
I found it strangely moving and harrowing. The tale of young Albert who loves his horse, Joey, so much that he enlists in the army during the First World War to rescue him. He's raised Joey from a frightened colt to become a magnificent stallion, a horse fit for an officer and the officer is dramatically killed during the first battle. Joey is rounded up by the Germans and put to work pulling an ambulance and then a cannon, before tanks come on the scene and Joey runs wild through no-man's land...


The staging was both simple and incredibly elaborate. A relatively bare stage for most of the production with atmospheric lighting and restrained use of props, presumably so that nothing took away from the glory of the horses. Lots of attention to detail from swallows flying on the sunny summer morning that opens the play to the death crows of the battlefield, little touches that show someone has really thought it all through and secured the funding to fulfill their vision.

It stirred memories and made me think of my Granda. He was a soldier in the First World War who lost an arm, wounded and delirious in no-man's land and saved by a young girl in a bombed farmhouse (rather similar to the second act in that respect). The things he must have seen (and probably done) don't bear thinking about and that's probably why he didn't speak about the war until his last few years and it was then that I got to know him a little.
One of my earliest memories of him is going with him to his allotment when I was about five on a sunny afternoon, wandering through the fields and he took me to see the horses. Granda had a way with animals and the horses were his friends - virtually everybody and everything was Granda's friend. He picked me up with his one arm and put me on the back of one of the horses and then walked away, turned and made a clicking sound with his mouth and the horse trotted over to him with me on it's back. I was terrified but all he was doing was giving me the thrill of my first (and only) horse-ride. He was a daft old bugger with a fondness for booze and I wish I'd known him better.
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