Heartbreaking Horses

“When will he return?”

Albert to Captain Nicholls

Tom Sturgess as Albert Narracott and Joey the horse (Photo: Brinkhoff Moegenburg)

I shall start with the first two paragraphs from my October 2007 review of Warhorse at the National Theatre. 

What Michael Morpurgo’s novel does is to place the horse centre stage, so that episodes in the First World War are seen from an equine point of view. The curious effect is that in this “war to end all wars” you realise that on the opposing side are good men who love horses. You hate what war does because horses get hurt and killed or die of overwork and malnutrition. But how to stage a play where the central character is a horse?

Never for one moment did I think a production based on puppet characters could engage me emotionally but I was blown away from the very first moment of watching the foal onstage. My brain told me that there were three actors managing the colt’s body but in my heart I was convinced that I was watching a young animal running around a paddock. There are two things to admire about this lovely play.

To begin with there’s the sheer technical brilliance of the engineering, the perfection of the horse’s body and how it works – this is what the men talked about at the interval. Then there is the visual and emotional realism, a horse that twitches its ears and breathes and moves like a real animal, eats grass and whinnies and has a human rider on its back: the leap that your imagination can make so that you believe you are watching a live horse – this is what the women talked about at the interval.  (Apologies for the sexist observation.)

Cast with Joey the Foal (Photo: Brinkhoff Moegenburg)

Michael Morpurgo’s novel was for young people and the narrator was Joey the horse. The novel is now a part of the curriculum at schools and the audience at the Olivier on the night I saw in 2026 was full of apprentice theatre critics with pen and notepad. 

A quick summary of the basis of the story is that it is about a chestnut hunter foal bought at auction by Ted Narracott (Stephen Beckett) in Devon, after a bidding war between the Narracott brothers.  Ted’s son Albert (Tom Sturgess) understands that the horse called Joey is to be his.  When the horse is full grown Ted and his brother have another bet as to whether the horse, Joey, could pull a plough.  Albert trains Joey to plough and Ted wins the bet.  It is 1914 and with the war against Germany, a million horses are commandeered by the army to go to France.  Joey goes to France and meets Topthorn a black thoroughbred. The horses are involved in the Battle of the Somme 1916.  Albert has vowed to find his horse and joins the army when he is old enough.  Joey’s ploughing skills mean he can be used to transport wounded soldiers to hospital care pulling heavy carts.

Joey the horse and Chris Williams as Major James Nicholls (Photo: Brinkhoff Moegenburg)

This play for me is different from the one I saw in 2007 and 2009.  This version has been touring for the last two years.  I don’t remember as many scenes of warfare in the original but that may be my memory as I was transfixed by the horses.  The warfare scenes are terrifying, explosions and barbed wire, and Rae Smith’s torn parchment drawings have horrific skeletons and frightened faces projected. The scene when a German cavalry officer Captain Müller (Manuel Khan) helps Joey seems less important and the whole play seems more about the war rather than just the horse viewpoint. As such, it has less emotional clout for me but is probably more meaningful as a chronicle of the First World War, rather than a play for animal lovers.

This powerful production has a good ensemble cast of people but outstanding are Handspring Puppet Company who should re-name their company Handspring Living Creatures.  The word puppet is almost derisory to describe these creatures with swishing tails and equine movement. It is a long watch for children and certainly too distressing for younger children with the death of Topthorn. 

Theatrevibe, the site that doesn’t do stars, awards Warhorse five stars for its strong impact of the reality of war and five stars for the state of the art beautiful horses. 

Cast in Warhorse (Photo: Brinkhoff Moegenburg)
Cast with Joey and Topthorn (Photo: Brinkhoff Moegenburg)

Production Notes 2026

Warhorse

Written by Michael Morpurgo

Adapted by  Nick Stafford

Directed by Katie Henry and Tom Morris

Cast

Starring:

Anita Adam Goboy

Stephen Beckett

Ike Bennett

Jo Castleton

Owen Dagnall

Danny Hendrix

Jasmin Hinds

Linford Johnson

Nicholas Khan

Manuel Klein

Madeleine Leslay

Jack Lord

Damian Lynch

Corey Montague-Sholay

Ann-Marie Piazza

Daniel Rock

Simon Stanhope

Tom Sturgess

Sally Swanson

Lucy Thornburn

Chris Williams

Horses

Joey

Matthew Lawrence

Lewis McBean

Felicity Donnelly

Topthorn

Wade Lewin,

Niko Wirachman

Sam Goodchild,

Baby Joey

Jordan Paris

Eloise Beaumont-Wood

Anita Adam Gaby

 

Creatives

Directors:

Katie Henry and Tom Morris

Designer: Rae Smith

Puppet designer: Adrian Kohler

Composers: John Tams, Adrian Sutton

Choreography and Movement: Toby Sedgwick

Musical Director: Dom Coyote

Lighting Designer: Rob Casey

Fight Director:  Paul Benzing

Sound Director: Christopher Shutt

Video/projection designer : 59 Studio

 

Information

Running Time: Two hours 40 minutes including the interval

Booking to 30th July 2023

Theatre: 

Olivier Theatre

National Theatre

South Bank

London SE1 9PX

Tube/Rail : Waterloo

Website: nationaltheatre.org.uk

Reviewed by Lizzie Loveridge 

at the Olivier Theatre

on 1st June 2026