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SHAKSPER 1993: Review: NTD *Hamlet* Adaptation
From: Hardy M. Cook (hmcook@boe00.minc.umd.edu) Date: 02/19/93
Shakespeare Electronic Conference, Vol. 4, No. 94. Friday, 19 February 1993. From: Tony Naturale <AXNNCE@ritvax.isc.rit.edu> Date: Wednesday, 17 Feb 1993 08:52:51 -0400 (EDT) Subject: Review: NTD *Hamlet* Adaptation To Be or Not To Be Ophelia (by Tony Naturale) In its 26th season, National Theatre of the Deaf (NTD) presented a unique adaptation of Shakespeare's Hamlet, allowing a fuller expression of actions and passions in ASL. The play was held in the Panara Theatre at the National Technical Institute for the Deaf (Rochester, NY). In the original Shakespeare's version of Hamlet, Ophelia had been viewed as an overly sensitive, poetically oriented tragic figure; cursed by crazed Hamlet, her lover, Ophelia sought to make things right when things only became worse. Grieving over the death of her father, Ophelia lost her mind; in her "lunatic" state, Ophelia eventually drowned in a river. Later, Hamlet became despondent after receiving the news of her death. As the play turned darker, Hamlet came face to face with a crisis in his life, his existential crisis; "To be or not to be, that is the question," Hamlet wondered. Hamlet (and Shakespeare) left many of us wondering about his true answer. Hamlet remained as one of the most challenging, puzzling, and yet rewarding plays. In this adaptation of Hamlet, the playwright Jeff Wanshel worked closely with NTD to develop further the role of Ophelia. Ostensibly to present a woman's point of view in this "rotten kingdom" of Denmark, the play became an experiment with mixed results. To keep the action rolling, plot was changed, scenes borrowed from other Shakespeare's plays were included, and conflicts between Ophelia and Hamlet were highlightened further. Wanshel also rearranged the series of death scenes, ending with Ophelia's. In this way, it was Ophelia who witnessed all the traumatic deaths of Polonius, the Queen, the King, Laertes and finally, Hamlet. In her own death scene, we all grieved deeply with her at all the tragic events; yet we were also introduced to the poetic world of Ophelia, in which flowers talked with and consoled her, the river cradled her to nurturing comfort, and Nature welcomed Ophelia in a womblike embrace. (Her death scene was definitely eco-feminist, in this reviewer's opinion.) In the title role of Ophelia, Camille Jeter was at once delicate and yet brutally frank; she appeared more cerebral, more reserved, and more in control. Unlike Hamlet who had already "gone beserk", Ophelia went through a major change. Earlier, Ophelia had "juggled" the dual but conflicting roles: a submissive daughter for her father while becoming a passionate lover for Hamlet. This constant juggling, however, came crashing down when Hamlet killed Polonius, her father. Here, Jeter delivered a heart-wrenching judgement against the male sex; Jeter's anger flared through in her outrage against men who have dominated and ruined her life; in her, the tension crackled and flashed between her love for Hamlet and the duty for her father. Here, Jeter presented a feminist view of her existence in this patriarchical society ruled by deceits and naked "will to power"; Jeter shared with us her anguish, her struggle to find a meaning in life, in which pain dominated pleasure, insanity overruled reason, and lies were easier to face than truth. At the funeral procession to the graveyard for Polonius, Ophelia expressed, in a painfully clear way, the absurdity of her existence. In this funereal context, Jeter asked for a reason to live. "To be or not to be? that is the question." In her hands, Camille Jeter performed one of the most compelling interpretations of this speech. The role of Hamlet, while stripped of the speech, was still powerful. Played by a veteran actor, Troy Kotsur, Hamlet was very passionate and determined to get what he wanted. As a crazed Hamlet, Kotsur displayed a wide range of emotions through his animate facial expressions, body postures, physical movements and of course, his visceral delivery of sign language. This Hamlet was very much alive, wrestling with dark emotions and dangerous ideas. As the ideas grew more unreconcilable, Hamlet struggled to confront his mother, the Queen. Hamlet could not for long remain silent with the foreboding knowledge of the Queen's involvement in the conspiracy to kill his father, the King of Denmark. The rest of the cast did well in maintaining the Shakespearean pageantry in the background. The Player-King (Joseph Sarpy) demonstrated his skills as a poet-creator. He helped express the morbid thoughts of Hamlet in a unique theatrical technique of "thought-balooning"; while Hamlet sat, brooding in soliptic manner, the Player-King revealed the thoughts through signs. There was an aiery movements of thoughts, floating above Hamlet. This was a powerfully creative use of supporting cast, to engage in the magic recreation of thoughts through ASL. Polonius, acted by Robert DeMayo, was a perfect example of a money-obsessed, sexually repressed, and overprotective father of his "virgin" daughter. Instead of seeing Ophelia as a human being, Polonius viewed her as valuable commodity. And with a prospect of her marriage to Hamlet becoming stronger, Ophelia would give Polonius a profitable access to the royal court of Denmark. All in all, this show was a fine performance of Ophelia. Jeter should be proud of having made "herstory" in this unique adaptation of Hamlet. The National Theatre of the Deaf should continue to explore adapting more plays by Shakespeare in order to explore the beauty of Signs as Visual-Gestural Thoughts of the Renaissance and the Restoration Cultures.
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