Hamlet Resource Pack Young Vic
Hamlet Resource Pack Young Vic
Hamlet Resource Pack Young Vic
By William Shakespeare
Contents
1. Hamlet: An Introduction
2. Shakespeare: A Brief Biography
3. Shakespeare’s Plays
4. Synopsis
5. List of Characters
6. Chronology of Hamlet
7. Cast and Creative Team
8. 10 Facts About Hamlet
9. Elizabethan Theatre and The Context of the Play
10.The Tradition of Revenge Tragedy
11.Madness & Melancholy
12.The Act of Acting
13. Playing Hamlet
14.A Brief History of Hamlet on Screen- by Daniel Rosenthal
15. Ideas for Practical Work
16. Bibliography and Further Reading
If you have any questions or comments about this Resource Pack please contact us:
The Young Vic, 66 The Cut, London, SE1 8LZ
T: 020 7922 2800 F: 020 7922 2801 e: info@youngvic.org
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Hamlet
By William Shakespeare
1. HAMLET:
HAMLET: AN INTRODUCTION
Shakespeare’s Hamlet is one of the most famous plays in the world. It has been translated and
performed all over the world, on stage and on screen. Quotations from the play have become embedded
in the language we use today: ‘neither a borrow nor a lender be’, ‘suit the action to the word, the word to
the action’, ‘to be or not to be’, ‘the lady doth protest too much methinks’ - all came from Hamlet. It has
been a major influence on culture and on literature, from numerous critical studies, to new plays and
stories based on the characters. And, for an actor, young Hamlet is a part that everyone seems to aspire
to play.
The play was written sometime between 1599 and 1601. It is difficult to say precisely when, because
publishing worked in a very different way then to now. It was not so easy to simply type, print and copy;
all the texts would have been written by hand.
Three early version of Hamlet exist, called the First Quarto, the Second Quarto and the First Folio1. The
versions are all slightly different – some lines have been added or omitted, and some words are different.
The first quarto of Hamlet was published in 1603 by Nicholas Ling and John Trundell, and printed by
Valentine Simmes. It contains about half the amount of text of the second quarto, which was also
published by Nicholas Ling in around 1604-5. The first folio, which included all of Shakespeare’s works
and was really the first Complete Works of Shakespeare was published in 1623 by Edward Blount and
William & Isaac Jaggard. From these three versions, scholars and directors work to reconstitute the
‘original’ Hamlet, but it is almost impossible to know what the original Hamlet was exactly like.
1
‘Quarto’ and ‘Folio’ are names that actually refer to the size of the paper that the text was printed on: if you imagine a sheet
of paper, fold it once in half so you have a rectangle, then fold it again into a square, then open it out and lay it flat, you have
eight sections, four on the front and four on the back. This was called a quarto. If you just fold the paper once into a
rectangle and then unfold it, you have four sections, two on the front and two on the back. This was called a folio. (Try it with
a normal A4 sheet!).
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Hamlet
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2. S HAKESPEARE:
HAKESPEARE : A BRIEF BIOGRAPHY
Shakespeare was born in Stratford-upon-Avon in 1564 and died there in 1616 aged 52. There is no exact
record of the date of his birth, only a record of his baptism, which was on 26th April 1564. His birthday is
anecdotally celebrated on the 23rd April, the day of the traditional English festival of St George’s.
He was the son of John Shakespeare, who was an alderman (similar to a local councillor) and Mary
Arden who was the daughter of a local farmer, and he was the third of eight children. He went to the
local grammar school where he would have learnt Latin and classics, and in November 1582 at the age
of 18 married Anne Hathaway. She was 26 and apparently the marriage happened in haste – perhaps
because their daughter Susanna was born just six months after. Two years later in 1585, they had twins,
Hamnet and Judith.
William Shakespeare
Between 1585 and 1592, there are no records of what Shakespeare was doing and some scholars have
called this ‘the lost years’. Perhaps he went to London and worked as a stable hand for theatre owners to
try and get into the theatre; perhaps he worked as a school teacher; perhaps he fled Stratford and
disappeared into the city of London because he had been poaching deer from the local landowner.
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However in 1592, the first traces of his work in the London stage start to appear and from then until
around 1614, scholars think he lived mainly in London, writing and acting with his company of players.
After that, he probably retired to Stratford, where he could by then afford one of the most expensive
houses in the town. He died there in 1616. His son Hamnet had died aged 11, and neither of his two
daughters children married. So the Shakespeare line of descendents died when his grandchildren died.
In his will, he famously left his wife Anne his second best bed, though nobody knows if this was an insult
or an act of love. Sometimes people would have saved their ‘best’ bed for their guests, meaning that the
second best bed would have been the Shakespeare’s marriage bed and therefore a gift with great
sentimental value. Like so many things in Shakespeare’s life, we do not really know, and can only
speculate and make up our own version of what we think is true…
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3. SHAKESPEARE’S
SHAKES PEARE’S PLAYS
Shakespeare wrote 38 plays, between 1589 and 1613. Again, there has been a lot of scholarly research
around whether he was really the author of these plays, whether he worked in collaboration with others,
and indeed whether there were other plays he wrote that have not been recorded. However, the accepted
list of Shakespeare’s plays, with the approximate date they were written are:
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1599–
1599–01 Hamlet
1601 The Phoenix and Turtle (Poem)
1601–02 Twelfth Night
1601–02 Troilus and Cressida
1602–03 All’s Well That Ends Well
1602–08 A Lover’s Complaint (Poem)
1604 Measure for Measure
1604 Othello
1605 King Lear
1606 Macbeth
1606–07 Antony and Cleopatra
1606–08 Pericles
1607–08 Coriolanus
1607–08 Timon of Athens
1609–10 Cymbeline
1610–11 The Tempest
1611 The Winter’s Tale
1613 Henry VIII
1613 The Two Noble Kinsmen
So, Hamlet was written well into Shakespeare’s career, when he already had a fair few plays under his
belt!
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4. SYNOPSIS
This is a synopsis of Hamlet in its complete written form. To perform the whole of Hamlet uncut would
take about 4 and a half hours. Some practitioners, like Peter Brook with Qui Est Là, Robert Wilson with
Hamlet: a Monologue, and Robert Lepage with Elsinore have cut, spliced and added to the play so it was
almost unrecognisable. In this version at the Young Vic, some cuts have been made.
‘Something’s
Act 1: ‘Somethi ng’s rotten in the state of Denmark’
The play opens at midnight: in the dark, the cold, and the fog of the castle ramparts. From the start,
there is a sense of haunting. On the surface, all is well in the court of Denmark, where there is an
efficient new King making tactical political decisions and a propitious remarriage. But under the
surface, something unfinished and unresolved has been buried. And as the play opens, it is starting to
rise…
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• The court is gathered to hear Claudius, the newly crowned King of Denmark and Hamlet’s uncle,
address them. He has just married Gertrude, the widow of the late King and Prince Hamlet’s
mother.
• He deals with court business, sending two ambassadors to Norway to deal with young Fortinbras’
threatened invasion, and granting Laertes permission to return to university in Paris.
• He then addresses his nephew. Hamlet is still mourning his father’s death, and his uncle and
mother deem his behaviour to be stubborn and inappropriate.
• Left alone, Hamlet gives his first soliloquy: ‘O that this too too solid flesh’ (line 129). He is
disgusted by the new King, who he believes is not a patch on his valiant and noble father, and by
his mother, whose behaviour he sees as deeply inappropriate, incestuous and grossly sexual.
• Horatio and the watchmen arrive to tell Hamlet about the ghost. He agrees to meet them later
tonight and see if the ghost will talk with him.
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• As Laertes leaves, Ophelia promises to heed her brother’s advice, but also warns him about double
standards. Polonius asks what his advice was and she tells him it was about Hamlet. Polonius
instructs her to stay away from Hamlet; she says she will obey.
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• Hamlet encounters Polonius on his way out and taunts him, calling him a fishmonger, which in
Elizabethan double entendre means a whoremonger.
• Rosencrantz and Guildenstern come to find Hamlet, who smells out that they have been sent for
and demands they confess. However, they have brought news that the Players of the city are on
their way, relegated from their permanent theatre and now a touring company.
