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Stillness in Hamlet

from Theatre: The Act of Memory and History in the Making

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 September 2014

Nicoleta Cinpoes
Affiliation:
The University of Warwick
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Summary

In Elsinore, instructing the actors who are getting ready to perform The Murder of Gonzago, a ghost play that is also a Mousetrap set to catch his father's killer, Hamlet begins by remembering other players, other performances: “O, there be players that I have seen play […]” (III.2.33–34). In New York, when Live Schreiber began those same instructions in Andrei Şerban's 1999 production for the Public Theatre, Hamlet was literally faced with remembering those players and performances, that is, faced with Hamlet's history. As he spoke, cast members entered carrying posters of Hamlets past:

Ralph Fiennes, lately of Broadway, [was] there, along with the Public's own Sam Waterston, Kevin Kline and Diane Venora (borne by Ms. Venora herself, this production's Gertrude), plus the celluloid princelings Laurence Olivier, Mel Gibson and Kenneth Branagh, not to mention John Barrymore and Sarah Bernhardt […] Last and largest in the parade is a blow-up of Mr. Schreiber, so big that it takes two actors to carry it. They enter just in time to illustrate the final words of Hamlet's critiques: “They imitated humanity so abominably.”

These still photographs, ghosts of previous Hamlets and Hamlets, are symbolic travellers who return to inform Şerban's production and remind his Hamlet of the world of theatre history he himself will enter. More clearly than anywhere else in this production, the scene reads Elsinore as the theatre, the most appropriate place for Hamlet to remember his father(s) and the likeliest space for actors and audience to make sense of Hamlet.

Type
Chapter
Information
Shakespeare in Europe
History and Memory
, pp. 291 - 302
Publisher: Jagiellonian University Press
Print publication year: 2008

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