La Tragédie d'Hamlet

by William Shakespeare
Directed by Dan Jemmett
Saison 2014-2015
Du 5 June au 26 July
Durée 3:10 WITH AN INTERMISSION
Lieu Richelieu
La Tragédie d'Hamlet
A monument of Western literature, an eternal image of modernity, Hamlet asks what man is and hence, speaks to each one of us.

Discover the play

  • On the walls of Elsinore, the sentinels fear the apparition of a spectre that the fortress walls cannot keep out. The ghost of the king of Denmark reveals to his son, Hamlet, that he died by the hand of his own brother, Claudius. Not long after the deed, Claudius married Gertrude, the king’s widow and Hamlet’s mother. The moral decay of the Court is starkly exposed on the occasion of a theatrical performance orchestrated by Hamlet as a mirror of the royal couple’s wickedness, a prelude to his revenge. The tragedy then draws the protagonists into a deadly spiral: Polonius, the late king’s and now the usurper’s chamberlain is murdered by Hamlet; his daughter Ophelia, who is in love with Hamlet, subsides into madness and drowns; the final duel between organised by Claudius between Hamlet and Laertes –Ophelia’s brother– is fatal to all three, while the Queen is dying, having drunk the wine mixed with poison her husband intended for her son.

    William Shakespeare, the author
    Hamlet, probably brought to the stage around 1600/1601, is the Shakespeare play that has generated the most commentary, giving rise to a genuine myth around his eponymous character. This elusive and timeless work is known by two editions published during the author’s lifetime: the first, highly elliptical edition, dated 1603, indicates that the play had been performed in London, Oxford and Cambridge; the second, more substantial edition, was published in 1604. The play marked the culmination of an already rich career, developing all at once in the genres of tragedy, comedy, historical plays and poetry. A monument of Western literature, at once a political tragedy, a metaphysical text and an eternal image of modernity carried by an unalterable poetic force, Hamlet asks what man is and hence, speaks to each one of us.

    Dan Jemmett, the director
    The English director Dan Jemmett is familiar with Shakespeare’s work, which he has revisited humorously and unceremoniously in _Presque Hamle_t (2002) Shake –after Twelfth Night (2001)– and Les Trois Richards, Richard III (2012). He also staged The Comedy of Errors in 2010, as well as Twelfth Night and The Tempest at the Polski Theatre in Warsaw in 2011. He has recently directed Fassbinder’s El café, after the Goldoni comedy, at the Teatro de La Abadia in Madrid. At the Comédie-Française, Dan Jemmett presented Molière’s The Affected Young Ladies in 2007 and Eduardo de Filippo's Grand Magic in 2009. For Hamlet, the clubhouse setting with bar, jukebox and dance floor, the spatial and visual starting point for a journey into this immense work, recalls the strong force of imagination of the Elizabethan stage; “Making of nothing a whole world”, as John Donne, a contemporary of Shakespeare wrote.

    Accessibilité
    Ce spectacle est accessible aux personnes sourdes et malentendantes 07/06/2015 - 14:00
    16/06/2015 - 20:30
    Ce spectacle est accessible aux personnes aveugles et malvoyantes
    08/06/2015 - 20:30
    27/06/2015 - 14:00

  • Direction: Dan Jemmett
    Artistic collaboration and dramaturgy: Mériam Korichi
    Scenography: Dick Bird
    Costumes: Sylvie Martin Hyszka
    Lights: Arnaud Jung
    Fencing master: Jérôme Westholm
    Hairdressing: Cécile Gentilin
    Make-up: Laura Ozier

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