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HAMLET . from SHAKESPEARE: Script, Stage, Screen (Chapter 15) Edited by David Bevington , Anne Marie Welsh and Michael L. Greenwald, Pearson Longman, 2006. . Context and dating. After Julius Caesar (1599) and Twelfth Night (1601)
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HAMLET from SHAKESPEARE: Script, Stage, Screen (Chapter 15) Edited by David Bevington, Anne Marie Welsh and Michael L. Greenwald, Pearson Longman, 2006.
Context and dating • After Julius Caesar (1599) and Twelfth Night (1601) • The first of four great tragedies (Hamlet, Othello, Macbeth, King Lear) • More than 40 films exits • Many women have played the role including women like Sara Bernhardt and Judith Anderson • Universally noted for the human-ness of its protagonist • It is memorable both as superb storytelling and spectacular theater
Plots and Counterplots • Relies on three interlinked stories about fathers and sons • Hamlet and his father • Polonius and Laertes • Fortinbras and his father • Laertes is too passionate in his revenge • Hamlet is too deliberate • Fortinbras is methodical and successful
HAMLET represents a new type of storytelling as he writes about a character “suspended” between impulse and action. --Stephen Greenblatt
The play is more than a murder story: it is an examination of the kind of response provoked by murder. --Peter Alexander
Harold Bloom The phenomenon of Hamlet, the prince without the play, is unsurpassed in the West’s imaginative literature. Hamlet the character transcends his play
Hamlet is the theatre’s most enigmatic hero… • Laurence Olivier begins his award-winning film with a voice-over “the tragedy of a man who cannot make up his mind” • He is a character fraught with inconsistencies • Is he feigning madness or indeed mad? • He seems tender, yet he has his friends murdered • Shakespeare’s only tragic character with an enviable sense of humor • Unlike Ophelia’s depiction, he is cruel to both her and Gertrude • He will not kill himself and deliberately refuses to kill his uncle
7 Soliloquies Soliloquies mark Hamlet’s movement from paralysis to action O that this too, too sullied flesh would melt (I.2)O all you host of heaven! (I.5) O what a rogue and peasant slave am I (II.2)To be, or not to be (III. 2)Tis now the very witching time of night (III.3)Now might I do it pat (III.3)How all occasions do inform against me (IV.4)
Oedipal implications These have been explored in several films including the adaptations with Laurence Olivier and Mel Gibson Laurence Olivier and Eileen Herlie Glenn Close and Mel Gibson
Other notable characters • CLAUDIUS, the wicked uncle-king • POLONIUS, a garrulous and meddling counselor • OPHELIA, an innocent ingenue • LAERTES, her fiery brother • HORATIO, Hamlet’s faithful friend • Manipulative and manipulated schoolmates ROSENCRANTZ and GUILDENSTERN
Even Minor Characters are memorable Fortinbras, future King of Denmark The clowns Osric The Gravediggers
Sources and Inspirations The Spanish Tragedyby Thomas Kyd (1588) Ur-Hamlet(Kyd? in 1589) Saxo Grammaticus HistoriaDanica 1180-1208 Francois de BelleforestHistories Tragiques(1576)
1601 It was written in 1601 at the height of a vogue for children’s companies. That same year is the death of Shakespeare’s father. Could it be a meditation on the death of a father?
Language and music • Several images dominate notably those describing corruption and decay • “Something is rotten in the State of Denmark” (1.4.90) • A sterile promontory - unweeded garden - ulcerous place • An evil act (fratricide, the primal sin) soils everyone
Language and music Play seems to move from beautiful to harrowing Marcellus description of rising son (1.1.72) to appearance of ghost Shakespeare’s most ambitious attempt to create a psychologically complex character through language The play has a preponderance of theatre language “Drama holds the mirror up to nature”
Language and music Contains three songs • Hamlet sings a jaunty tune to celebrate the success of “The Mousetrap” • Ophelia’s song is one of the bawdiest in all of Shakespeare • Gravedigger’s sing a nonsense song as they dig Ophelia’s grave QUEEN How now, Ophelia! OPHELIA[She sings.] "How should I your true love know From another one? By his cockle hat and staff, And his sandal shoon." QUEENAlas, sweet lady, what imports this song? OPHELIASay you? nay, pray you, mark. Song. "He is dead and gone, lady, He is dead and gone; At his head a grass-green turf, At his heels a stone."
