Tag Archive: Henry VIII of England


Generics

Mark Rylance as Thomas Cromwell

We are still only in January, but the BBC adaptation of Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall is already sure to be one of the year’s TV highlights.

Costume dramas have long been the Beeb’s stock in trade and on the strength of episode one (broadcast on BBC Two on 21st January) this looks to one of their best for a long while.

It almost goes without saying that the acting is superb and I was particularly impressed by Mark Rylance as Thomas Cromwell.

What makes his performance so riveting is that, although he not physically imposing, he quietly manages to fill the screen and make you understand how such a man could have risen from humble beginnings , as the son of a blacksmith, to be one of the most influential figures in Britain.

The drama has a contemporary resonance in that you can well see how Cromwell’s instinctive Machiavellian skills also have a modern-day application. Continue reading

THE WOLF OF WOLF HALL

WOLF HALL by Hilary Mantel (Fourth Estate, 2009)

Hilary-Mantel-Wolf-HallHistory has never been my strong point. The sum total of what I recall from lessons about Henry VIII at high school are that (a) He had six wives  (b) He was obese and (c) He was instrumental in bringing about the dissolution of the monasteries.

This is not exactly a vast sum of knowledge about a reign that lasted almost 38 years until his death in 1547.

Actually, there’s not a massive amount of specific information about the life of the king in this fictionalised account covering the period 1500 – 1535.

The focus of the story is Henry’s fixer in chief Thomas Cromwell who rose from humble beginnings to become the most powerful man in England. Like Winston Wolf in Pulp Fiction, he’s a a problem solver and master tactician. His diplomacy and keen intellect is such that you can well understand why Henry says  “I keep you, Master Cromwell, because you are as cunning as a bag of serpents”. Continue reading