Wednesday 13 April 2016

To Go or Not To Go? Hamlet at the RSC - Spring Summer 2016

Simon Godwin's production is certainly colourful and at times exuberant, but sadly a lot of it falls very flat. This might be because The National Theatre's startling production starring Benedict Cumberbatch is still so fresh in my mind from last year. Papa Essiedu's Hamlet is performed well and there are certainly moments of humour in his performance and I'm looking forward to seeing him in more, but what really troubled me was Ophelia. I'm so bored of seeing another presentation of a pathetically mentally inferior Ophelia. Why, oh why can't someone jump on the possibility of making her a strong, feminist character? Why in the 21st century with our obsession with adaptations has no one done an amazing world renown production focusing on Ophelia's story? Now that's what I'd go to see!

Natalie Simpson's Ophelia is poignant and tragic and tender, all the things that we expect Ophelia to be but there was nothing fresh in her characterisation. The only sense of innovation in this production was the relocation of the story to Africa. At times this really really worked, in the main when the Players arrived to perform at Elsinore but this shift could have been made much more of, particularly in the duel scene at the play's climax.

Why Godwin couldn't have put more twists like the romantic interest between Rosencrantz (James Cooney) and Guildenstern (Bethan Cullinane) I do not know. There is so much potential for excitement and variety with Hamlet and the RSC has the strength of cast, set, costume, you name it to wholly throw themselves at a new idea and run with it at 110 miles per hour to make it soar. I did love the sneaky students nearly getting caught by the King and Queen with their bong though! More of that please!

This is a production to see if you want a comfy, cosy adaptation of the classic story. Do not go expecting to leave reconsidering the themes of the play or Hamlet's plight. This play treads all too familiar ground, but admittedly it does do it rather well. Go for a fun night with friends, for a drink and chat, do not go to be dazzled by the genius of Shakespeare or the RSC.

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