• Hamlet welcomes the Players, and asks the First Player to deliver his favourite speech from the
story of the Trojan War. It tells of Pyrrhus’s murder of Priam and Hecuba’s grief at her husband’s
death. It is agreed that the Players will perform a play the next evening called ‘The Murder of
Gonzago’, and the First Player agrees to learn a short extra speech, written by Hamlet and
inserted into the play.
• Alone, Hamlet gives his second soliloquy ‘O what a rogue and peasant slave am I’ (line 501). He
berates himself for his cowardice and inaction in avenging his father’s death, but he fears that the
ghost may be a devil sent to damn him. He decides to use the play to clarify the situation – as it
will closely resemble the true facts of his father’s murder, if the King has a guilty reaction, he will
know the ghost was telling the truth.
Act 3: ‘The play’s the thing wherein I’ll catch the conscience of the king’
By the third act, everyone is acting up. Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are acting the confidents, Ophelia
is acting the virtuous daughter, the players are acting their show. And although he is acting mad, Hamlet
still cannot act – even when the opportunity presents itself, he cannot enact his revenge.
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• Claudius, who was watching, is alarmed by what he has seen and decides to avert danger by
sending Hamlet off to England. Polonius urges him to give it one last chance to find out what is
going on, by engineering and eavesdropping on yet another of Hamlet’s meetings. This time he
suggests Hamlet’s mother Gertrude, tonight after they have watched the Players.
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• Polonius enters to let the King know that Hamlet is on his way to Gertrude’s room and he will
hide and eavesdrop on the conversation.
• Claudius attempts to pray for forgiveness, but cannot: ‘My words fly up, my thoughts remain
below / Words without thoughts never to heaven go’ (line 96-7).
• While the King is on his knees, Hamlet enters. Here is his opportunity to kill his father’s murderer
and enact his revenge. But, for some reason, he cannot do it: he justifies himself with the thought
that to kill the King in prayer would guarantee his entry to heaven, and he does not want to afford
that luxury to this villain. He gives his fourth soliloquy: ‘Now might I do it’ (line 73).
appliance
Act 4: ‘Diseases desperate grown by desperate app liance are relieved, or not at all’
Tension is rising, and the threat that Hamlet poses to the stability of the court and country, and to the
status and lives of its rulers, is increasing. Claudius and Hamlet pit their wits against one another in a
series of quick fire scenes. Claudius is plotting to get Hamlet killed in England, and Hamlet, spurred on
again by accounts of the fiery actions of young Fortinbras, searches for the will to affect his revenge.
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Scene 1
• Claudius discovers a distraught Gertrude, who recounts that Hamlet in his madness has killed
Polonius.
• As he had suspected, Claudius thinks Hamlet is a real danger. Using Rosencrantz and
Guildenstern as escorts, he resolves to send him off to England.
Scene 3
• Claudius confronts Hamlet about Polonius’ murder. Hamlet responds with dark humour telling
him Polonius is at supper ‘Not where he eats, but where he is eaten’ (line19). Death is a leveller.
Claudius tells his errant nephew that he is being sent to England for his own good.
• When he is alone, Claudius reveals that his actual plan is to have Hamlet killed on arrival in
England.
Scene 4
• There is a reminder of the sub-plot of Fortinbras, the young Prince who marches through with his
army and sends a Captain on to greet the Danish King. Hamlet meets the Captain, and
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questioning him, discovers that they are marching on Poland to do battle over a tiny piece of
worthless land.
• Hamlet delivers his fifth and final soliloquy ‘How all occasions do inform against me’ (line 32)
again berating himself that while whole armies are prepared to die defending a worthless piece of
land, he cannot muster the will to enact his revenge his own father’s murder.
Scene 6
• Horatio is sought out by a sailor, who comes in to deliver a letter from Hamlet. Horatio reads the
letter. It tells of Hamlet’s kidnapping by pirates, asks Horatio to direct the sailor to the King to
deliver another letter and to then join Hamlet, which he does.
Scene 7
• Claudius has been telling Laertes about Polonius’ murder and his fears for his own life at the
hands of Hamlet. He explains that he sent him away, rather than having him tried for treason, to
spare Gertrude’s grief and because of Hamlet’s popularity with the general public. But he
intimates that Laertes’ revenge will come.
• They are interrupted by a messenger delivering the letter from Hamlet, which reads that he will
return, alone, tomorrow.
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• Sped on by this news, Claudius and Laertes hatch a plan to kill Hamlet as if by accident.
Claudius will invite Hamlet to fence against Laertes – an invitation which he knows the
competitive Hamlet will accept. Laertes will poison the point of his sword and Claudius will invite
Hamlet to drink from a poisoned chalice.
• Gertrude enters and reports in her ‘There is a willow grows askant a brook’ (line 166) speech that
Ophelia has drowned.
Scene
Scene 1 – The Graveyard
• Two Gravediggers are at work digging a grave, joking together on the theme of suicide, death and
the propriety of Christian burial.
• As one exits to fetch wine, Hamlet enters with Horatio. The Gravedigger continues to dig up skull
after skull from the earth, and finds the skull of Hamlet’s old friend and court jester Yorick,
Hamlet joins the darkly humorous musings on death, the leveller.
• Ophelia’s funeral cortege arrives and by the mutedness of the ceremony Hamlet knows it is the
funeral of a suicide. When he sees Gertrude scattering flowers on her hoped-for daughter in law’s
grave, and Laertes leaping into that grave, he realises it is Ophelia who has died. Hamlet
proclaims that he really did love Ophelia, and the two men attack each other over the grave.
Scene 2
• Hamlet tells Horatio the story of his travels: on the boat to England, an ill-feeling led him to
intercept the letter that Rosencrantz and Guildenstern were carrying, which is how he discovered
Claudius’ instruction for England to kill him on arrival. He replaced the letter with another one,
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signed and sealed with the signet of his father, instructing instead the immediate beheading of the
emissaries themselves.
• Hamlet vows to deal with the murderous Claudius, and expresses his regret at his treatment of
Laertes: after all, he can empathise with a young man grieving the loss of his father.
• Osric, a courtier, arrives with Claudius’ proposal of a fencing match between Laertes and Hamlet.
He has bet that, in a dozen passes, Laertes will not beat Hamlet by more than three hits.
• Hamlet accepts the challenge, telling Horatio he has been practising his fencing. He admits that
he has a strange foreboding sense, but somehow, he has an attitude of calm and acceptance of the
inevitability of his death: if it be now, ‘tis not to come; if it be not to come, it will be now; if it be
not now, yet it will come – the readiness is all (line 193-5); he tells Horatio.
• The Court assembles for the match. Hamlet takes Laertes’ hand and asks for his forgiveness.
Laertes says he accepts it, but they must still duel for the sake of his honour.
• They prepare to play. The King calls for wine and drops a pearl into one cup saying that if Hamlet
wins the first or second point, he will drink to his health.
• The game begins. Hamlet wins the first point, but wants to play another round before he drinks.
He wins a second point, and in celebration Gertrude drinks from the poisoned cup. They play on.
Laertes wounds Hamlet with the poisoned sword, then in the scuffle they exchange swords and
Hamlet wounds Laertes. The Queen falls. Claudius claims she is swooning because of the fight,
but just before dying she tells Hamlet ‘I am poisoned’ (line 290). Hamlet calls treachery and calls
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for the doors to be locked. But Laertes falls, confesses the plot and tells Hamlet that both their
wounds will prove fatal. Hamlet finally runs at the King, wounding him with the poisoned sword,
and he dies. Laertes begs and receives Hamlet’s forgiveness as he dies. Horatio in his grief picks
up the cup to drink poison, but Hamlet urges him to stay live on and tell the story.
• As he dies, Hamlet hears the approach of a marching army and gives young Fortinbras his
blessing to become King.
• Young Fortinbras enters, returning from Poland at the same time as an ambassador from
England brings the news to the King that Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are dead. Horatio
prepares to tell the world the story of what has happened. Fortinbras orders a military funeral
for Hamlet, and his soldiers fire a military tribute.
