The Sunday Post (Inverness)

An emotional ride

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Inside the theatre sensation War Horse.

PUBLISHED in 1982, War Horse has become one of the best-loved stories about the First World War.

The bestsellin­g book by former children’s laureate Sir Michael Murpurgo – which tells a story of courage, loyalty and friendship between a young boy called Albert and his horse Joey, set against the backdrop of the war – was adapted for the stage in 2007 and made into a film by Steven Spielberg.

It is now the most successful play in the National Theatre’s history, having been seen by seven million people across the world. As it returns to Edinburgh for 25 nights as part of a new UK tour, in10 speaks to Sir Michael and nine other people involved in this incredible production.

Sir Michael Morpurgo Creator

War Horse was inspired by a series of lucky accidents. I had been fascinated and horrified for some time by four small drawings we discovered at the bottom of a trunk in our attic. They were scenes from the First World War, of British cavalry at the front.

I wanted to know more, particular­ly about the part played by horses in the war. I rang up the Imperial War Museum and asked if they knew how many horses had been killed. Between one and two million they said – and that was only the British side. The horses had suffered as the men suffered. Then, one evening, I was in the village pub and saw a man in his 80s who I knew had been to that war as a young man. He told me he had been there “with horses”. What he told me in the next hour or so made me feel I had to write a book about a horse in this war. I was moved by his story and felt he was passing it on – he’d never spoken of these things to anyone. After that, the story of Joey began to weave itself in my head. A horse, sold from a Devon farm against the wishes of Albert, who had grown up with him, used by the British as a cavalry horse, then captured by the Germans and used to pull guns and ambulances. We live with Albert and Joey in both the book and the play, willing them to survive and to find one another again.

It had to somehow be the story of the soldiers from all sides. I concluded there was only one way to tell it and that was via a horse that goes to war – the story of universal suffering seen through the eyes of an innocent creature. When the National Theatre approached me I wondered how a convincing drama of the First World War could be made using life-size puppets of horses, and pantomime horses came to mind. But this was the National Theatre, so they knew what they were doing. Opening night was a triumph and the production has now travelled the world.

Thomas Dennis

Actor, Albert

The first thing I had to do was believe I was working with a real horse, which wasn’t difficult.

The audience come on the same journey. In the first few minutes, they see the puppeteers, the wood, the frame, then are taken by the story.

We are telling the tale of millions of men who fought in the war and I wanted to do them justice. I visited a cemetery in France, where the men from the Devonshire Regiment who were killed on the first day of the Somme were buried.

Going on that trip gave me more than any rehearsal ever could.

Monica Corder

Puppet Tech

There are 20 puppets that my colleague and I maintain on the road.

One of us will work during the day on maintenanc­e, while the other is on hand during the shows. The show won’t stop, so we have spare legs at stage-side and a spare Joey head if needed.

Joey weighs 8st and sometimes there is a rider on top, so we have to make sure the cages are safe for the puppeteers.

Lewis Howard

Puppeteer

I play the heart of Joey, so I’m in the middle of the three puppeteers.

I’m in charge of his breathing, whether he is calm or relaxed. I’m an actor, and it’s a form of acting but very different.

Telling a story without language is a challenge – we are a creature that doesn’t understand what’s happening, but we also have to drive the story on.

Paul Bouchier

Company manager

I liken my job to being the tour dad for the 60 cast and crew. This is my first time on War Horse and I’ve never worked with puppeteers before.

They have quite specific injuries, so we have a physiother­apist on the road with us to keep their bodies in shape.

A lot of the cast haven’t toured before. It’s exciting for them at first, but after a few cities they begin to miss family, pets and home. Some have wobbles, so I reassure them.

That’s why it’s so important we all get on well. We’re like a big family out on the road.

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