WAR HORSE Celebrates Fifth Anniversary In London

By: Oct. 26, 2012
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The National Theatre's award-winning production of War Horse last night (25 October 2012) celebrated its fifth anniversary in London with a special performance at the New London Theatre, Drury Lane.  Former cast members and the show's creative team gathered with VIPs and friends to celebrate five years on the London stage.

Since its early experimental days at The National Theatre Studio, War Horse has become a national and international phenomenon.  It opened at the National's Olivier Theatre in October 2007 and transferred to the New London in March 2009.  More than 1.6 million people have seen the show in London with over 2.4 million people seeing the production worldwide.  A ten month, nine-venue tour of the UK and Ireland will begin in Autumn 2013; productions of the show are currently running in New York, Toronto and on a North American tour, with future productions planned for Australia and Berlin.

Nicholas Hytner, Director of The National Theatre, said:  "War Horse caught the imagination of audiences from its very first outing at the National, but none of us could have foreseen that this astonishing production would still be engendering the same heartfelt response five years later. It's a show which could only have been developed in the subsidised theatre, where the ability to risk-take and experiment is beyond price.  I salute the hundreds of theatre-makers, puppeteers and artists who have been part of War Horse's remarkable journey."

Michael Morpurgo, author of the original novel, said:   "From a Devon meadow a hundred and more years ago, to the battlefields of the First World War, to London, to New York, and soon to Australia and Berlin, our Joey keeps on running.  It's five years since The National Theatre took this little known story, and transformed it, told it their way, wonderfully.   Since that night in the Olivier when Joey first trotted out into the spotlight, millions of grown-up children and children around the world have come to know and love Joey's story, through play, film, concert and book.  So thank you National Theatre, thank you Joey, and thank you especially to those actors and puppeteers who go on every night and make War Horse the unique theatrical event it has become."

Marianne Elliot and Tom Morris, co-directors of War Horse, added:   "We can't believe that War Horse is celebrating its fifth anniversary.  We are so proud of our show.  It was a huge team that made it happen – much bigger than any of the teams either of us have worked with before or since.  What we ended up with was something far greater than any one of us could have ever imagined."

War Horse is the powerful story of a young boy called Albert and his beloved horse, Joey, who has been requisitioned to fight for the English in World War I.  Caught in enemy crossfire, Joey ends up serving on both sides during the war before landing in no man's land, while Albert, not old enough to enlist, embarks on a treacherous mission to find his horse and bring him home.  A remarkable tale of courage, loyalty and friendship, War Horsefeatures ground-breaking puppetry work by South Africa's Handspring Puppet Company which brings breathing and galloping horses to life on stage.

War Horse is based on a novel by Michael Morpurgo, adapted by Nick Stafford and presented in association with Handspring Puppet Company.  Directed by Marianne Elliott and Tom Morris, it is designed by Rae Smith, lighting is by Paule Constable and movement and horse choreography by Toby Sedgwick.  The puppetry directors are Basil Jones and Adrian Kohler, with video design by 59 Productions Ltd, song-making by John Tams, music by Adrian Sutton and sound by Christopher Shutt.

 



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