Theatre Review (Stratford-on-Avon): Hamlet at the Royal Shakespeare Company

Part of: StageMage

David Tennant is Hamlet. It was tempting to add ‘Nuff said’ to that first sentence and leave it at that, but Tennant’s performance is not the only excellent thing in Gregory Doran’s RSC production at the Courtyard Theatre in Stratford-on-Avon.

The opening scene is rendered all the more sinister and supernatural by the reflective surface of the thrust stage and mirrored backdrop: torch beams bounce around the auditorium like World War II searchlights frantically scanning the sky for an unseen but everpresent threat. That threat arrives in the person of Patrick Stewart who plays both Old Hamlet’s Ghost and King Claudius.

Stewart is a charismatic Claudius, ruling a very different Denmark from that of his murdered brother. He hardly knows the names of his courtiers, but his immense charm and powerful presence make it unusually easy to see why Gertrude marries him. His handling of Fortinbras and later Laertes is the hallmark of a skilled politician, and even the flamboyant feasts, so hated by Hamlet, seem calculated to accustom the country to the recent regime change.

The production is modern: the costumes are contemporary and there is a pleasing contrast between the beautifully cut court suits and the characters’ casual wear. Hamlet is very much a student when not a prince: David Tennant effortlessly sheds 15 of his 37 years in his T-shirt and jeans – although he does have the sense not to belt them around his hips. Guns replace swords for all but the final fight, and the revolving mirrored doors upstage are infinitely preferable to any arras.

Tennant’s performance is remarkable in many ways. Hamlet is by no means a sympathetic figure, but Tennant manages to make him so through superlative handling of the soliloquies and the insanity. His grief for his father’s loss is completely convincing, and upon it he builds all the doubts and dilemmas which can make the character hard for audiences to endure, successfully negotiating the fine line between Hamlet’s ‘crafty madness’ and his genuine distress. It is also a superb physical performance. Tennant is incredibly agile on stage; moving like a great neurotic skittish spider, he seems to skip his way through the play without ever losing his focus and intensity.

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Article Author: David Trennery

David Trennery lives and works in London. Cheese is his only weakness.

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  • 1 - Lisa Damian

    Sep 12, 2008 at 8:52 pm

    I've heard that Patrick Stewart is not to be missed as a Shakespearean actor. I'd love to see him some time. When I lived in San Francisco, I always enjoyed "Shakespeare in the Park" in Golden Gate Park, and while in London, I attended a performance at the refurbished originial Globe theatre. From plays to poetry, Shakespeare really was a master.

  • 2 - Mary K. Williams

    Sep 19, 2008 at 9:03 am

    I think every actor, film or stage, should have some Shakespeare on their resume.

  • 3 - Deano

    Sep 19, 2008 at 9:42 am

    I recently saw A Mid-Summer Night's Dream in an open-air theatre in a local park. They gave the production a distinct Caribbean theme which actually worked marvellously well.

    The old Bard is still bringing them in....

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