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Jim Catapano views the ATA’s New Life for Prince Hal

Shakespeare’s Henry V is revived with a Sparkling New Production at the American Theatre of Actors

“We Happy Few, We Band of Brothers,” Henry V famously proclaims—and Sam Hardy, the actor who currently brings him to life, could well be addressing his castmates and crew of this accomplished production, now playing at the ATA as presented by Jonathan G. Power.

Henry V is the final piece in a tetralogy by Shakespeare that was basically the 16th century stage version of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. It was preceded by Richard IIHenry IV, Part 1, and Henry IV, Part 2. Henry V would have been a familiar character to theatre fanatics of the Renaissance, having appeared in Henry IV Parts 1 and 2 in youthful form as the wayward, tavern-loving Prince Hal.

This “sequel” depicts Hal/Henry (also known as “Harry”) rising to the throne with a new maturity. At the English court Henry is convinced after a discussion about land laws with the Archbishop of Canterbury (David Allard) that he has a claim to the Throne of France. Thus, he prepares to do battle with the French near Agincourt. His regiment is comparatively small, but the king is armed with a of heart and spirit that he is determined to share with his soldiers.

Shakespeare veteran Hardy is perfect in the title role; his commanding voice, powerful stage presence and impressive physicality adding an extra electricity to the Bard’s 1599(ish) play. He brings great poignancy to a sequence where Henry disguises himself to walk among his soldiers, in order to get to know them and bring them hope and encouragement.

One of the most popular of Shakespeare’s historicals, Henry V is engaging and witty throughout, with many humorous interludes and an incredibly quotable text. The actors handle the complex languages, lengthy soliloquies, and Bill’s famous wordplay with astonishing skill and a clear love for the source material; they also excel at the tricky, operatic fight sequences, which are expertly choreographed for this production. The English soldiers are in tan T-Shirts, the French in blue; and the overall dress is contemporary. Even with the large cast many of the actors play multiple roles, switching demeanors and characterizations with deftness.

Dustin Pazar is engaging as The Chorus (“Narrator”) as well as The Duke of Exeter, Noy Marom is Princess Catherine of France; in one of the play’s most amusing scenes she asks her maid Alice (Annie Unger) for a lesson in how to say a selection of English words, with Alice responding with rather suspect pronunciation. Marom also plays the conspiratorial Sir Thomas Grey, and Unger doubles as “the Boy,” page to comedic trio Pistol (Joe Patrick Marshall), Nym (Kieran Wylie), and Bardolph (Paul Maurizio). (These four characters also appear in multiple Shakespeare works.) The prolific Jane Culley (over 50 off and off-Broadway credits) is the Queen of France and also Pistol’s wife, Mistress Quickly. Producer Power appears as Henry’s counterpart on the chessboard, the King of France. Adam Lyons is very amusing as the French Herald, who periodically appears on the balcony to taunt the English warriors.

Dukes and Earls of course abound. Christian Miranda appears as both the Duke of Orleans and the Earl of Salisbury; Reese Villiger is the loyal Earl of Westmoreland;

For audiences unfamiliar, I’d equate the relationships among the characters to the conflicts, and camaraderie in another more recent hero’s journey, The Lord of The Rings franchise (subtracting magic rings and dragons, but adding the tennis balls that the Dauphin of France sends to his rival Henry as a gag gift). Cruz is an entertaining presence as the aggressive, always screaming Dauphin.

Directed with panache by ATA founder and artistic director James Jennings, Henry V makes great use of the multi-leveled, atmospheric John Cullum Theatre. Moving video backdrops portraying castles, battlefields and graveyards add a nice sense of place and time. As usual for this highly regarded entry into Shakespeare’s canon, this edition Henry V earns it’s 3-hour runtime, captivating throughout on its way to a rousing denouement.

Henry V runs at the ATA through April 19, 2025.

REVIEW by JIM CATAPANO: A Fractured Family Searches for Connection

A House Divided Visits a Family in the Aftermath of the Events of 2016 and 2020

Thanksgiving Day, 2021. COVID lingers. The Trump Era is (temporarily) interrupted. The working-class Gebauer family of south Philadelphia reunites for their first in-person gathering in years, after their personal and political differences had driven them apart. Thus begins A House Divided: A Blue Collar Comedy on National Themes, a timely, powerful and very entertaining work by Joshua Crone.

