When director Nick Hennegan heard Henry V was to be staged on Remembrance Sunday, he planned to drop a cloud of poppies onto the stage at the end of each performance.

The plan was foiled by technical constraints but he is still believes the significance of the day will resonate with audience members.

Critics have always argued about whether Shakespeare intended Henry V to celebrate war or expose its follies, but the Maverick Theatre artistic director is firmly in the latter camp.

"I don't know that it's possible to make a play about war that's not anti-war. Henry V to me is about the futility of war," says Hennegan.

Ethics aside, the Maverick's play - a condensed, solo performance of the original - is at heart a "good romp".

"It's sad in parts but in other parts there's a real rumbustiousness to it," he says.

Tomorrow's play kicks off the Dome's annual season of Shakespeare for children and although Maverick Theatre's version was not produced specifically for youngsters, its simplified text does lend itself to a younger audience.

Hennegan describes his interpretation as a "greatest hits". Some of the more arcane phrases such as "shall we shog" (meaning "shall we go") have been replaced with their modern equivalents but the most celebrated parts of the text, such as the St Crispin's Day speech, remain.

The Birmingham playwright, who also has a parallel career as a DJ on digital station The Arrow, sat down to write his adaptation one night in 1992 after a few drinks down the pub.

"I couldn't afford to do a full-scale production and I only knew one actor when I wrote it, so I decided to make it a one-man play," he says.

"Obviously it's cheaper touring with one person but there's also an extra intimacy there."

It was first performed at the Midlands Arts Centre, where it was spotted by Brum comedian Jasper Carrott's manager, who persuaded them to take it to the Edinburgh Festival.

The experience ignited Nick's love of fringe theatre and he came back to Birmingham and set up Maverick.

Although the play has already been on tour along the east coast of America, this is the first UK tour.

Partly this is down to the complexity of the behind-the-scenes work. The cast list may be short - just actor Edward Morris playing a total of 12 characters - but there are also more than 400 light and sound cues throughout the performance.

"The technical level is more akin to a West End show," said Hennegan. "There's very little time for the actor to rest. Not many actors have got the physicality to sustain a piece for an hour and a half.

"They usually lose a lot of weight and there are injuries too, with all the flailing around. It's tough vocally, too, as they're doing everything from little whispered prayers to loud battle cries."

The season continues this week with CTC Theatre's Young Hamlet, another solo performance which presents Hamlet as a detective unearthing his troubled family history, while A Tale For Winter re-examines A Winter's Tale through the eyes of three of its youngest protagonists

  • Henry V, 3.30pm & 6.30pm, £8/£6
  • Also at the Pavilion Theatre, Brighton: Young Hamlet, November 14, 6.30pm, £6. A Tale For Winter, November 27, 10am & 1.30pm, £8/£6
  • Call 01273 709709 for tickets for all shows