Themes No play in history has generated more commentary than HAMLET • Hamlet as religious treatise • Hamlet as a cry of despair • Hamlet as interrogation into the human condition • Hamlet as existentialist tract • Hamlet as political document • Hamlet as feminist discourse
Staging Challenges • WHICH TEXT--and how do we cut it? 1. Unauthorized quarto or “bad quarto” (1603) 2. Authorized quarto performed by King’s Men (1604) 3. 1623 Folio is compatible with Q2, about 100 lines shorter • The longest of the plays and modern versions are longer than any acted in Shakespeare’s day • Play was undoubtedly trimmed in Shakespeare’s time and subsequently modern productions must deal with the length
Staging Challenges • Hamlet’s Ghost has been used in various ways in different productions including one in which Gertrude was allowed to see the Ghost • The dumb show (play within the play) exposes the king • Hamlet’s treatment of women is problematic • The graveyard scene, if not handled properly can seem absurd and foolish
Richard Burbage • Richard Burbage was the first Hamlet. Was Shakespeare the ghost? • Many of the best performances have been documented in print and film beginning with Thomas Betterton in 1661 Richard Burbage Thomas Betterton
The Elizabethan Era Burbage was the first Hamlet, followed by Joseph Taylor. The Globe theatre seems perfectly designed for the play.
17th and 18th centuries Betterton played the role into his 70s and played it in “modern” dress Garrick was the most noted Hamlet of the 18th century...but, unlike his other Shakespeare’s edited the text to conform with tastes of Neoclassicism. For example, after killing Claudius, he exonerated Laertes and cut the return of Fortinbras
19th century – romantic hero • Coleridge was a great commentator upon the play • John Philip Kemble (1783) the first “melancholic” prince • Edmund Kean first played the role in 1814 to great acclaim • Edwin Booth played the role for 100 performances in NY, a first • Henry Irving (1864) played opposite Ellen Terry as Ophelia and was lavish, set in the 6th century • William Poel’s Elizabethan Stage Society production (1881) • John Forbes-Robertsoin (1897) restored the Fortinbrassubplot
Early 20th century • John Barrymore triumphed in London and NY (1925) • Barry Jackson staged a revolutionary “modern dress” Hamlet (1925) • Guthrie Theatre opened in 1964 with a Hamlet in tuxedos and gowns. The titlerole was played byGeorge Grizzard.Jessica Tandy wasGertrude with HumeCronyn as Polonius
Early 20th century • In the 1930s and 40s...Gielgud played role five times as an aristocratic and delicate prince • Olivier’s Hamlet, in contrast, was athletic, masculine and passionate
Late 20th Century • RSC’s first Hamlet staged in 1965 by Peter Hall. In it, David Warner was very clearly anti-heroic...very much a symbol of his time • NicolWilliamson played the role as an outsider on stage and on film • In 1975, the RSC cast Ben Kingsley in the role • Derek Jacobi (1977) at the Old Vic became basis for 1980 BBC production • Michael Pennington (1980) at RSC seemed tame compared to earlier ones
Postmodern Hamlets • 1965 Theatre of Cruelty (Marowitz) presented Collage Hamlet • Joseph Papp’s Naked Hamlet deconstructed the play in 1967 • German director Peter Zadek staged the play in an empty factory in 1977 • German H. Hayme offered an electronic Hamlet in 1979 • Robert Wilson’s Hamlet Monologue (1995) was a one man performance
Inspired in part by the Gielgud/Burton, Kevin Klein played Hamlet at the Public Theatre in 1990. It was broadcast on public television.