Jim (Mark Thomas McKenna) is a long-haul trucker and Trump supporter, separated from his liberal wife, schoolteacher Rosalie (Alyssa Simon), who is hosting for the holiday. “Granny” Alice (Jenny Martel) is initially not in attendance, and is only appearing via FaceTime, as Jim has refused to vaccinate and she doesn’t want to risk exposure. Adam McDowell is the Gebauer’s son Jimmy, a pastor, who has brought his devout girlfriend Grace (Kinah Britton), a woman of color, to the gathering. The couple has two related major life announcements to tell the family, but Jimmy is aware that they may not go over well, particularly with the “old-fashioned” (to put it mildly) Alice. Sammy (Hayley Pace) is the Gebauer’s other child, arriving with a Covid mask on—and a major life announcement of his own, which is unlikely to be welcomed by either Alice or Jim. All is revealed at the unseen dinner, and the family returns to the living room to deal with the aftermath, the chasm between them even wider than before.

Where the characters agree and disagree is handled very interestingly and realistically. Jimmy is the only character who tries to consistently put acceptance and understanding above all else, but struggles to maintain the role of peacekeeper. Jim is somewhat sympathetic to the Black Lives Matter movement, agreeing that police brutality and prejudice is a real thing, but he rolls his eyes at Rosalie’s having put a BLM flag in the window—suspecting it’s only there because Grace was coming. Rosalie later admits he’s right, but Grace is not impressed, and actually distances herself from the movement. Sammy and Alice agree on masks, but decidedly differ on Sammy’s revelation.

Hayley Pace gives a nuanced, sensitive performance as Sammy, who reveals to the family that he will seek gender-affirming surgery—despite being assigned female at birth, he’s a boy and always has been. The reactions of the other characters vary dramatically; Jim is aghast, verbally dismissive, and refuses to use Sammy’s pronouns (as foreshadowed earlier in the play when he can’t even remember to use his wife’s own preferred version of her name). The old-school religious Grace also condemns the notion, driving a wedge between her and Jimmy, who fully supports his sibling. Progressive Rosalie is also completely on Sammy’s side, but also very awkward and occasionally unhelpful—and Sammy calls her on that. The frustrated Rosalie later admits that as an ally she’s trying to do the right thing, but feels she keeps doing it the wrong way. Meanwhile the spark is still there between her and Jim, and they go from flirting to fighting in the blink of an eye—again, a very realistic take on the complexities of human relationships.

Crone’s writing crucially does not take sides—events play out and the audience is allowed to take it all in without being manipulated into any character’s corner. The effect is a blend of All in The Family and the notorious “Seven Fishes” episode of The Bear. Which is to say there is a lot of humor mixed in with the dysfunctional strife, making the story more true-to-life than it would have been if it were nothing but melodramatic angst and shouting. Early on there is a comedic sequence involving the charred turkey, which brings in a fireman (Will Maizel) after a funny phone mix-up with the operator (Tiffany Ray). There’s even two invisible (but adorable) energetic cats, Smokey and Bandit, unseen but very much heard.

The characters escape from the conflict by reminiscing about the good times back in the day, trying to recapture the bond among them. They take turns noodling meditatively at the electric piano at the front of the stage. Jim tunes out the fighting literally, by singing loudly as he works on fixing the fireplace, trying to reclaim his former role in the family. These interludes culminate in an unexpected, hilarious Broadway-style song (by Michael and Joshua Crone) from the entire cast that provides a catharsis, and gently pokes fun at the inherent weirdness of the musical trope of everyone knowing the same song and suddenly bursting into it.

The actors gel remarkably, giving the impression of relationships with a long, complex history. At the end of the play we see them all as human beings, and despite their very serious differences the connections and love are still there among them. A heartwarming sequence involving popcorn and family-favorite movie Convoy drives this home (and “warm fuzzies” abound). A House Divided successfully shows us the angst, heartache, and growing pains of the 2020s, but reminds us that warmth and sweetness can still follow.

A House Divided is directed by Thoeger Hansen and is a production of Night Cook Studio. It runs at The NuBox at John DeSotelle studio through March 30, 2025.