Scene
Not Prince Hamlet, nor Meant to Be
by Charles Weinstein. Written on 2011-02-02. Published in Reviews from the ISE Chronicle.
National Theatre Live: Hamlet starring Rory Kinnear, directed by Nicholas Hytner
Horatio loves Hamlet; he may even want to be Hamlet. But wishes are not horses, and
         it makes no sense to cast a born Horatio as Hamlet. Rory Kinnear is a thirtyish, balding
         plodder with all the charisma of a substitute teacher. He is not unintelligent: he
         has considered his lines, and he conveys their meaning clearly if not trippingly.
         (He has even come up with a new reading: “Soft! You, now! The fair Ophelia!"). 
But he has no charm, no brilliance, minimal wit and limited powers of invention and
         variation. In brief, he is ordinary. Ophelia tells us that Hamlet is the undisputed
         Star of Elsinore, and even Claudius admits that the common people adore him. These
         accolades sit uneasily upon Kinnear, who turns The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark
         into The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.
 
Nicholas Hytner has surrounded him with minimalist scenery and a few familiar concepts.
         For the second time in a year, we see Denmark as a 21t-century police state. Hytner
         has replaced Gregory Doran始s 
surveillance cameras with a bevy of Secret Service men, but the idea is the same and
         entirely wrong, for as a police state Denmark is ridiculous. The “dangerously mad”
         Hamlet puts on an unvetted play attacking second marriages before the newly-remarried
         Queen. He runs riot during the performance with obscenities, jeers and threats. He
         nearly kills the unguarded King at his prayers but decides to wait. Instead, he visits
         the Queen in her room where he promptly kills Polonius. Doran and Hytner wanted to
         convey the oppressive omnipresence of Big Brother, but what we see are the serial
         pratfalls of Keystone Kops.
 
Matters are not helped by their depiction of the Chief Spymaster. When Peter Hall
         first directed Hamlet (1965), he reconceived Polonius as a cunning politician using
         the mask of befuddlement to accomplish his 
ends. Kenneth Branagh did much the same in his 1996 film. Unaccountably, Doran and
         Hytner opt for a traditional comic dullard, further dispelling the Orwellian ambience.
         At least Doran始s Polonius was funny. In contrast, David Calder loses laugh after laugh
         through bad timing and off-kilter rhythyms. (He does the same as the Gravedigger in
         Act V). I have happy memories of Calder始s fantastical, dream-struck Falstaff, but
         that was fifteen years ago.
 
In truth, Hamlet will not bear too much updating. If you choose, like Hytner, to present
         Ophelia as a thoroughly modern young woman – sexy, feisty, jousting with her strange
         anachronism of a brother – you 
raise the question of why she yields so quickly to Polonius始 silly edicts. Why does
         her liberated mind give way before the mundane pressures of a bad love-affair and
         an aging father始s death? Sensing these discrepancies, Hytner suggests that Ophelia
         does not drown under the weight of her own distraction, but is instead murdered by
         the royal goons. This doesn始t help, and Ruth Negga is too pedestrian an actress to
         make sense of the muddle. 
On the plus side of the ledger, Patrick Malahide is a refreshingly slimy Claudius,
         a serpent in the orchard indeed. (Some actors try to ennoble the character. Nonsense:
         the man murders his brother and 
marries his sister-in-law for gain, and then engineers the murder of his stepson).
         Clare Higgins fleshes out the underwritten Gertrude in both senses, showing us a once-beautiful
         woman whom years and alcohol 
have thickened into a harsh, unlovely middle-age. Her gratitude to Claudius is keen,
         but her resentment at the passage of time is greater.
      
Among the ensemble, Matthew Barker impresses as the Norwegian Captain (a small part, but there are no small parts), while Ferdinand Kingsley, son of Ben, is an efficient, yuppified Rosencrantz. Giles Terera looks like Eddie Murphy and plays Horatio about as well as Murphy could. The tearful Alex Lanipekun shows us Laertes the sentimentalist but not Laertes the fanatic avenger. James Laurenson was an embarrassing Gaveston to Ian McKellen始s Edward II (1970); as the Ghost and the Player King, he seems to have finally ripened into competence.
“Hamlet without the Prince” has become a metaphor; unhappily, Kinnear and Hytner literalize
         it. In Doran始s production, we saw Hamlet as Harlequin. This was shallow, but more
         diverting than Hamlet as 
Prufrock. One has seen worse – one has seen Beale – but one has also seen much better.
         
