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This
summer's Hamlet is the first production to be directed by Michael Boyd since he
took over as the Royal Shakespeare Companys artistic director. At Stratford, Boyd
has created two overlapping cast ensembles: one for the Shakespeare Tragedies season here
in the main house and the other for the season of Golden Age Spanish plays at the Swan
Theatre. Thus, there has been a welcome return to an ensemble dynamic and energy based
upon a kernel of (mostly young) actors appearing together in several plays throughout the
season. This dynamism and energy are clearly evident in Boyds inaugural production
of Hamlet.
Also evident is a return to the traditional
Elizabethan production and, more importantly, a triumph of story-telling over elaborate
interpretation. In Boyds production, everything serves the text - every line is
clearly thought through and presented with emotional commitment by his cast and this most
famous and oft-quoted of Shakespeares plays appears freshly dramatic as if every
line were newly minted. The staging by Tom Piper is minimal, with a semi-circular graphite
wooden wall with large doors at the center and hidden doors and windows in the wall for
the eavesdropping scenes. Vince Herberts atmospheric lighting provides the scene
changes and as a result the play moves swiftly and relentlessly even though presented
without cuts.
The play emerges as the intelligent political thriller which it is. Rarely
has every twist and turn of Hamlets plot to revenge his fathers murder and the
resulting battle of wits against his uncle, King Claudius (whom he suspects), been so
compellingly conveyed. At every moment the audience is with Hamlet in his attempts to
prove and revenge his fathers murder by Claudius and in his struggle to overcome his
passionate revulsion both at the deed and the resulting "oerhasty"
marriage between Claudius and Hamlets mother Gertrude.
It is this crippling revulsion rather than procrastination that is at
the core of Toby Stephens flamboyant, witty interpretation of the role. He delivers
a highly entertaining performance and has an immediacy of rapport with the audience,
especially in the soliloquies. Stephens' prince is possessed of intelligence, poetry and
incisive humor--a great mind in overdrive. But his sardonic humor and sarcasm hide a
righteous anger at the political machinations that surround him. His ire initially flares
out in odd moments but is palpable when he realizes that his lover, Ophelia, and his
friends Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are reduced to pawns in Claudius game.
Naturally, it erupts into a torrent of rage when he confronts his mother with her guilt in
the famous closet scene which is played minimally with one chair rather than a bed, so
that he physically traps Gertrude with his accusations. Gertrude (Sian Thomas) hides her
guilt behind her overly made-up face and elegant dresses until the facade dissolves under
pressure from her son. She even appears to have a change of heart and supports her son as
best she can in the closing scenes.
The political background of the enmity between Denmark and Norway and
the theological and philosophical elements of the play are all presented with complete
lucidity. The characters truly believe in heaven, hell and purgatory they are real
places, part of their emotional life and also at the core of their motivation which
is more difficult to convey in a modern dress production. For example, in the most
memorable moment of the evening, Greg Hicks as the ghost of Hamlets father slowly
shuffles in on a ramp through the audience bent double over a broad sword, mouthing words
he is unable to speak until he is face to face with his living son. Hicks powerfully
embodies (physically and vocally) the suffering of a soul in purgatory and the look of
horror on his face when he tells his son he must return to the "sulphurous
flames" is truly harrowing. It becomes clear that Hamlet must not only revenge his
fathers murder but also that his father will not be set free from the torments of
purgatory until he does so, thus adding to the emotional burden under which he is living
through much of the play.
With his meticulous production Boyd presents a gallery of highly
detailed characterizations. By the end of the performance the audience feels they really
know the characters. Forbes Masson is an affecting Horatio giving the impression he
fully understands his friend Hamlet. Ian Drysdale presents an imposing Claudius, not to be
crossed, but guilt ridden at murdering his brother in the chapel scene. Richard Cordery is
a sinister Polonius a cold political animal under the bumbling affability he present
to the Court. He cruelly dominates his daughter Ophelia (Meg Fraser) in their chilling
scenes together. As her brother, Gideon Turner, movingly portrays his love for her and at
the end the desperation of realizing he has been yet another pawn in Claudius
game. Meg Frasers Ophelia is fresh and alert. If she cannot stand up to her
father, she certainly does to her lover, Hamlet. Her mad scene is modern and robust rather
than pre-Raphaelite and waif-like; there is a frenzied anger at life behind her
meanderings.
Overall
Boyd has created an ensemble production with clear, detailed modern acting in a
traditional setting, centered by Toby Stephens' brilliant, passionate, romantic and
thoroughly believable Hamlet. The text emerges
with illuminating clarity creating an intriguing and compelling evening.
Stratford-upon-Avon, July 26, 2004 - Neil Ludwick