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5. CHARACTERS
Gertrude
Queen G ertrude
Hamlet’s mother, former wife of King Hamlet, who has retained her role as Queen of Denmark by
marrying her former brother-in-law Claudius
Claudius
Brother of King Hamlet, uncle of Hamlet and new husband of Gertrude, who has just been crowned King
of Denmark
Polonius
Father of Laertes and Ophelia, and an advisor to the King
Horatio
Hamlet’s best friend, also a student at Wittenburg
Laertes
Brother to Ophelia and son of Polonious; studying in Paris
Ophelia
Sister to Laertes and daughter of Polonius; possible lover or confident to Hamlet
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Prince Fortinbras
The heir to Norway’s crown and a military leader
Other Characters
The Players
A troupe of actors who arrive at Court to present their plays
Reynaldo
A servant from Polonius’ retinue – in Shakespeare’s time, noblemen like Polonius would have had an
entourage of men who were paid to look be in service to them
Osric
A servant in the King’s retinue
Gravedigger
An old man, outside the jurisdiction of the Court, who has been a sexton for 23 years, and whose job
would be to maintain and look after the buildings and grounds of the church.
Clown
The gravedigger’s companion
Captain
A captain in Prince Fortinbras’ Norwegian army
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There are numerous references to time in the play, from which we can piece together an idea of when the
events are taking place. Of course, these references are often from a character’s point of view, so it is
debateable how far we can rely on them. Hamlet, for example, clearly exaggerates when he comments in
the Mousetrap scene:
Hamlet: … look you how cheerfully my mother looks, and my father died within’s two hours’
Ophelia: Nay, ‘tis twice two months my lord. (Act 3, Scene 2, Lines 112-113)
It suggests that Hamlet was born 30 years ago, and that Yorick died 23 years ago, when Hamlet was 7.
However, in the different versions of Hamlet the Gravedigger tells us different things. In the First Folio
edition the line reads I have bin sixeteen heere... and in the First Quarto edition, I have been sexton here
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man and boy thirty years is missing, and instead of 23 years he says, here’s a scull hath been here this
dozen year.2
The Gravedigger is also a ‘clown’ character: intended to be darkly humorous and to appeal especially to
the groundlings who could not afford seats in the theatre. So, again, how much we can take his word as
true is debateable.
Perhaps the age of the actor playing Hamlet also affected Shakespeare’s decision about how much time
has passed since the Gravedigger has been in his job.
In his soliloquy O, that this too too solid flesh, Hamlet gives us some clues as to timing. He suggests that
it was about two months since Old Hamlet died:
…That it should come to this,
But two months dead (1.2.138-9)
But, it is a grieving and a seething Hamlet who is revealing this information. He is clearly deeply
affected by his father’s sudden death and his mother’s inappropriate behaviour. In fact, Hamlet makes
three references to time in the speech, and each one gets shorter: from ‘two months dead – nay not so
2
See introduction for more on the different folios of the play
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much, not two’, it becomes ‘a little month’, and then ‘within a month’. Hamlet is he making a point about
his mother’s disloyalty and fickleness – so again, there may well be a touch of the hyperbole.
Opening
Before the Openi ng of the Play
In Norway, Prince Fortinbras begins to round up troops against Denmark to regain Old Fortinbras’s lost
territory.
Prince Hamlet starts some kind of courtship of Ophelia. There is no concrete evidence in the text of the
play as to when the relationship between Ophelia and Hamlet begins - this is something that each director
and cast will have to decide for themselves and will affect how their scenes are played.
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That Night
Hamlet: …I will watch tonight
Perchance ‘twill walk again.’ (1.2.241-2)
The Ghost appears to Hamlet and demands his revenge, setting in motion the main thrust of the play,
including Hamlet’s ‘antic disposition’.
Monthss Later
Approximately Three Month
It is in ‘The Mousetrap’ scene that Ophelia corrects Hamlet’s sense of time and suggests that about four
months have passed since Old Hamlet’s death and therefore around two to three months since the
beginning of the play:
Hamlet: … look you how cheerfully my mother looks, and my father died within’s two hours’
Ophelia: Nay, ‘tis twice two months my lord. (3.2.112-113)
During this period Hamlet has been acting mad and Ophelia has been rejecting his letters and company.
Hamlet: ‘…we’ll hear a play tomorrow… We’ll ha’it tomorrow night.’ (2.2.490-3)
Immediately after the aborted play, Claudius conscience is piqued – Hamlet overhears him, but cannot
kill him in cold-blood.
Hamlet confronts his mother and, in a fit of rage, murders Polonius
Claudius decides to ship Hamlet off to England, and gives a letter to Rosencrantz and Guildenstern to
deliver which commands that Hamlet be killed.
Also, when Claudius talks to Laertes about the duel, he says that
‘…Two months since
Here was a gentleman of Normandy’ (4.7.80-1) who had a conversation with Hamlet about what a fine
fencer Laertes was. So we can assume that two months ago, Hamlet not yet left for England.
So, at Act 4, scene 5, two months have passed when the King and Queen and a just-returned Laertes
witness Ophelia in her ‘madness’.
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Horatio, Claudius and Gertrude receive letters from Hamlet saying he will return tomorrow.
Claudius conspires with Laertes for Hamlet's death.
Ophelia drowns.
John Everett Millais’s 1851 painting Ophelia, which depicts her death
Hamlet returns via the graveyard and the gravediggers. Ophelia’s funeral cortege arrives and Hamlet
confronts Laertes.
Hamlet tells Horatio how he has averted Claudius's murderous plot on the way to England.
Osric invites Hamlet to the duel with Laertes.
They duel: Gertrude, Laertes, Claudius and Hamlet are all killed.
Fortinbras arrives in Elsinore, victoriously returning from Poland.
Using this information, and informed by your own decisions about time in the play, try creating
your own timeline on a big piece of flip chart paper. Draw a line from one end to the other, and
start filling in what happens when in terms of the action of the play. There are points in the play
when a long period of time passes (eg between Act 1 and Act 2, after Hamlet has seen the Ghost
and while he is pretending to be mad) and times when things happen in quick succession (eg the
Players’ arrival, the play, Hamlet’s killing of Polonius, and his confronting of his mother). What
do you notice about the structure of the play?
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The Players:
Guildenstern/Francisco Adeel Akhtar
Horatio Hayley Carmichael
Claudius James Clyde
Gertrude Sally Dexter
Marcellus/Player/Captain Callum Dixon
Barnardo/Player King/Gravedigger Pip Donaghy
Polonius Michael Gould
Ophelia Vinette Robinson
Hamlet Michael Sheen
Rosencrantz/Nurse Eileen Walsh
Laertes Bendict Wong
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1. Hamlet is the most widely performed play in the world. It is estimated that it is being performed
somewhere every single minute of every day.
2. Hamlet is Shakespeare’s longest play and uncut would take between 4 and 5 hours to perform.
Hamlet has 1530 lines, the most of any character in Shakespeare.
3. One of the earliest re-mounts of Hamlet was on board a ship called The Dragon, anchored of the
coast of Sierra Leone in 1607.
4. It is believed that Shakespeare appeared in the play as the Ghost at the Globe.
5. In the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) production of Hamlet in 2009, David Tennant used
a real skull as a prop in the gravedigger scene. The skull had belonged to the composer André
Tchaikowsky who bequeathed it to the RSC when he died in 1982 'for use in theatrical
performance'. David Tennant was the first actor to use the skull on stage in a performance.
6. The first actor to play Hamlet was Richard Burbage, the lead actor in Shakespeare’s company,
The King’s Men.
7. The castle in which the play is set really exists. It is called Kronborg castle and was built in the
Danish port of Helsingør in 1420s by the Danish king, Eric of Pomerania.
8. At the end of every play performed at the Globe, four dancers, two dressed as women, would
perform an upbeat, bawdy song and dance routine called a jig - even if the play was a tragedy like
Hamlet.
9. Where now we say ‘I’m going to see a play’ in Elizabethan times, people talked about ‘going to
hear a play’.
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10. Shakespeare advertises his own work in the play. When Polonius interrupts the players and
proclaims that he enacted Julius Caesar and was ‘accounted a good actor’ in Act 3 scene 2, he is
reminding the audience that he will soon be starring in Shakespeare’s production of Julius Caesar.
