Set play: Hamlet

11th May 2001, 1:00am

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Set play: Hamlet

https://www.tes.com/magazine/archive/set-play-hamlet

Steven Pimlott’s modern-dress production is the epitome of “director’s theatre”. It’s good to report that it works brilliantly. Consistently inventive and surprising, it remains true to Shakespeare’s text, and presents the corrupt world of Elsinore and Hamlet’s mental anguish with admirable clarity.

The style is unrelentingly contemporary. There are rifles and automatic weapons, camcorders and video screens. Fortinbras has deafening air cover for his march on Poland. Polonius and Claudius are despatched with pistol shots. The play opens with searchlights sweeping the audience.
This is a state under threat, and one that keeps a watchful eye on its citizens.

On the remodelled, huge, bare stage of Stratford’s main theatre, Pimlott creates an all too believable modern political world. Claudius’s courtiers greet him with enthusiastic hand-clapping. In their pin-striped suits they pointedly resemble New Labour apparatchiks . But Pimlott gives their allegiance a cynical twist. At the play’s end, they welcome the new ruler Fortinbras with a mirror image of how they saluted Claudius.

Samuel West delivers a memorable Hamlet, quite unlike the traditional stereotype of a noble prince. He shares a joint with Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, and sits in the grave in matey conversation with the Gravedigger. In jeans, T-shirt and black leather jacket, he is a modern adolescent rebel, full of disgust for the corrupt world he sees around him.

West dazzlingly brings out Hamlet’s contradictions. He is in turns close to suicide, elated, sardonic, vulnerable, and comic. He spits viciously in Ophelia’s face. Yet always he tries to reason out everything he experiences, and West delivers each soliloquy with compelling logic, straight to the audience.

Box office 01789 403403. RSC Education provides a residential course for teachers on Hamlet, June 22-23. For details, tel: 01789 403462

  • Picture: Samuel West as Hamlet
    • A longer version of this review appears in this week’s Friday magazine

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