Sir John Falstaff
is a fictional character who appears in three plays by William Shakespeare as a companion to Prince Hal, the future King Henry V. A fat, vainglorious, and cowardly knight, Falstaff leads the apparently wayward Prince Hal into trouble, but he is ultimately repudiated after Hal becomes king.
Shakespearean scholar Edmond Malone claimed, on uncertain authority, that John Heminges was the actor Shakespeare had in mind to portray Falstaff; an alternative is that Falstaff was written for Will Kempe, the clown of Shakespeare's company. The original actor was later succeeded by John Lowin, another comic actor. It is also asserted that Thomas Pope played the role of Falstaff after Kempe left the troupe.
Though primarily a comic figure, Falstaff still embodies a kind of depth common to Shakespeare's tricky comedy. In Act II, Scene III of Henry V
, his death is described by the character "Hostess", possibly the Mistress Quickly of Henry IV
, who describes his body in terms that echo the death of Socrates.
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FALSTAFF TICKETS
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Appearances
thumb at the
Golden Bough Playhouse in Carmel, Ca., in 1999.
He appears in the following plays:
- Henry IV, part 1
- Henry IV, part 2
- The Merry Wives of Windsor
His death is mentioned in
Henry V
but he has no lines, nor is it directed that he appear on stage. However, many stage and film adaptations have seen it necessary to include Falstaff for the insight he provides into
King Henry V's character. The most notable examples in cinema are
Laurence Olivier's
1946 version and
Kenneth Branagh's
1989 film, both of which draw additional material from the
Henry IV
plays.
There are several works about Falstaff, inspired by Shakespeare's plays:
- Orson Welles's Chimes at Midnight
(1966) compiles the two Henry IV
plays into a single, condensed storyline, while adding a handful of scenes from Richard II
and Henry V
. The movie, also known as Falstaff
, features Welles himself in the title role.
- Falstaff
(1893), Giuseppe Verdi's last opera, with a libretto by Arrigo Boito. It is mostly based upon The Merry Wives of Windsor
.
- Falstaff
(1799), Antonio Salieri's opera, with a libretto by Carlo Prospers Defranchesi, which is also based upon The Merry Wives of Windsor
.
- Falstaff
(1913), a "symphonic study" by Elgar, which is a sympathetic and programmatic musical portrait.
- Falstaff, A Hungarian TV movie based on Henry IV, part 1
and Henry IV, part 2
, prepared by László Vámos and Péter Müller
- Die lustigen Weiber von Windsor
(1849) by Carl Otto Nicolai, based upon The Merry Wives of Windsor.
- Sir John in Love
, 1924 – 1928, an opera by composer Ralph Vaughan Williams, based upon The Merry Wives of Windsor
, and notable for including an arrangement of the tune "Greensleeves".
- The opera "Plump Jack" (1984) by Gordon Getty.
- The Tragically Hip song "Fiddler's Green" mentions Falstaff.
- The Gus Van Sant film My Own Private Idaho
offers a version of the two parts of Henry IV
in which Falstaff is Bob, a derelict and petty thief.
- The novel Falstaff
by Robert Nye.
- Jasper Fforde's Thursday Next series, where Falstaff is an operative of Jurisfiction, the policing agency that operates within fiction to safeguard the stability of the written word. He is presented as a ladies' man.
- The poem Geckos in Obscure Light
by William Logan (poet) contains a line "beneath bellies distended as Falstaff’s". The poem appeared in the New Yorker in April 2007 and can be read on .
Character
right
Insert the text of the quote here, without quotation marks.
Falstaff is a central element in the two parts of
Henry IV
, a natural portion of their structure. Yet he does at times seem to be mainly a fun-maker, a character whom we both laugh with and laugh at, and almost in the same breath. Nothing has helped more to give this impression than the fat knight’s account of the double robbery at Gadshill. Even his name invites humor, as it is a sort of pun on impotence, brought on by the character's excessive consumption of alcohol. Scholars also note the potential for a pun on the author himself - Fall-Staff; Shake-Spear.
Falstaff's character is necessary to Hal's character development just as Hotspur's temperament is necessary to his. Falstaff's wit, humor and amusing antics are needed to develop Hal. He helps us relate to Hal and his decision. We know people of all types of character and personality in our lives. They influence our thinking and decisions. So it is also necessary for Hal.
The character of Falstaff seems to have been inspired by the theatrical forerunners Vice and
miles gloriosus
, but Falstaff has a unique, and undeniable depth of character. Beneath Falstaff’s contagious panache, he is a Homeric burlesque, an iconoclast, a philosopher, and a paradox. Falstaff is hailed by Harold Bloom and other literary scholars as one of Shakespeare’s greatest creations. Falstaff is closely scrutinized because his character is a revolution on the stage; he represents the transition from flamboyant, 'carnivalesque' comedy to the modern, aesthetic character. He’s a point of ‘transcendent subjectivity’
3 from which we see roots of the modern, western human.
Origins
One theory is that Shakespeare originally named Falstaff "
John Oldcastle", and that
Lord Cobham, a descendant of the historical John Oldcastle, complained, forcing Shakespeare to change the name. There is both textual and external evidence for this belief. In
Henry IV, Part One
, Falstaff's name is always
unmetrical, suggesting a name change after the original composition; Prince Hal refers to Falstaff as "my old lad of the castle" in the first act of the play; the epilogue to
Henry IV, Part II
, moreover, explicitly disavows any connection between Falstaff and Oldcastle.