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9. ELIZABETHAN THEATRE
THEATRE AND THE CONTEXT OF THE PLAY
The Playhouse
The origins of Elizabethan theatre start with itinerant musicians, mummers, players of morality and
mystery plays. A bit like wandering minstrels, these bands of players would move around from town to
town, manor house to castle, literally singing for their supper, acting out stories and trying to draw in an
audience, perhaps like buskers or street performers might today. Eventually, the players began
constructing temporary stages and putting them up in the courtyards of taverns, or inn-yards, playing to
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an outside crowd. It was not until 1576 that there was a permanent theatre in London, when actor,
manager and theatrical entrepreneur, James Burbage (father of the actor, Richard Burbage) decided to
capitalize on the growing popularity of plays. He managed to get a lease on a piece of land and
permission to build a theatre – which was called, simply, 'The Theatre' and stood in Shoreditch. In the
1580’s, Shakespeare became a member of the resident company of the theatre, which would later
become the Lord Chamberlain’s and then The King’s Men. Over the next 20 years, a series of other
theatres sprung up. They were huge – with capacities of up to 3000 people – that’s about 6 times the
size of the main house at the Young Vic which can house about 450 people. Huge, rough and rowdy, they
were constantly being shut down by the puritanical elders of the city because of the threat of bubonic
plague as well as the general debauched behaviour of the audiences.
James Burbage
The Globe
The lease on the Theatre was due for renewal in 1596, but due to disputes and the death of James
Burbage, the company was forced out. They performed for two years in the neighbouring Curtain
Theatre, but then decided that if they could not rent the ground that the building stood on, they would
have to just move the building. In 1598, they leased a plot near rival theatre, the Rose on the south bank
of the river outside the jurisdiction of the city of London, demolished the Theatre and carried its timber
piece by piece over the river to build a new theatre, the Globe. It opened in 1599. Several members,
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including Shakespeare, became shareholders, having put in the money to fund the scheme, and this
became the permanent home for Shakespeare’s company of actors.
Unsurprisingly, there were no women in the King’s Men – and no women in any theatre company.
Female roles would all have been played by boys, who entered adult companies as apprentices aged 10 –
13, and would play the female roles up until the age of around 20. There were also child acting
companies which these evolved from a tradition of grammar school performances and choirboy practises,
and they were particularly popular with the Royal patrons: when Rosencrantz talks of the ‘eyrie of
children, little eyases, that cry out on the top of question and are most tyrannically clapped for’t’ (Act 2,
Scene 2, Lines 315-6), he is clearly referencing the child acting companies, who were very real rivals in
terms of audiences, patrons and profit.
Producing Plays
With established playhouses and licensed, patronised companies of actors, there came a real need for
dramatists to produce the plays that would fill these new establishments and satisfy the audiences hunger
for novelty.
Writers like Shakespeare did not compose their plays sitting at home, working in isolation and coming up
with the whole thing in advance. First, they had to present their ideas for the plot and the main
characters to the rest of their company. If the lead actors and manager liked it, they would give a down
payment for the play to be written. Knowing the company well, the different actors’ strengths, likes and
dislikes, the characters would often be written with the specific actors in mind. Richard Burbage, for
example, who was a lead actor in The King’s Men, had a prodigious memory for learning lines – and it is
thought that Hamlet, with his 1530 lines, was written for him.
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Then the play would be written, by hand, and distributed to the actors - rather than getting a copy of the
whole play, each actor would receive just the lines of his own part, written out on a piece of parchment to
learn. He would have no idea who else was on stage or what happened in between his scenes until the
rehearsals started. Where now we have a strong concept of the director, who takes overall responsibility
for the direction, design and overall coherence of a play and works in rehearsal to bring this all together,
it would have been up to the individual actor’s in Shakespeare’s theatre to deal with his own entrances,
exits, ‘blocking’, songs, movement and costumes. Once written, plays entered the repertoire, and each
day, the company would present a different play, rehearsing it in the morning and performing it in the
afternoon.
All these conditions meant that theatre in Shakespeare’s time, was a wholly different experience
Productions were rough and ready, spontaneous and living, and adapting to the needs and demands of
their audience. There was no elaborate set, no scene changes, no lighting, no manufactured sound
effects. This was a theatre of shared imagination, where through his words alone, the actor transported
the audience to the foggy ramparts of Elsinore castle, the raging stormy seas, or the magical forest of
Arden.
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Hamlet
By William Shakespeare
Here is a picture of what theatres like The Globe looked like. Audience who could afford a seat, sat in
tiers of stalls that created a full round amphitheatre, completed with the tiring house. Groundlings were
the poorer people, who stood in the pit close to the stage for the performance. The tiring house was a
backstage area where the actors dressed and rested, and then entered the stage through the two doors at
the front. There were possibilities of using different levels in the Globe – the stage, where most of the
action would have happened, but also the upper floor in the tiring house, which would have been useful
for scenes like the famous balcony scene in Romeo and Juliet, and also the under stage space. Through
using a trap door, things could appear or disappear from the stage, for example, the gravediggers may
have used the trap door as Ophelia’s grave, into which Laertes and Hamlet leap and fight. Knowing that
an actor could literally get under the stage gives a bit of a theatrical in-joke to the scene in which Hamlet
34
Hamlet
By William Shakespeare
asks his friends to swear not to reveal what they have seen of the Ghost, and references the booming echo
of this fellow in the cellarage (Act 1, Scene 5, Lines 151).
Shakespeare’s Globe stood on Bankside until 1613, when during a performance of Henry VIII, a stage
cannon set light to the thatched roof and the theatre burned down. Of course, now you can see and feel
what the Globe would have been like, by visiting the reconstructed Globe on the Southbank.
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Hamlet
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Hamlet can loosely be said to belong to a theatrical genre known as revenge tragedy. It was immensely
popular in Elizabethan theatre from around the 1580’s to the 1640’s and tended to always include
similar elements: a wronged avenger, ghosts, murders, madness, disguise, a play-within-a-play, plotting,
suspense, intrigue, and grisly crescendo of on-stage violence.
Thomas Kyd wrote The Spanish Tragedy in around 1585, and is credited with being the initiator of this
new genre. His play was immensely popular, bringing a classical style revenge play to a popular audience
for the first time, and it initiated a long line of revenge tragedies which, in their earliest forms, were real
crowd pleasers, restaged again and again.
Scholars believe that these tragedies were initially influenced by the Roman playwright and philosopher
Seneca whose works from the 1st Century AD started to be translated and performed in 16th Century
England. The most popular were based on Greek mythical stories and characters, for example, Thyestes
(who ate his own children), Medea (who killed her own children) and Agamemnon (who was murdered by
his wife’s lover). They were large scale, spectacular performances in which passions and stakes ran sky
high. Similarly, it is sometimes thought that Italian novella being translated at the time also influenced
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Hamlet
By William Shakespeare
revenge tragedy with their tales of Machiavellian villains, of sexual deceit and bloody vendettas. Other
scholars also chart the influence of the medieval tradition of contemptus mundi on the genre of revenge
tragedy. This means ‘contempt of the world’ and was a tradition preoccupied with the ephemerality of
our mortal lives, the split between the flesh and the spirit, and the inevitability of death. The image of the
memento mori – a man holding a skull as he contemplates is death – was the emblem of this.
Many of the stock elements are still there: ghostly visitations, revenge, madness, and a man holding the
decaying skull bone of the once living royal jester and ruminating on his own mortality. However,
Hamlet is much more complex, sophisticated and human than a conventional Elizabethan revenge
tragedy bloodbath. Whereas in The Spanish Tragedy, revenge is a straight-forward non-negotiable duty
that a family member is honour bound to perform, for Hamlet, revenge is factually and morally
ambiguous. Shakespeare wrote Hamlet not as the stereotype of an avenging protagonist, but as a
psychologically defined human man, with real hopes, fears and emotions. And his achievement was to
satisfy the audiences of the time with a barnstorming, bloody revenge tragedy at the same time as
touching the reality of the human condition through the psychological depths of his characters.
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Hamlet
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But Hamlet, unlike earlier revenging protagonists, really wrestles with the problem of revenge. He is a
complex, psychologically real man forced into an extra-ordinary and super-natural situation. Hamlet
feels the weight of his father’s indictment and knows what custom demands of him, but his individual
sense of morality and ethics and his own intellectual rigour, make him question those demands. So, in
some ways, Hamlet the avenger is an emblem of a clash between an old and a new world order.
