NEW YORK, NY.- Many Hamlets Ive seen are wily. Some kooky. Narcissistic, aloof, even pretentious. Less common is a Hamlet who is tender and romantic and achingly vulnerable, like a petal falling from the head of a flower at the end of its bloom.
When Alex Lawthers fragile Danish prince drags himself onstage in Robert Ickes modern-dress production of Hamlet, which opened Tuesday night at the Park Avenue Armory, he recalls 19th-century poets Arthur Rimbaud and Percy Shelley, a brilliant yet dejected young man who seems resolved to his sorrow and to a tragic end.
In the past decade, Icke has gained prominence for his heightened and contemporary-inflected adaptations of classics. This Hamlet played in the West End in 2017, with the hot-priest-sized package of magnetizing charisma known as Andrew Scott in the lead. He was one of the best Hamlets Ive ever seen though, as in so many other takes, the focus fell on his brooding and banter more than his emotional depth.
Lawther, best known for his role in The End of the __ing World, doesnt have Scotts starry flair, but he possesses his own demure kind of charisma; he draws you in even as he withdraws into himself. As a result, this rendition honors Hamlet as not just self-indulgently melancholy but also as grappling with legitimate, heartbreaking loss.
We begin at a swanky wedding party. (Hildegard Bechtler did the stylish sets and costumes.) Beyond a wall of sliding glass panels, we see Hamlets mother, Queen Gertrude (Jennifer Ehle), and her new husband, his uncle Claudius (Angus Wright), dancing amid balloons and strings of lights. Dressed in a black suit, Lawther slowly shuffles across the stage and sits close to, but removed from, the action. He roughly rubs his palms against his thighs, as though to rub the fabric off his body.
Throughout the hefty 3-hour-and-45 minute production, Lawther fully embodies Hamlets despondency, shuffling like a wayward toddler, with knees slightly bent and a constant sway that makes him appear near collapse. Planning to enact his vengeance on his scheming uncle, he holds a gun off at an angle, as though his arm is being puppeted by someone else pulling the strings above the stage.
And when he speaks, its in a slow, warbling singsong, at once contemplative and idiosyncratic, especially when he pauses in the middle of sentences as if his mind is hiccuping with existential thoughts.
Although the peculiar line readings sometimes turn monotonous, he snaps out of it, erupting into a surprising fit of mania. And Lawther threads the famed What a piece of work is man! monologue with poetic resonance, moving from wonder to despair through slow articulation and emphatic rhythm.
Icke, whose one-woman Enemy of the People played the Armory last year and whose 1984 had a brief Broadway run in 2017, brings a cinematic eye to the proceedings, using foreground and background to create dimension. In one clever bit of staging, Hamlet tarries in the forefront as the king and queen canoodle in back and guards race by mid-stage between them, fresh from sighting the former kings ghost.
At the same time, the director brings some curious adjustments to the characters, giving Polonius a touch of dementia and depicting Rosencrantz and Guildenstern as a couple clearly at odds about how they should respond to the royal request to monitor Hamlet.
The women, in particular, get short shrift. Gertrude is unreadable, despite Ehles punchy line readings, and Ophelias descent into madness occurs faster than you can say something rotten doing a disservice to Kirsty Riders perfectly matched delicate companion to Lawthers Hamlet.
As Claudius, Wright has the self-consciously composed air of a politician but misses some of the menace, while Peter Wight leans too heavily on the bumbling as Polonius. Luke Treadaway, however, makes the most of Laertes transformation: from refined gentleman and doting brother to unhinged revenge seeker, wildly swinging a gun at the news of his fathers murder and sisters suicide.
There are actual gunshots, too ghastly pops and flashes of light that make the audience jump to attention. This is nowhere as gratuitous as, say, the 2019 DruidShakespeare production of Richard III, or even the current Broadway staging of Macbeth, with its severed limbs and crotch wounds. Still, the sight and sound of a gun onstage today, given our countrys despicable relationship to firearms, is unsettling.
Whats most frustrating about Ickes otherwise intriguing approach is the inessential, and, by now, highly unoriginal, incorporation of high tech. A grid of 12 screens hangs overhead, and two larger screens flank the stage, showing security footage from the castle and news reports about Denmarks conflict with Norway.
The screens also flash pause and stop before the two intermissions and the final scene, mawkishly calling attention to the audience as spectators. The way Icke and lighting designer Natasha Chivers handle several of Hamlets monologues is more effective; soft overhead light halos Lawther as he seems to addresses theatergoers directly from the edge of the stage, only to snap off when hes done speaking.
Tal Yardens sound design envelops the proceedings in ominous atmospheric gloom: a distant howling wind; the cold, mechanical hum of static and feedback; and, finally, the thunderous exclamations of drums. Less fitting are the productions folksy compositions (by Laura Marling) and use of Bob Dylan songs, which, even deployed ironically, are a bit too Midwest-porch-jam for this chic production.
Hamlet is one of the Shakespeare plays that most suffers from diminishing returns adaptations that try too hard to innovate, to render a classic modern and hip. Although Ickes protracted production occasionally falls into that trap, ultimately the creative teams visual and technical prowess along with its provocative young lead make this a tale of musing, mania and murder for our age.
Hamlet
Tickets: Through Aug. 13, Park Avenue Armory; armoryonpark.org. Running time: 3 hours 35 minutes.
Credits: Written by William Shakespeare; directed by Robert Icke; sets and costumes by Hildegard Bechtler; lighting by Natasha Chivers; sound by Tom Gibbons; video design by Tal Yarden; composer, Laura Marling; associate director, Anthony Almeida; associate director, Ilinca Radulian; dialect coach, Deborah Hecht; fight director, Thomas Schall; company stage manager, Heidi Lennard; deputy stage manager, Natalie Braid; stage manager, Caroline Englander; assistant stage manager, Kasson Marroquin; assistant stage manager, Katie Young. Presented by Park Avenue Armory.
Cast: Michael Abubakar, Tia Bannon, Bartley Booz, Lise Bruneau, Marty Cruickshank, Jennifer Ehle, Calum Finlay, Joshua Higgott, Jacqueline Jarrold, Gilbert Kyem Jnr, Alex Lawther, Andrew Long, Imani Jade Powers, Kirsty Rider, David Rintoul, Harry Smith, Luke Treadaway, Ross Waiton, Peter Wight, Angus Wright and Hara Yannas.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.