Hamlet
William Shakespeare
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John Douglas Thompson |
That something is “rotten in Denmark” becomes immediately
obvious in the opening minutes of American Conservatory Theatre’s current
production of Hamlet. Black-clad men climb from the bowels of
some underground passageway, with streaks of stark light emanating from the
subterranean world onto the towering walls of what may be the interior or
exterior of buildings in bad repair. David
Israel Reynoso’s scenic design is massively ugly and foreboding with its
stained walls of gray concrete, huge windows with cracked and missing panes, dark
corners, and a large freight opening with a heavy plastic curtain separating
what we see from what we can not quite ascertain on the other side. The lighting of James F. Ingalls creates
atmospheres of ominous colors – purple, green, red – and shadows lurk gigantic
in the heights of the walls. The time
period is in question in a world that looks permanently damaged from past, bad
decisions. As a king and queen and members
of the court emerge in present-day clothes (also designed by Mr. Reynoso), a
gold, modern-day set of chairs for the royal couple and a chandelier that may
have come from Crate and Barrel or Z Gallerie are the only bright spots in an
otherwise dreary scene. What is amazing
is that no one in the royal court seems in the least surprised or bothered by
the totally dismal surroundings. This is
the normal world as they now know it.
And so Carey Perloff opens her last season as A.C.T.’s
Artistic Director to direct her first Hamlet
and the first of the Company since 1990.
This is a play that most of us in the audience have surely seen
one-to-many other times. (I lost my own count during my 30+ years of going to
the Oregon Shakespeare Festival.).
However, this soon becomes a production we each know will takes its own
stand as unique, important, and different from any other we may have seen.
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Domenique Lozano & John Douglas Thompson |
Particularly striking is Hamlet himself, for he is not the
usual (at least for modern audiences) young, handsome man barely shaving that
often graces that part. This Hamlet is
the much-accomplished and well-seasoned John Douglas Thompson, an actor
beginning his sixth decade of life. He
brings to this Hamlet a maturity and set of life experiences that redefine Hamlet’s
feigned madness, his abhorrence of the marriage of his mother to his uncle
(only two months after his kingly father has died), and his decision-making
process whether and how to seek revenge once he suspects their foul play
against his father. The famous lines of
Shakespeare (such as the “to be or not to be”) flow from Mr. Thompson not as
part of a memorized script or dramatized reading, but as natural-sounding
reflections and considerations of a man who is actually quite in control amidst
the chaos and deteriorating environment around him. He is calculated and cunning in ways that
speak of a man who knows himself well.
He can make fools of his college buddies-of-sorts, Rosencrantz and
Guildenstern, while keeping them in the dark of his true intentions or state of
mind. He is willing to scorn his
uncle/now-father with a confidence of statement that is more of a peer than a
younger son or subject. And when he
grabs his mother’s face and forces her to look into the unseen faces of both her
dead and her present husbands to compare their nobilities (or lack there-of in
the latter’s case), Mr. Thompson does so with a sense of inner power and surety
that a young son in his twenties would probably not have.
The Hamlet that Mr. Thompson shapes and forms before us is
not the tempestuous, temper-prone boy becoming man that one often sees in the
twenty-somethings portraying the Prince of Denmark. This is a Hamlet who grieves
both for his betrayed father as well as for his own sure fatal fate to revenge
that father – a fate where his own plans of love and eventual rule are now
known as impossible and a fate that he seems to understand is just another sign
of a world permanently scarred by the acts of the people within it – including
himself.
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Stephen Anthony Jones & Domenique Lozano |
Surrounding John Douglas Thompson is an equally impressive
cast, from minor to major roles. When we meet Queen Gertrude, the slightly
up-tilted head of Domenique Lozano ensures her eyes lower to look in slight
disdain at all those lower in caste than she.
Her face puckers in pride as she listens to the royal decrees and
braggadocio of her new husband and former brother-in-law. Later as her own guilt makes its way into her
now wrinkled face, she degenerates before us into a queen barely holding onto
her own sanity while trying to control and console those around her who are
fast losing theirs. Ms. Lozano is superb
in every respect as the queen whose own doom is only a matter of time, as can
be seen in eyes that increasingly shout the fear felt within.
As both the live and the dead kings – as both the
perpetrator, Claudius, and the victim, Hamlet’s father – Steven Anthony Jones
is bombastic and blow-hardy in voice and demeanor as the former king and
ethereally spooky as the latter king.
