NEW YORK, NY.- As a veteran of the Public Theaters free Shakespeare in the Park productions, Ato Blankson-Wood is used to contending with the elements. The bugs, the helicopters flying overhead: Theres an intense focus that is necessary, he said.
But for this summers production of Hamlet, he has had to dig deeper: Not only is he feeling the weight of the title role but, as he put it, the world is on fire and air-quality issues have forced the cancellation of four Hamlet performances so far.
Still, Blankson-Wood is undeterred.
I remember that theres a person in that audience who is maybe seeing a play for the first time, or who was very excited to come see a show, he said during a recent interview at a cafe in Brooklyn. Thats what Im focused on. This is not about my experience; its for them, and for my scene partners.
This alfresco staging of Hamlet, directed by Kenny Leon, is Blankson-Woods fifth production at the Delacorte Theater in Central Park. His first, Hair, in 2008, was also his New York professional stage debut. Then he played the narcissistic Orsino in Twelfth Night in 2018 and Orlando in As You Like It in 2017 and 2022. Hes also had notable turns in more hospitable environments on Broadway and off, including his Tony-nominated run in Slave Play.
In Leons modern-dress production of Hamlet, Blankson-Wood opted for a contemporary take on the tragic prince: a sad boy dressed in military fatigues, flowy white shirts and a dark hoodie that he said the shows costume designer, Jessica Jahn, created after learning of his inspiration.
I had this thought that our most Hamletian modern figure is Kanye West, he said. We witnessed him losing a parent in the public eye, hes been called a genius, and he has behaved in ways where people are like, Is he OK? I think its exciting to imagine his moments of uncertainty, what his soliloquies might be.
The actor, 38, said Wests recent controversies are less interesting to him. Which is not surprising. In speaking with Blankson-Wood, the sense emerges of an artist with little time for psychic clutter. Each morning, he recites daily affirmations (one he goes back to, borrowed from his Slave Play character, is, in part, I am the prize) and makes sure to engage his body (workouts at the gym), mind (post-workout podcasts, like Spark & Fire or Oprah Winfreys Super Soul Sunday) and spirit (morning meditation, in a section of my room where I have a little cushion, altar and a remembrance of my grandmother).
I like to engage with the spiritual world, he said. Its a part of my understanding of life on this planet, so I have to touch that every day to center myself. Since Hamlet, hes added a nightly bubble bath.
He came to the production after participating in a collaborative online reading of the plays To be or not to be speech, which was performed by Black actors and released in 2020 by the Public to coincide with the Juneteenth holiday that year. Leon, a consultant on the piece, said he was struck by the strength and softness of Blankson-Woods performance.
When it came time to cast Hamlet, I wanted to tell it through the eyes of the young people who felt hurt, betrayed and unloved in the aftermath of George Floyds murder, Leon said in a phone call. Like Ato, this Hamlet leads with love, and is begging to be understood. We talked a lot about the mental health issues that young people are dealing with, because I wanted this production to have some hope, small as it is, by the end.
Leon made a deal with the cast: Once Shakespearean scholar James Shapiro completed his edits, the actors would be allowed to add lines back in though they would need to give up some of their own in exchange. The approach helped trim the five-hour play to two hours and 45 minutes, excising the military and royal aspects to focus on the family dynamics.
Weve been talking a lot about how Shakespeare is often cut by academics, and sometimes I wonder if there would be a benefit to it being cut by artists, seeing whats really necessary from an actors standpoint, Blankson-Wood said. I have my issues with this cut. A lot of the meta-theatricality is gone, and thats one of the things I love about the character, like his line about holding a mirror up to nature. I did fight to get some things back.
The actor added that Leons fiery technique, on and off the page, took some getting used to, but he credited Leon with pushing him further than he thought he could go. (In his review for The New York Times, theater critic Jesse Green credited his performance with bringing a vivid anger to the role.)
I get to purge emotionally every night, he continued. I can take bits of my day and pour it in there to release, if I need to, and I knew this production would be good for that.
Blankson-Woods love of theater, and his drive to define his relationship to it, extends to his childhood.
Born the middle of five siblings in Silver Spring, Maryland, to Ghanaian immigrants, he grew up watching movie musicals with his mother. While his home was culturally very traditionally Ghanaian, he said musicals created a cultural bridge to his American interests, which led to acting.
He studied acting at New York University and was soon cast as a member of the tribe in a production of Hair at the Delacorte which, coincidentally, shared the 2008 summer season with another Hamlet, starring Michael Stuhlbarg. He remained with Hair when it transferred to Broadway and then Londons West End but, following a run in the 2011 musical Lysistrata Jones, the actor said he felt a gap between the work I was doing and what I felt I was capable of.
The ethos and energy behind commercial musical theater feels like it is really about the product, he explained. I dont think thats good or bad, but I do think my interests are always in process and craft, which I feel are more valued in plays. Thats where the impulse to go to grad school came from.
He enrolled in the Yale School of Drama, where he became friends with James Cusati-Moyer (who would later be his Slave Play scene partner). The two became like a traveling act: this duo that everyone knew of, Cusati-Moyer said. And then we started doing drag together.
In 2013, they performed in Yale Cabarets inaugural Yale School of Drag show as well as a drag play written by their classmates titled We Know Edie La Minx Had a Gun which later had a 2016 presentation in Brooklyn. Blankson-Wood couldnt reprise his role; he was giving what Charles Isherwood described as a breakout performance in The Total Bent at the Public. His replacement? An incoming Yalie named Jeremy O. Harris.
The three became friends, and Harris took inspiration from the friendship of the other two as he developed the characters of Gary and Dustin, one of three interracial couples undergoing dubious sex therapy in Slave Play.
We had to navigate very difficult territory, as these characters were inspired by us but were specifically not Ato and I, Cusati-Moyer said. But theres no one else I can imagine doing that role with. He brings every corner of his heart, and that comes with an innate care and appreciation for his own work, as well as the work of those around him.
The show opened on Broadway in 2019 and garnered 12 Tony nominations, including nods for both actors; Harris; and the director, Robert OHara, who later directed Blankson-Wood in a 2022 COVID-era adaptation of Long Days Journey Into Night at the Minetta Lane Theater.
Im not necessarily drawn to these internal, isolating roles, but something happened when I went to grad school where it felt like a faucet turned on and emotional availability became my go-to, Blankson-Wood said.
After Slave Play, he continued, I was very aware of my inherent value, because thats the journey my character was on. I now really understand what it means to take ownership of my process, and have found my voice in that way.
After that and Long Days and this, Im ready for something that has levity and is heart-forward.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.