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Hamlet
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Hamlet’s madness is a much debated element of the play, especially the question of whether his madness
is ‘real’ or feigned. But as Polonius tells us ‘to define true madness, / What is’t but to be nothing else but
mad?’ (Act 2, Scene 2, Lines 93-4) We can never fully get inside the mind of another, and never fully
understand the unbearable pressures of a man in Hamlet’s position; behaviour that may look ‘mad’ from
an outside perspective may appear entirely logical and sensible inside the mind of a ‘madman’. Also,
there is an accepted social code that labels what it is to be rational, sane and within the boundaries of
‘normal’; if a person chooses to flout those conventions, does it necessarily made him or her mad?
Hamlet is certainly an expert in flouting social mores and conventions, and at Elsinore - especially after
the ghost has appeared and revealed the truth under the veneer - perhaps he has good, sane reason to.
The following chart shows the four humours with the corresponding qualities, characteristics, elements,
and organs where the fluid was produced:-
Hamlet shows qualities of a man with too much black bile, despondent, sleepless and irritable; a
melancholic, or a man suffering melancholy.
Those will a severe imbalance who went ‘mad’, might have been unlucky enough to end up in Bedlam.
Bedlam was a notorious institution for the mentally ill that was a fixture in London from the 13th Century
onwards – a hospital where abuse, appalling conditions, and forced incarceration were the norm. The
playwright Nathaniel Lee who lived in the mid-late 1600’s was in Bedlam for five years, and famously
reported that ‘They called me mad, and I called them mad, and damn them, they outvoted me’3.
3 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bethlem_Royal_Hospital#cite_note-0
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Hamlet
By William Shakespeare
Polonius to shreds, telling him he is a meddling, dull, unattractive old fool (Act 2, Scene 2, Line 190
onwards). It is uncomfortable for Polonius, but Hamlet’s ‘madness’ absolves him of responsibility for
what he is saying and doing. Likewise, it is virtually impossible, given the subservience of the court, for
Hamlet to speak out against his uncle and mother’s marriage, but he can organise a show in which to
attempt to pique them.
Certainly Shakespeare uses the convention of the fool in many of his plays - characters who are given
license to criticize or satirize situations and people because they are somehow outside the accepted
conventions. The madman is in that same adjunct position: meting out brutal truths because they have
absolved themselves of responsibility for what they say and do. But they are always teetering on the edge
of danger. And Hamlet is in a dangerous situation: if he avenges his father’s death, he kills both a man,
which is murder with moral, ethical and religious ramifications, and he kills a king which is treason. He
is stuck between a rock and a hard place.
The shifts in his state of mind, his ‘madness’, speak to this danger and impossibility of his situation. He
satirizes, he improvises, he plays the fool and the madman. He does not know who he can trust in a court
where his mother has remarried, his girlfriend has become the mouthpiece of her father and his two
childhood friends are playing him like a pipe. He has been approached by ghostly apparition, which he
does not know whether to trust, and which has revealed the murder to him alone without witnesses -
Horatio has expressed a fear that the ghost might send into madness: ‘What if it tempt you toward the
flood …/ And draw you into madness? (Act 1, Scene 4, Lines 70-4), and Hamlet himself doubts whether
this vision is to be trusted: ‘The spirit that I have seen / May be a devil’ (Act 3, Scene 1, Lines 551-2).
Grief 4
A hugely important element in thinking about Hamlet and madness must come from a consideration of
his grief. He has just lost his father unexpectedly, and his mother has remarried, very quickly, his own
uncle. His world has been turned upside down and he is reeling from the impact. The court, his
companions and the people he is in contact with seem to have glossed over the tragedy and just moved
on. He feels deeply alone in his grief – it is only with the audience that he expresses his true feelings of
4
Please see the accompanying DVD of interviews with the cast and creative team, for more on the importance of grief and
madness in this production.
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Hamlet
By William Shakespeare
suicidal thought and hopelessness. And in that place of being essentially alone in grief, he ‘loses his
mind’. In modern terms, we might call him depressed.
Hamlet becomes obsessed by death. This may seem a symptom of his madness, but it is little wonder
given that he is surrounded and haunted by death. There is a pervading sense in the play of unfinished
business, things not laid to rest, rites of passage not properly respected, transitions not effectively made.
Hamlet the elder was killed without spiritual preparation, as are Gertrude, Claudius and Laertes during
the course of the play. Proper mourning for the king was not observed. Ophelia was not given full burial
rites because she committed suicide.
In the first three Acts of the play, this ethereal, pervasive sense of death as a figure that haunts the mind,
is contained in the image of Hamlet’s ghost. But after the significant interlude between Acts 4 and 5 in
which Hamlet himself escaped death, his attitude shifts. He famously tells Horatio that ’There’s a divinity
shapes our ends, / Rough-hew them how we will’ (Act 5, Scene 2, Lines 10-11). In the fifth Act, he faces
death not as an intangible, terrifying, haunting ghost, but as a skull, a real, earthy emblem. It is as if he
finally faces the reality of his own death, and this brings him to a sense of acceptance and peace.
It is significant that the final lines of the play are Fortinbras’ orders to give Hamlet a soldier’s funeral, to
observe a full and proper ritual of death. Perhaps things which have haunted and been haunted
throughout the play are finally laid to rest.
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Hamlet
By William Shakespeare
Hamlet, as with many of Shakespeare’s plays, is full of references to actors and acting. In many ways,
this reflects how the theatre of the day functioned. While theatre today often reinforces a divide between
the audience and the performers – with the audience often sitting in silence in the dark while the actors
‘act’ and pretend not to see them - in a theatre like The Globe there much less of a divide. Plays were
performed in the daytime, without lighting or elaborate technology, and without the rules of an audience
having to arrive or leave on time. Actors and audience could clearly see and respond to each other.
Shakespeare’s plays acknowledge the presence of this audience; they are self-conscious and delight in
playing around with their own theatrical conventions.
Hamlet is full of ideas of watching, performance, setting up scenes, acting and pretence. For example,
Polonius regularly plays director – setting up a ‘reading’ scene where Ophelia will play out a duologue
with Hamlet. Claudius directs Laertes as pawn in his own revenge plot, setting up an elaborate fencing
match in order to strike Hamlet out. Even Hamlet himself sets up The Mousetrap to crack Claudius’
social façade and get to the bottom of his story.
Indeed, the character of Hamlet is preoccupied with these themes. He often berates others for playing a
role, for not showing their true selves and not being what they seem: his mother for ‘seeming’ to love his
father, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern for ‘seeming’ to be loyal companions, Ophelia for ‘seeming’ to be
virtuous. But of course, Hamlet himself is a great actor. He tells his mother ‘I know not seems’ (Act 1,
Scene 2, Line 76), but he knows speeches off by heart and is not afraid to deliver them in front of a room
of professionals; he writes lines to be delivered on stage and happily gives his opinions about their
delivery; and he performs his madness with the gusto of a blood thirsty revenge hero.
The irony is that while Hamlet may be able to ‘act’ the actor, he cannot ‘act’ the revenger. He can
perform his part as a madman, but cannot perform his part in avenging his father’s murder. For all his
rhetoric, play-acting and games, the act of killing belongs in a different register. And when he is alone
on stage, he shares this problem with the audience. His soliloquies are not inner monologues which he
speaks to himself. He addresses a large audience, baring his soul to them and letting them into his inner
process.
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Hamlet
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In some ways, Hamlet is a metaphor for the role of the actor himself; the man or woman who
experiences and shares emotions real enough to move an audience, but who is after all just playing make
believe. The part of Hamlet demands a high level of self-awareness from the actor about being an actor.
There is no hiding behind the part of Hamlet, and actors though the ages have been simultaneously
attracted to and daunted by playing this complex, gruelling and thrilling role.
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Hamlet
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It seems there is a Hamlet for every generation. He is a character who has endured through history, who
continues to fascinate and mesmerise audiences, whose questions and dilemmas are as insistent now as
they were in 1600. William Hazlitt, a writer and editor in the early 1800’s, said that ‘it is we who are
Hamlet’; and Oscar Wilde in the late 1800’s that ‘there is no such thing as ‘Shakespeare’s Hamlet’…
there are as many Hamlet’s as there are melancholics’. Somehow, the character of Hamlet does not age
and become irrelevant, but continues to have something to say to every generation of actor that plays him
and audience that witnesses him. Hamlet ‘holds a mirror up to nature’ not just with Claudius, but with
the actual audience watching him in the here and now. He brings to life themes which are universal and
enduring.