Ralph Feinnes and Jude Law both played Hamlet on Broadway Feinnes played the role in 1995 and Law in 2009.
Non-western Hamlets Especially popular in Germany from end of 19th century Performed in Japan since 1880 South Africa productions have been memorable since 1947. Pictured at right, aSouth African productionfrom 1977.
2014 – Benedict Cumberbatch plays Hamlet at Shakespeare’s Globe
Silent film Most notably a 1920 Danish film with a female lead, Hamlet, the Drama of Vengance directed by SvendGade and starring Asta Nielsen is said to have influenced Greta Garbo and Marlene Dietrich
1948 • 1948 (Starring and directed by Laurence Olivier) • Oscar-winner for best picture • Black and white • Highly Freudian and Oedipal
1964 - GAMLET A Russian film directed by GrigoriKozintsev with an adaptation by Boris Pasternak
1964 – Gielgud directs Burton Director John Gielgud made a film of the NY stage production starringRichard Burton and using minimal staging
1967 Director Tony Richardson directed Nicol Williamson as Hamlet and Marianne Faithfull as Ophelia
1990 Directed by Franco Zeffirelliand starring Mel Gibson, Alan Bates, Julie Christie, Helena Bonham-Carter
1996 Kenneth Branaghwas the star and director. He used Blenheim Palace (near Stratford)as Elsinore. It was set in the 19th century with an international cast of stars.
1996 Trevor Nunn discusses the title role featuring excerpts by Olivier, Gielgud, Burton, Schell, Williamson, Kingsley and others in a documentary called THE GREAT HAMLETS
2000 Director Michael Almereyda directed Ethan Hawke in a film which sets Denmark as a modern corporation in NYC
On television • 1960--Maximilian Schell played Hamlet on West German television • 1970--Peter Wood directed a BBC television production with Richard Chamberlain as Hamlet • 1980--Director Rodney Bennett directed for the BBC with Derek Jacobi as Hamlet, Patrick Stewart as Claudius and Claire Bloom as Gertrude
2010 –RSC/PBS Patrick Stewart was once again Claudius in the 2010 RSC production starring David Tennant as Hamlet.
Adaptations and spin-offs • 1868--Ballet by Ambroise Thomas • 1976 pop opera by Cliff Jones called Rockabye Hamlet • Many other ballet versions have been staged with music by Berlioz, Liszt, Copland and Tchaikovsky • 2000--Choreographer Stephen Mills used music by Philip Glass...action was seen as a flashback by Hamlet as he died
Tom Stoppard 1966 – Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead 1977 – Dogg’s Hamlet
Other stageplays • Poor Murderer (1977) by Czech playwright PavelKohout • Hamletmachine (1977) by Heiner Muller (Germany) • I Hate Hamlet (1993) comedy by Paul Rudnick features ghost of Barrymore • Fortinbras (2002) is Lee Blessing’s continuation of the story • Gertrude--The Cry (2003) by English “shock” playwright Howard Barker centers on the sexual life of Gertrude
Film adaptations • To Be Or Not To Be (1942) Ernst Labitsch use a performance of Hamlet by a Polish acting troupe to dupe the Nazis...remade in 1983 by Mel Brooks • The Bad Sleep Well (1960) Akira Kurosawa’s version set in modern Japan • Johnny Hamlet (1972) an American western • A Midwinter’s Tale (1995) a comedy by Kenneth Branagh about an out of work film actor playing Hamlet in a small town church
Others… • Strange Illusion (1945) an expressionistic film by Edgar Ulmer • Blue City (1986) a film noir starring Judd Nelson • Let the Devil Wear Black (1999) a film by Michael Almereyda
Also… • Strange Brew (1983) a comedy with Rich Moranis and Dave Thomas where the foolish protagonists end up at Elsinore Castle, a brewery • Outrageous Fortune (1987) a feminist perspective on the play with Bette Midler and Shelley Long • The Renaissance Man (1994) uses the play against the background of a group of soldiers in training