The historical Oldcastle was unlike Falstaff; in particular, he was a
Lollard who was executed for his beliefs, and he was respected by many Protestants as a
martyr. Shakespeare knew an anonymous play of the 1580s,
The Famous Victories of Henry V
, in which Oldcastle is Henry V's companion, and Oldcastle's history is described in
Raphael Holinshed's
Chronicles
, Shakespeare's usual source for his histories.
It is not clear, however, if Shakespeare characterized Falstaff as he did for dramatic purposes, or because of a specific desire to satirize Oldcastle or the Cobhams. Cobham was a common butt of veiled satire in Elizabethan popular literature; he figures in
Ben Jonson's
Every Man in His Humour
and may have been part of the reason
The Isle of Dogs
was suppressed. Shakespeare's desire to burlesque a hero of early English Protestantism could indicate
Catholic sympathies, but
Henry Brooke, 11th Baron Cobham was sufficiently sympathetic to Catholicism that in 1603, he was imprisoned as part of the
Main Plot to place
Arbella Stuart on the English throne, so if Shakespeare wished to use Oldcastle to embarrass the Cobhams, he seems unlikely to have done so on religious grounds.
The Cobhams appear to have intervened while Shakespeare was in the process of writing either
The Merry Wives of Windsor
or the second part of
Henry IV
. The first part of
Henry IV
was probably written and performed in 1596, and the name Oldcastle had almost certainly been allowed by
Master of the Revels Edmund Tilney.
William Brooke, 10th Baron Cobham may have become aware of the offensive representation after a public performance; he may also have learned of it while it was being prepared for a court performance (Cobham was at that time
Lord Chamberlain). As father-in-law to the newly-widowed
Robert Cecil, Cobham certainly possessed the influence at court to get his complaint heard quickly. Shakespeare may have included a sly retaliation against the complaint in his play
The Merry Wifes of Windsor
(published after the Henry IV series). In the play, the paranoid, jealous Master Ford uses the alias "Brook" to fool Falstaff, perhaps in reference to William Brooke. At any rate, The name is Falstaff in the
Henry IV, part 1
quarto, of 1598, and the epilogue to the second part, published in
1600, contains this clarification:
One more word, I beseech you. If you be not too much cloyed with fat meat, our humble author will continue the story, with Sir John in it, and make you merry with fair Katharine of France where, for any thing I know, Falstaff shall die of a sweat, unless already a' be killed with your hard opinions; for Oldcastle died a martyr, and this is not the man.
Another theory is that the new name "Falstaff" could have been dervied from the medieval knight Sir
John Fastolf (who was also a
Lollard). Changing a few letters gave Shakespeare the name by which his invention is known today. There was a historical
Sir John Fastolf who fought at the
Battle of Patay against
Joan of Arc, which the English lost. Fastolf's previous actions as a soldier had earned him wide respect, but he seems to have become a scapegoat after the debacle. He was among the few English military leaders to avoid death or capture during the battle, and although there is no evidence that he acted with cowardice, he was temporarily stripped of his knighthood. Fastolf's role in
Henry VI, Part I
loosely follows these events.
Stephen Greenblatt has suggested that writer
Robert Greene may also have been an inspiration for the character of Falstaff. Notorious for a life of dissipation and debauchery somewhat similar to Falstaff, he was among the first to mention Shakespeare in his work (in
Greene's Groats-Worth of Wit
), suggesting to Greenblatt that the older writer may have influenced Shakespeare's characterization.
In William Shakespeare's home town, Stratford-upon-Avon lay claim that Falstaff was based on William Rogers, one of the Sargeants of the mace and close friend of the Shakespeare's, who ran the Three Tunns Tavern from the Shrieve's House
[1], now a museum. See The Shrieve's House by Petra Rees.
[2]
Notable Falstaffs
- Victor Buono at the Mark Taper Forum
- Pat Carroll at the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C.
- Delaney Williams at the Folger Shakespeare Library
- Maurice Evans on Broadway
- Kevin Kline at the New York Shakespeare Festival
- Samuel Phelps at Sadler's Wells Theatre
- Anthony Quayle at the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre
- George Robey in Laurence Olivier's Henry V
- Robbie Coltrane, in Kenneth Branagh's Henry V
- Ralph Richardson at the Old Vic Theatre
- Joss Ackland at the Old Vic and at the Barbican Theatre for the Royal Shakespeare Company
- Orson Welles in the film Chimes at Midnight
- Robert Stephens at the Royal Shakespeare Company
- Desmond Barrit at the Royal Shakespeare Company
- William Hutt at the Stratford Festival of Canada
- Simon Callow at the Royal Shakespeare Company
- David Warner at the Royal Shakespeare Company
See also
- Sir John Fastolf
- Sir John Oldcastle
- Battle of Patay
- Falstaff (opera)
- Toby Belch
- PlumpJack Winery
References
- www.falstaffexperience.co.uk
- http://www.falstaffexperience.co.uk/page.php?linkid=20&sublinkid=106'.