Playing Hamlet is a rite of passage for the younger actor and has been described ‘the supreme test for a
performer in the earlier half of his career’5. The experience must be a daunting one, not only because of
the weight of historical tradition on the actor’s shoulders, but also because the part demands a brutal
honesty.
Michael Pennington, an actor who has played Hamlet several times and written a book about the
experience, said that ‘the part is like a pane of clear glass, disclosing the actor to a greedy audience;
playing it changing you for the good and for the better.’ Kenneth Branagh has called it a ‘naked, X-ray
role’ and said that playing it is like an emotional obstacle course6. Central to playing Hamlet are the five
soliloquies, when he directly addresses the audience and lets them into the innermost workings of his
mind. He is constantly berating the other characters for playing roles and not showing the truth of who
they are under their social masks. In the soliloquies, the actor playing Hamlet has to strip off his mask
and let the audience see his (or her) true vulnerability.
5
Paul Taylor in The Independent at Sunday on http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/theatre-
dance/features/hamlet-the-hardest-part-to-play-so-who-is-fit-to-wear-the-crown-464173.html
6
Both quoted in an interview at www.bbc.co.uk/archive/hamlet/8529.shtml
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But for all its emotional difficulty, the part is also forgiving, according to Pennington. He describes how
it mutates to accommodate the individual actor and adapt to his personality. So as well as demanding
honesty and openness, it also contains and supports. In an interview with Simon Russell-Beale and Sam
West, who both played Hamlet in 2000-2001, Simon says of Hamlet ‘it is the most hospitable part there
is….it is so broad, I can see no logical reason why anybody can’t play it’7. It is this coalescing between
the individual actor’s personality, Shakespeare’s text, and the spirit of the time that can create this
simultaneous sense of the very specific and the universal.
7
See interview with Sarah Comptom at http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/4723170/How-to-play-Hamlet.html
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By William Shakespeare
David Garrick
In the 19th Century, Edmund Kean, one of the most highly regarded actors of the time, was the first
person to dispense with Hamlet’s royal costume and play him as a serious, introverted individual in plain,
every day clothes. Slightly later in 1899 Sarah Bernhardt, who had been a courtesan before becoming a
renowned actress, played a Hamlet first on stage and then on screen in a two minute long silent version
of the play called Le Duel d’Hamlet.
Sarah Bernhardt
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By William Shakespeare
In 1911, the Moscow Arts Theatre produced Hamlet with Stanislavsky as director and Gordon Craig as
designer. Both were huge theatrical figures of their time and have had lasting legacies on theatre today -
Stanislavsky with his pioneering method of psychological realism, and Gordon Craig with his vision of
stage sets as symbolist interpretations of inner states of mind.
During the 20th Century in Britain, John Gielgud played the part many times, as did Laurence Olivier who
also directed it with Peter O’Toole in the title role in the inaugural performance of Hamlet at the
National Theatre in 1963. The play ran again at the National Theatre in 1989 directed by Richard Eyre
and with Ian Charleston playing Hamlet, after Daniel Day-Lewis left the production. Day-Lewis
collapsed on stage during the scene when the Ghost first appears to Hamlet, started sobbing
uncontrollably and refused to go back on the stage. Allegedly, he had seen the Ghost of his own father.
When Ian Charleston took over the role, his friend and fellow actor Ian McKellan commented that it
looked as if he had been practising all his life. Seven weeks later, he died of AIDS.
Hamlet continues to excite director and actors, and over the last decade many well-known actors have
taken on the role. Hamlet has been produced twice at the National Theatre since the turn of this century
with Simon Russell Beale in 2001 and Rory Kinnear in 2010; and three times for the RSC, with Sam
West in 2001, Toby Stephens in 2004, and David Tennant of Doctor Who fame in 2008. Other recent
include Christopher Ecclestone at the West Yorkshire Playhouse in 2002; Ben Whishaw at the Old Vic in
2002 and John Simm at the Sheffield Crucible Theatre in 2010. Jude Law played Hamlet at the Donmar
Warehouse in 2009, followed by a run on Broadway. This will be Michael Sheen’s first time playing
Hamlet; Ian Rickson’s first time directing a Shakespeare play, and the second time Hamlet has been seen
at the Young Vic in the last 10 years.
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14.
14. A BRIEF HISTORY OF HAMLET ON SCREEN
by Daniel Rosenthal
Type “Hamlet” into the Title Search on the Internet Movie Database, hit Return and up pops a list of
almost 150 film and television productions, spanning dozens of countries and more than 100 years.
From a silent short made in France in 1907, to the BBC version of the Royal Shakespeare Company
(RSC) revival starring David Tennant in 2009, Hamlet’s popularity on the world’s stages has been
matched on small and big screens – to such an extent that in 2004 an American radio documentary
about Shakespearean cinema chose a mock-exasperated title: “How Many Hamlets Can There Be?”.
In the silent era, the most remarkable adaptation was Hamlet The Drama of Vengeance (1920), a two-
hour German melodrama. The plot blends Shakespeare, Saxo-Grammaticus’ 12th-century Danish saga of
Prince Amleth (who avenges his father’s murder by his wicked uncle, Fengo), and The Mystery of
Hamlet (1881), in which American scholar Edward P. Vining argued that the Prince was in fact a
woman. The film sees Gertrude give birth to a daughter just as King Hamlet is ‘mortally’ wounded in
battle. To preclude a dangerous power vacuum, Gertrude proclaims that the kingdom has acquired a
male heir, only for the king to recover. To conceal the deception, the royal couple raise their princess as
a prince, played as an adult by Asta Nielsen, one of the great stars of European silent cinema.
Her casting redefines Hamlet’s plot (a woman assumes the traditionally male role of the avenger seeking
retribution for a father’s murder), and introduces unrequited love: this Hamlet adores the virile Horatio,
much as the disguised Viola loves Orsino in Twelfth Night. When Horatio falls for Ophelia, Hamlet
decides to woo Polonius’ daughter “to lead her away from my beloved” and ‘his’ existential crisis is
articulated in fleeting inter-titles: “I am no man and may not be a woman!”
Fatally wounded by Laertes’ foil, Hamlet expires in Horatio’s arms. Horatio accidentally touches her
breasts and exclaims: “Death uncovers your tragic secret – your golden heart was a woman’s!” The line
is hilarious and heartbreaking: Hamlet might have reigned as Queen not King, and, unlike Shakespeare’s
hero, dies within reach of romantic fulfilment.
In the sound era, no original-text adaptation (by which I mean a film retaining Shakespeare’s language)
has had a greater impact than the 1948 version starring and directed by Laurence Olivier, who had
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already won a Special Academy Award for Henry V (1944). At Denham Studios near London, Olivier’s
designers Roger Furse and Carmen Dillon built a stylized, cliff-top Elsinore of cold grey stone, long,
arched passageways and steep, winding staircases – a place clearly medieval yet somehow timeless: an
ideal setting for a black-and-white adaptation that is part grim fairy tale, part psychological case study.
Olivier’s screenplay omitted Reynaldo, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, the second Gravedigger and
Fortinbras, and two of Hamlet’s soliloquies – all told, about half the text. The cornerstone of his
performance echoed his stage Hamlet from 1937, when an essay by Ernest Jones, biographer of
Sigmund Freud, had convinced him that Hamlet suffered from an Oedipus complex: repressed desire for
Gertrude and jealousy of Claudius largely explained, wrote Olivier, “what is wrong with the prince”. As
Gertrude he cast Eileen Herlie, who at 27 was 13 years his junior and looks young enough to be
Hamlet’s wife. The result is a haunting but reductive interpretation; there is much more to Hamlet than
Olivier’s summation, in an opening voiceover, that “This is the story of a man who could not make up his
mind.” In 1948-49, however, the film was lavishly praised and its $3m takings at cinemas in America
were exceptional for any non-Hollywood production. It remains the only Shakespeare feature to have
won the Best Picture Oscar, while Olivier’s remains the only Shakespeare performance to have won Best
Actor.
