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News: Pubs and theatre. An age-old pairing.
This exciting project will no doubt resonate with anyone that has ever stepped into a pub, so this February, grab your pint of Drunken Nights and witness something completely original and unique.
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News: The 28 Day Project launches wonderful opportunities
The 28 Day Project is an exciting initiative offering emerging talent a step into the film business.
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Have you got the Star Wars X Factor?
Thousands turned away at open auditions after standing in the rain for hours.
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News: TheatreCraft returns to help young people’s backstage careers
The 8th annual event returns to the Royal Opera House later this month.
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BLOG: Theatre: the best casino shows around the world
Casinos around the world offer some of the best theatrical entertainment you can find.
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BLOG: 5 Best Actors in Superhero Cinema
Is “superhero” acting any less challenging?
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Blog: Films to study for inspiration
Watching great actors can often inform your own work.
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Blog: Shakespeare experimenting with the limits of contemporary drama
Briony Rawle heads to Yorkshire and takes a closer look at Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale.
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Review: Bat Boy, Southwark Playhouse ✭✭✭
A campy fun musical with bite screams Douglas Mayo.
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Review: Visitors, Arcola Theatre ✭✭✭✭
Barney Norris first full-length play is an exquisitely written examination of love and loss, writes Alex Delaney.
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Review: 1984, Almeida Theatre ✭✭✭✭✭
This fresh vision of 1984 feels like a rediscovery of Orwell’s dystopia, writes Sophia Longhi.
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Review: Secret Theatre - Show 4, Lyric Hammersmith ✭✭✭✭
This review comes with a capitalised, emboldened and even italicised, SPOILER ALERT. That should do, writes Briony Rawle.
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Review: Hamlet, Royal Shakespeare Theatre ✭✭✭✭✭
Jonathan Slinger’s Hamlet for the RSC is a triumph according to Emily Hardy.
Jonathan SlingerThere’s little left to say about Hamlet, every corner analysed, scrutinised and explored by scholars and practitioners alike. But David Farr, whilst remaining faithful to the text, has conjured an undeniably potent production, newly relevant and devastating.Jon Bausor’s masterful design situates the play, not inside castle walls, but within a dated village hall (equipped for fencing classes), complete with wooden benches, stackable chairs, a solitary helium balloon in the rafters, mucky skylights and parquet flooring. As events unfold the set adorns each used prop like a scar - champagne bottles, bibles, antlers … corpses. There is no escaping the symbolic relevance of what has come to pass.Jonathan Slinger takes gold with a performance so rare, so pellucid, so alive that any pre-supposition of a naive, foppish, hesitant Hamlet is irradiated
Farr’s direction steers the plot away from despotism (superbly concreted by Slinger’s ironic, blasé use of the plastic crown in the final scene) and instead offers a psychological exploration of the ‘un-breakable’ bond between blood relatives. Greg Hicks’ slight Claudius is infuriatingly calm and rational, but his later shifts are so expertly delivered that his vices seem to seep out, like hot lava from his pores. Charlotte Cornwell’s Gertrude is brilliantly torn. Struggling to detach herself from her son and her late husband she writhes in agony at the sight of Hamlet’s evocative polaroid pictures. Ultimately a “face without a heart,” she coolly buries her pain in the presence of Claudius and Hamlet sees his mother too has slipped away from him. However, it is the heart wrenching, fleshy appearance of the ghost, (played also by Hicks) which loads Hamlet with the ammunition for revenge. The desperate figure, likable and human, clings onto and cradles his son, pleading to be avenged and remembered. This is the first of many moments that induced tears; the audience empathise with Hamlet’s loss of a father rather than the country’s loss of a King. Also notable is Farr’s brave, if slightly odd, handling of the play within a play. The murder plot is delivered through three, contrasting forms of theatrical presentation: Elizabethan, gothic/90’s rock and naturalism. These varying forms stir the rage of Claudius but they also provide a fascinating dichotomy between productions past, and the tremendous production here present.
The cast and band warrant exceptionally high praise, however Jonathan Slinger takes gold with a performance so rare, so pellucid, so alive that any pre-supposition of a naive, foppish, hesitant Hamlet is irradiated. In its place comes a bespectacled, awkward 40-something, tortured by overwhelming feelings of love for his family, his friends and his girl. Fiercely loyal, he is physically incapable of coming to terms with betrayal, more fatal than any stab wound. Slinger’s Hamlet regresses during the course of the play, perhaps in a desperate bid to re-connect with his mother. Reduced to whining, waddling and stamping, Slinger painfully treads upon the remaining wedding confetti that lingers on the ground as a constant reminder of Gertrude’s second marriage. Grunting, groaning and dripping with humanity, Slinger’s Hamlet leaves the engrossed audience no option but to hang on his every word until, of course, “the rest is silence.”***** (5 stars)Runs until 28th SeptemberMore infoPublished on March 28, 2013 · Filed under: Featured, Reviews; Tagged as: Charlotte Cornwell, David Farr, Hamlet, Jon Bausor, Jonathan Slinger, Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Shakespeare








says:
Apart from Michael Billington’s review you seem to be the only reviewer to understand this particular production of ‘Hamlet’. Your review truly captures the themes and nuances that David Farr focused on. The performances are breathtakingly powerful expressing grief and depression to their highest degree. Thank you.
says:
Superb, driven production full, dare one say it, of drama, and emotional insight.
For example the cruel ‘nunnery’ scene is partly mitigated, at Ophelia’s funeral, by Hamlet’s remorseful, grief-stricken declamation, ‘I loved Ophelia ‘.
How Slinger manages to burden three simple words with such pain is miraculous.
Also remarkable was the superb Pippa Nixon’s Ophelia, and as a practical detail, also her corpse, which is on-stage for the rest of Act 5.
I was in a position to watch her very closely, and such was her immobility that, until she got up at the curtain, I was convinced that she was a forensic mannequin!
There is not a dull moment or weak performance in the whole production.