When the Ghost King finally speaks to Hamlet, his vocalizes the hate for
his brother and the abomination of the murderous act with a haunting yet
booming voice while moving little other his speaking lips. The visceral tension generated is later
matched by the now-Claudius confessing in an unholy prayer his newly found
agony and self-doubt surrounding the fratricide he has committed to gain the
crown and his bride.
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Dan Hiatt & John Douglas Thompson |
As is true in most Shakespearean tragedies and is certainly
true in this Hamlet as directed by
Carey Perloff, there are many moments of quick and even sustained humor – both
in specific characterizations and in quick tongue-in-cheek smirks by Hamlet
himself. Dan Hiatt is particularly
memorable as the bowtie-donned Polonius, a lord in the king’s court who is wont
to lecture on and on (and on) like a college professor, exacting his spoken
“t’s” with consonant clarity and dotting all his “i’s” to provide more than
enough details and examples on whatever the present subject.
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Graham Beckel & Teddy Spencer |
As the Gravediggers, Graham Beckel’s and Teddy Spencer’s interactions
with Hamlet are like those of comic trio on a Vaudeville stage and produce the
desired levity preceding the next, upcoming scenes of blood and death.
Mr. Becket is also part of the troupe of traveling thespians
(along with Peter Fanone and Adrianna Mitchell) that get to draw laughs with
their songs and silly play (and piano playing) before they shift to enact
Hamlet’s planned test to see if the words of the Ghost are those of a devil or
in fact, of his father. (That shift in
the play-within-a-play’s mood is given startling announcement by the
honkey-style piano music composed by David Coulter shifting to take on
screeching, shocking reverberations as just the strings of the upright piano
are played and pounded.)
Vincent J. Randazzo and Teddy Spencer bring an aw-shucks,
collegiate quality to their respective Guildenstern and Rosencrantz roles and
are fun to watch as they try to gauge how to react first to Prince Hamlet and
then to King Claudius in order to stay in the good graces of each. As they begin to side more with the latter,
their shift to the ‘dark side’ makes their bumbling manners more sinister as
the two maintain a certain comedy while clearly also being calculative in how
to do whatever it takes (including enabling a possible murder of Hamlet) to
stay in the King’s graces.
In no way funny but altogether evocatively beautiful and
pitiful at the same time is the performance of Rivka Borek as Polonius’s
daughter and Hamlet’s would-be fiancé, Ophelia.
When first introduced, her Ophelia is clearly embarrassed and
uncomfortable by her father’s praises and the royal couple’s attention on
her. Later, as she mourns her own
father’s demise at the hands of her intended, the truly crazed and
sorrow-ravaged Ophelia is actually uncomfortable to watch as Ms. Borek becomes
a young woman wandering in see-through negligee, singing a nonsensical, bawdy
song. Actor, director, and costume
designer collaborate brilliantly to bring the totally depressed Ophelia back in
a later scene now dressed in her dead father’s suit, giving gifts to the
stunned court of his bowties as if they were recently gathered herbs. The Ophelia created by Ms. Borek is
altogether startling, sad, and stunning.
Less successful in his assigned portrayal but certainly
still adequate is Anthony Fusco as Hamlet’s loyal friend, Horatio (and the only
person of the court left standing alive at the play’s end). He so underplays the part that his Horatio
fades into the background when compared to those around him.
Overplaying is more the issue with Teague F. Bougere’s
Laertes, the revenge-seeking son of Polonius. Mr. Bougere does not find much
variation in his loud, bold, and almost bully approach in portraying the son
crazed in his own way by the grief he suffers.
Where his Laertes does shine is in the final duel with Hamlet, a fight
with Filipino sticks (called eskrima)
whose metallic crashes and violent swings and hits have been expertly
choreographed by fight director Jonathan Rider.
When all is said and done in this three-plus-hour version of
Hamlet and as the bodies lay strewn
in the stage’s dark shadows of the glowering walls, we as audience know that
Carey Perloff and American Conservatory Theatre have successfully created a
production of the oft-staged classic of classics. This Hamlet
will be long-remembered both for its startling staging and for its Prince
who is older, wiser, and thus more unsettling than many of those preceding him.
Rating: 4.5 E
Hamlet continues
through October 15, 2017 at American Conservatory Theatre, The Geary Theatre, 405 Geary Street, San
Francisco. Tickets are available online
at http://www.act-sf.org/ or by calling the box office 415-749-2228.
Photos by Kevin Berne
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