Olivier’s influence can be seen in the black-and-white cinematography of the next major adaptation,
director Grigori Kozintsev’s 1964 Russian epic, which uses Boris Pasternak’s translation of
Shakespeare. Totalitarian Soviet society is refracted through Hamlet’s belief that “Denmark’s a prison”.
Inside a vast Elsinore, Claudius’ obsession with surveillance ensures that as Hamlet (the blond, brooding
Innokenti Smoktunovsky) walks through wide stone halls he is spied on by Claudius, Polonius,
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, armoured guards and courtiers (in exquisite sixteenth-century costumes).
As he admits the whereabouts of Polonius’ corpse, a scribe notes down his testimony, as though in a
show trial (in 2010, director Nichoals Hytner presented a theatrical take on omnipresent surveillance
within Elsinore by setting his National Theatre Hamlet in the present in an unnamed former Soviet
republic, where Hamlet was monitored by Claudius’ armed bodyguards, CCTV and a hidden microphone).
Kozintsev retains the Norway sub-plot and on the film’s original release, some viewed the climax as
allegory: the tyrannical Claudius/Stalin is replaced by the more liberal Fortinbras/Khrushchev (who had
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succeeded Stalin in 1953), whose ‘thaw’ may cleanse rotten Denmark/Russia. Ironically, the film opened
as Leonid Brezhnev’s harsher regime took hold.
Kozintsev had a budget of more than £40m at today’s prices; the hour-long experimental video made in
1976 by Celestino Coronado, then a student at London’s Royal College of Art, cost £3,000. Shooting
almost entirely in close-ups, Coronado presents Hamlet’s divided personality with a dazzling casting
coup: he is played by blue-eyed, identical twins David and Anthony Meyer. In soliloquy and dialogue, we
see Hamlet literally talking to himself. The “sweet” prince tells Ophelia “I did love you once.” – but his
‘evil’ twin yells “I loved you not!”
Where Coronado’s casting was innovative, Franco Zeffirelli’s choice of leading man for his 1990 Hamlet
was wildly improbable: Mel Gibson, a Shakespeare novice best known as the violent hero of the Mad
Max and Lethal Weapon films. Zeffirelli, however, whose 1968 Romeo and Juliet was a huge box-office
success, knew that Gibson’s presence could bring Shakespeare to a mass audience. Zeffirelli jettisoned
60% of the text to achieve a 135-minute running time and, apart from retaining Rosencrantz and
Guildenstern, followed Olivier’s cuts and overtly Oedipal interpretation so closely that the film
sometimes resembles a colour remake of that 1948 adaptation. Gibson acquits himself competently, but
the rest of the characters are left with so little to say that they verge on caricature: Glenn Close’s
Gertrude is a lusty widow and Alan Bates’ Claudius a Henry VIII-like carouser; Helena Bonham Carter’s
distracted, fidgety Ophelia seems half-mad from the outset, while Ian Holm’s Polonius is an absurd
chatterbox.
The severe cutting in all these adaptations only underlines the importance of Kenneth Branagh’s decision
as adapter, director and leading actor to follow his films of Henry V (1989) and Much Ado About
Nothing (1993) with a four-hour Hamlet presenting the complete text used when he starred in an RSC
production in 1992. Almost half a century after Olivier, a filmmaker at last did justice to the domestic
and political plots, and to the complexity of Hamlet and the supporting characters.
The action was brought forward to the late 19th century, sets (dominated by a vast hall of mirrors) and
costumes evoking the last days of the Russian Tsars. Branagh chose the 1890s because, as he put it in an
interview for the book Shakespeare, Cinema, Fin de Siècle (2000), they presented an environment “in
cinematic terms, where [audiences] can accept people speaking in heightened language.” He has always
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resisted setting Shakespeare in the present, “where you don’t expect people to talk in a certain kind of
way” – which is why American director Michael Almereyda’s Hamlet (2000) was both daring and
problematic.
Almereyda moved Hamlet to present-day Manhattan, where Denmark becomes the Denmark
Corporation, based in the Elsinore Hotel. As Kyle MacLachlan’s sleek, power-suited Claudius succeeds
his murdered older brother as CEO and resists a takeover bid from Fortinbras, Almereyda wants us, he
wrote in the introduction to his published Hamlet screenplay, to accept that “global corporate power is
as smoothly treacherous and absolute as anything going on in a well-oiled feudal kingdom.” He also uses
the play’s preoccupation with eavesdropping to comment on 21st-century media saturation: fax machines,
phones, answerphones, TV and CCTV screens are omni-present; Ophelia wears a wire-tap for the “Get
thee to a nunnery” scene and Hamlet (the mumbling Ethan Hawke) makes experimental digital films
(including “The Mousetrap”, the play-within-the-play).
The combination of high-tech realism and Shakespearean language throws up glaring incongruities
between imagery and dialogue. “Watching the movie requires a certain suspension of disbelief,” the
director acknowledged, hoping audiences would “forgive words that don’t seem right”, but that is
impossible when, for example, Hamlet’s friends Marcella (a female version of Marcellus) and Bernardo
address him as “My Lord”, not in ironic, college student endearment, but in earnest.
Genre Adaptations
Adaptation s
It is Shakespeare’s ‘difficult’ language that provides the steepest barrier to films of his plays finding
mainstream success; for millions, his pentameters evoke obligatory studies, not an entertaining night at
the multiplex. This has led many filmmakers to make “genre adaptations”, translating Shakespeare’s
archaic text into straightforward contemporary dialogue while retaining the storylines and characters, to
make a genre film. Thus Macbeth and King Lear have been reinvented as urban crime dramas (Joe
Macbeth in 1955; My Kingdom in 2000) and The Tempest as a Hollywood sci-fi adventure (Forbidden
Planet, 1956).
The corporate settings of two genre adaptations of Hamlet were influences on Michael Almereyda’s film.
The first is The Bad Sleep Well (Japan, 1961), one of several shakai-mono (social problem films) made
by Akira Kurosawa to comment on his country’s post-war woes. Having turned Macbeth into a samurai
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warlord in Throne of Blood (1957), in The Bad Sleep Well he used Hamlet to condemn public sector
corruption. His Hamlet surrogate is Koichi Nishi, who marries Kieko, lame, fragile daughter of his boss,
Iwabuchi, Vice-President of the Public Corporation for Land Development, which has taken a massive
bribe from a construction firm. Iwabuchi had earlier driven Nishi’s father to suicide and now the hero
masks his vengeful intent with a fake persona; he has swapped identities with his friend and accomplice
Itakura (Horatio). The widowed Iwabuchi is thus a conflation of Claudius and Polonius: responsible for
the death of the hero’s father, and father to the woman Hamlet loves, Kieko (Ophelia), and her
hotheaded brother, Tatsuo (Laertes). The climax of this powerful morality tale sees Nishi’s hesitation
allow Iwabuchi to have him murdered; corruption goes unpunished, the bad continue to sleep well.
In the second genre adaptation, the Finnish director Aki Kaurismäki turned tragedy into bathos in his
spoof, Hamlet Goes Business (1987). Here, Old Hamlet, president of a Helsinki conglomerate, is
poisoned by his managing director, Klaus, who marries the boss’ wife, Gertrud, and tries to sell the
business in order to gain control of a Swedish manufacturing company specializing in rubber ducks. He
is defied by Gertrud’s son, Hamlet, a horny, gluttonous slob – about as far away from Olivier’s
handsome, swashbuckling hero as can be imagined.
Two directors have transformed Hamlet into action-packed adventures. The Italian Enzo Castellari’s
spaghetti Western Johnny Hamlet (1967) opens as handsome Confederate soldier Johnny Hamilton (the
Hamlet counterpart) returns home from the American Civil War to Ranch Elseñor (a lovely Tex-Mex-
Shakespearean pun) to discover that his father has been murdered by his uncle, Claude. As he seeks
revenge, Johnny is reunited with his pre-war girlfriend, Emily (Ophelia), daughter of the corrupt local
Sheriff, Polomo (Polonius). There are occasional, one-line stabs at Hamlet-esque philosophy, but the
rest is violence: a string of mindless shootouts and fistfights.
Feng Xiaogang’s The Banquet (China, 2006) clothed the skeleton of Hamlet with the intrigues, doomed
romance and gravity-defying martial arts sequences of Zhang Yimou’s House of Flying Daggers (2004).