–Charles Weinstein
      
Nicholas Hytner has surrounded him with minimalist scenery and a few familiar concepts.
         For the second 
time in a year, we see Denmark as a 21st-century police state. Hytner has replaced
         Gregory Doran始s 
surveillance cameras with a bevy of Secret Service men, but the idea is the same and
         entirely wrong, for 
as a police state Denmark is ridiculous. The “dangerously mad” Hamlet puts on an unvetted
         play attacking 
second marriages before the newly-remarried Queen. He runs riot during the performance
         with obscenities, 
jeers and threats. He nearly kills the unguarded King at his prayers but decides to
         wait. Instead, he 
visits the Queen in her room where he promptly kills Polonius. Doran and Hytner wanted
         to convey the 
oppressive omnipresence of Big Brother, but what we see are the serial pratfalls of
         Keystone Kops.
 
Matters are not helped by their depiction of the Chief Spymaster. When Peter Hall
         first directed Hamlet 
(1965), he reconceived Polonius as a cunning politician using the mask of befuddlement
         to accomplish his 
ends. Kenneth Branagh did much the same in his 1996 film. Unaccountably, Doran and
         Hytner opt for a 
traditional comic dullard, further dispelling the Orwellian ambience. At least Doran始s
         Polonius was 
funny. In contrast, David Calder loses laugh after laugh through bad timing and off-kilter
         rhythyms. (He 
does the same as the Gravedigger in Act V). I have happy memories of Calder始s fantastical,
         dream-struck 
Falstaff, but that was fifteen years ago.
 
In truth, Hamlet will not bear too much updating. If you choose, like Hytner, to present
         Ophelia as a 
thoroughly modern young woman – sexy, feisty, jousting with her strange anachronism
         of a brother – you 
raise the question of why she yields so quickly to Polonius始 silly edicts. Why does
         her liberated mind 
give way before the mundane pressures of a bad love-affair and an aging father始s death?
         Sensing these 
discrepancies, Hytner suggests that Ophelia does not drown under the weight of her
         own distraction, but 
is instead murdered by the royal goons. This doesn始t help, and Ruth Negga is too pedestrian
         an actress to 
make sense of the muddle. 
On the plus side of the ledger, Patrick Malahide is a refreshingly slimy Claudius,
         a serpent in the 
orchard indeed. (Some actors try to ennoble the character. Nonsense: the man murders
         his brother and 
marries his sister-in-law for gain, and then engineers the murder of his stepson).
         Clare Higgins fleshes 
out the underwritten Gertrude in both senses, showing us a once-beautiful woman whom
         years and alcohol 
have thickened into a harsh, unlovely middle-age. Her gratitude to Claudius is keen,
         but her resentment 
at the passage of time is greater.
      
Among the ensemble, Matthew Barker impresses as the Norwegian Captain (a small part,
         but there are no 
small parts), while Ferdinand Kingsley, son of Ben, is an efficient, yuppified Rosencrantz.
         Giles Terera 
looks like Eddie Murphy and plays Horatio about as well as Murphy could. The tearful
         Alex Lanipekun shows 
us Laertes the sentimentalist but not Laertes the fanatic avenger. James Laurenson
         was an embarrassing 
Gaveston to Ian McKellen始s Edward II (1970); as the Ghost and the Player King, he
         seems to have finally 
ripened into competence.
      
“Hamlet without the Prince” has become a metaphor; unhappily, Kinnear and Hytner literalize
         it. In 
Doran始s production, we saw Hamlet as Harlequin. This was shallow, but more diverting
         than Hamlet as 
Prufrock. One has seen worse – one has seen Beale – but one has also seen much better.
         
–Charles Weinstein