In 904AD, Crown Prince Wu Luan (equivalent to Hamlet) loves Wan (Gertrude), but exiles himself
when his father the Emperor claims her as Empress. Three years later, his uncle, Li, murders the
Emperor, usurps the throne and marries Wan. As Wu Luan seeks retribution at home he falls for a
demure palace attendant, Qing (Ophelia), whose brother is General Yin Sun (Laertes); their father is
bearded, sagacious Minister Yin (Polonius). The superhuman swordplay repeatedly undermines gripping
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chamber drama, in which the ice-cool Wan is the most intriguing Shakespearean counterpart: Gertrude
reimagined as a childless, scheming femme fatale, reminiscent of Lady Macbeth.
This survey bears testimony to the astonishing breadth and depth of Hamlet as a performance text whose
appeal reaches across all national boundaries. No film or stage production can ever hope to give us a
‘definitive’ interpretation; the play’s political, emotional, theological and philosophical seams are so rich
that they can be mined selectively by film-makers and theatre directors to emphasize specific elements –
the mother-son relationship for Laurence Olivier, say, or the corrupting effects of power for Akira
Kurosawa – and each version holds the mirror up to the society in which it is made.
• Daniel Rosenthal is the author of 100 Shakespeare Films (BFI Publishing, 2007) and regularly
lectures on Shakespeare and film at schools around England
(see http://shakespeareonfilm.com/lectures.html).
Select Filmography
Unless indicated in square brackets, these titles are available on DVD via amazon.co.uk.
Hamlet The Drama of Vengeance (1920) Dir: Sven Gade [available from www.edition-filmmuseum.com]
Hamlet (1948) Dir: Laurence Olivier
Hamlet (1964) Dir: Grigori Kozintsev
Hamlet (1976) Dir: Celestino Coronado [unavailable]
Hamlet (1990) Dir: Franco Zeffirelli
Hamlet (2000) Dir: Michael Almereyda
Hamlet (2005) Dir: Stephen Cavanagh
Genre Adaptations
The Bad Sleep Well (1960) Dir: Akira Kurosawa
Johnny Hamlet (1967) Dir: Enzo Castellari
Hamlet Goes Business (1987) Dir: Aki Kaurismäki
The Banquet (2006) Dir: Feng Xiaogang
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Claudius’ Court
Act 1 Scene 2
This is the first time we meet the King, the Queen and the courtiers. It is also the first time we meet
Hamlet. The opening scene was a misty outdoor scene, a ghostly prelude, and an introduction to the
underclasses and the underbelly of the court. The next scene is a very sudden shift to the glossy veneer of
courtly life that Claudius is trying to create.
Read Claudius’ speech and divide it into his different pieces of ‘business’ that he is dealing with here.
Think about staging the court and what space says about status. Where are the courtiers, the
ambassadors, Laertes, Polonius and Hamlet standing in relation to Claudius and the Queen?
When you watch the performance, think about this court space. What is the atmosphere that is being
created in this court? What is the veneer? Are there clues already that all is not as it seems under the
surface? How do you know? And is there a way, spatially, that hamlet’s discontent and suspicion are
being shown?
A Space Exploration:
This is an exploration which shows how much you can say simply by where you choose to position yourself
in space.
Define a large playing space. Have one person enter the space and take up a position somewhere. Then a
second person goes into the space and takes up a position. The first person moves and then second
person responds, and so on, like a silent conversation. Think about the middle, the edges, the corners, a
low to the ground position, a far-away position, a high-up position. Without there having been any
intentions set, see what stories and relationships starts to emerge.
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Act 3, Scene 1
To be, or not to
to be
Hamlet’s third soliloquy is his most famous, and there are as many interpretations as there are actors.
Look for where Shakespeare keeps this rhythm clean and where he shifts the rhythm. What effect does it
have to shift the rhythm?
Act 3, Scene 1
Ophelia & Hamlet
Think about what has happened between Hamlet and Ophelia before this scene. What do we know from
the text has happened between them? Look at Act 1 scene 2, when Laertes and Polonius were giving
advice to her about Hamlet, and remember Act 2 scene 1 when she reported Hamlet’s ‘mad’ visit to her
room.
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Make a list of the facts around their relationship and the questions: for example, FACT: she has at some
point received ‘remembrances’ from Hamlet which she has ‘longed long to re-deliver’ (Act 3, Scene 1,
Line 94), but QUESTION: what are they, and when and under what circumstances did he give them to
her?
Improvise a scene before the start of the play, between Hamlet and Ophelia, perhaps when she received
these remembrances.
Improvise the scene when Hamlet visits Ophelia in her chamber and behaves ‘madly’.
Read the duologue in pairs. Find out the meaning of any words you don’t know, and establish what they
are each saying to the other with each sentence.
In this duologue, Ophelia has been ordered by her father to break up with Hamlet, and she knows her
father is watching the exchange. Does she let on? Does Hamlet know he is being watched? At what point
does he realise? What difference does it make to how he behaves? Try different versions of the scene,
where Hamlet knows he is being watched, where he does not know he is being watched, where Ophelia is
trying to tell him that he is being watched. See what differences they make.
What do you think about their relationship, and about how Hamlet treats Ophelia?
Act 3, Scene 2
The Dumb Show
The prologue to The Mousetrap is a dumb show. Act out the stage directions in a group. Try a version
where the movement is tiny and very subtle, almost naturalistic, and try a version in a heightened,
melodramatic form where the characters strike poses.
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The closet scene between Hamlet and Gertrude is when Hamlet confronts his mother about her
remarriage to Claudius and reveals that her former husband did not die accidentally as she believed, but
was murdered. It is also Gertrude’s chance, spurred on by Polonius, to get to the bottom of Hamlet’s
behaviour and so save him from the measured punishment of Claudius.
What is the effect of the rhythm of these lines? Hamlet takes what his mother says and turns it back on
her. What does it tell you about how he is feeling, and about the relationship between Hamlet and his
mother?
Just a scene before, Hamlet had the opportunity to kill Claudius and get his revenge. Now, he kills
Polonius behind the arras. Why didn’t he kill Claudius then and why does he kill Polonius now? Think
about the emotional motives of Hamlet. What does this say about his state of mind?
Read the scene. Think about the contrasts that Hamlet sets up between his father and his uncle. How
were these two men different? What is Hamlet’s argument to his mother? Think about Gertrude’s’
response – how are Hamlet’s words affecting her?
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16.
16. B IBLIOGRAPHY AND FURTHER READING
Hamlet, ed. P Edwards, The New Cambridge Shakespeare, Cambridge University Press 2003
- the play text with excellent introduction and explanatory notes
Shakespeare: An Illustrated Stage History, ed. J Bate & R Jackson, Oxford University Press, 1996
- great resource on theatre in Shakespeare’s era and through the ages
Freeing Shakespeare’s Voice, The Actor’s Guide to Talking the Text, Kirsten Linklater, Theatre
Communications Group 1995
- a really interesting practical book with practical voice work exercises
Guide, Michael Pennington, Nick Hern Books, 1996
Hamlet, A User’s Guide
- Pennington has played Hamlet five times and this is his interesting anecdotal take on the play and its
performance
Shakespeare on Stage
Stage, by Julian Curry, Nick Hern Books, 2010
- with a chapter from Jude Law about his experience playing the Dane
Shakespeare’s Advice to the Players, by Peter Hall, Oberon Books, 2003
- Peter Hall gives clear and good introductions to iambic pentameter and Shakespeare’s other language
devices.
Some interesting articles from recent actors and theatre critics on the internet:-
Hamlet: The hardest part to play, so who is fit to wear the crown?
by Paul Taylor on the Independent website
http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/theatre-dance/features/hamlet-the-hardest-part-to-play-
so-who-is-fit-to-wear-the-crown-464173.html
- an article on different Hamlet’s of the last 50 years
The Role to Die For
by Michael Billington on the Guardian website
http://www.guardian.co.uk/stage/2008/jul/31/theatre.shakespeare
- another interesting retrospective on some recent actors playing Hamlet
How to Play Hamlet
By Sarah Comptom on the Telegraph website
www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/4723170/How-to-play-Hamlet.html
- actors Sam West and Simon Russell Beale talk about playing Hamlet
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