Synopsis A group of actors assemble near Stratford to mount a production of Hamlet, not knowing it's a front for the producer's plans, inspired by Shakespeare's ghost, to rob the poet's grave in search of lost plays.
There is a terrible kind of evening in the theatre that, in its perverse, old-fashioned way, can be curiously compelling, and Andrew Doyle’s Shamlet falls with a merry thud into this benighted category.
The sole salvation of James Robert Carson’s production -- about a bunch of thespian losers putting on a weird version of Hamlet on the outskirts of Stratford-upon-Avon while their producer connives with Shakespeare’s ghost to raid the bard’s tomb in Holy Trinity -- is that it is directed with notable efficiency and acted to the hilt by a game and determined cast.
The producer, Marcus (Tom Walker), is hoping to find Shakespeare’s three lost plays: Cardenio, Loves’ Labour’s Won and the even more obscure Parable of Gerald, the Fat French Shepherd. To this ridiculous end, he has secured lodgings and a performance venue with a fat Lithuanian landlady (Maxine Howe) who exudes threatening gypsy oddness.
His company assembles at first in a Peckham hell-hole and expands from two or three to six after an audition process and the wooing of a booming grandee, Isambard Warrington (Gregory Floy), once known as “the pretty boy of Bognor” and lately described by Benedict Nightingale, apparently, as “a washed up old queen.” Isambard, played by Floy with an unseemly, molar-flashing relish in the style of Donald Sinden gone mad, enters in full Lily Savage drag, cursing his luck in a tacky pantomime engagement.
The motley crew, led by Grainne Gillis’s full-on bonkers lesbian director (“It isn’t art until it hurts” she screams in an improvisatory rehearsal that has gone on for 12 hours), includes a statuesque nymphet and dominatrix (Dorothy Lawrence) who turns Queen Gertrude into a nightclub raver; an unlikely Horatio (Andrew Beavis) who decamps as a wild rapper before the opening performance; and a wan nun, Bernadette (hilariously played by Pauline Shanahan) who auditions with Lady Macbeth’s sleepwalking scene and spends the rest of her debut experience covering her ears against backstage insults and obscenities.
How the cast manage their quick costume changes is a sight to behold, especially in the case of Debbie Arnold, doubling as an infatuated stage-manager and an incensed Anne Hathaway, flogging pies and complaining about having been left the bard’s second best bed. After the terrifying car crash that was this theatre’s last production, A Right Royal Farce, at least you can see that the actors have worked hard in rehearsal.
Whether or not their efforts were justified is a moot point. I suspect the show might draw a camp little cult audience, and it is clear that Andrew Doyle – an Oxford scholar and stand-up comedian – has a lurking talent for something or other. But Shamlet is one of those shows it is more fun to talk about, and indeed write about, than to actually sit through.
A delighful farce, following a dysfunctional group of theatre types in their efforts to host a classic play, with hilarious consequences. Not to be taken too seriously. The acting was strong from teh lead roles with great support from the younger cast members. Well written, with upfront jokes and humour (some may not be suitable for the very young). I was singing the song on the way home on the tube! A fun unpretentious night out! - 80.68.42.130)
05 Sep 06
A genuinely funny and silly night in the theatre from a great cast! However, not for those without a good sense of humour who are up for a laugh. - 212.18.224.57)
04 Sep 06
In these stifling politically correct days when Big Brother watches our every uttered opinion – or so we have grown to believe -– SHAMLET offers an unashamed and welcome escape. Moreover, it leaves you no choice but to laugh, unrestrained, at jokes that some may find shocking or crude but which – let's be honest here – are genuinely hysterically funny. Let us remember that Shakespeare's humour was once considered crude, too, and SHAMLET is in that respect true to the Bard. It is in fact about a group of ill-matched, larger than life, social misfits who get together to stage one of Shakespeare's most famous plays – but with a pound's worth of artistic licence.
Andrew Doyle's deliciously irreverent script is a dare to any prejudices of style and content the audience may have, and which are soon dispelled by Robert Carson's fast paced, zany direction.
Grŕinne Gillis's honey-dewed tones and razor sharp comic timing make the character of Joan the kind of theatre director all thespians dread but can't help adoring.
Gregory Floy, as the burnt out Shakespearean actor turned drag queen Isambard, towers over the stage with commanding presence. His polished, beautifully controlled voice booms with the charisma of a true Shakespearean actor.
Dorothy Lawrence is unabashfully sexy and highly expressive as promiscuous primadonna Geraldine, while Debbie Arnold proves her unquestionable versatility doubling up as madcap Holly and foul mouthed Anne Hathaway.
A burst of authentic stage stardom that would make all the 'grandes dames' of the theatre proud, is provided by Maxine Howe as the Mrs Slutska – probably the most surreally twisted character of them all. Her performance is so entrancing, you find yourself believing she will continue being Mrs Slutska even off-stage.
Forget what you're supposed or not supposed to laugh at. SHAMLET provides a hearty, belly laugh you're seldom allowed to have these days.
- 213.122.34.203)
03 Sep 06
This is - sadly - a good script as far as I could make out; but it is directed execrably - I assumed the director had just graduated Uni and / or done a couple of panto's in his local village hall but if he's the chap who was in the bar afterwards he's way old enough to know better.
I thought for the first ten minutes 'Oh, in a bit the coarse acting and mugging and clanging gay in-jokes will give way to something else - this must be a play within a play.' Two hours and an interval later they hadn't and it wasn't...
There are so many out of work actors - I can't believe this lot were the best the producer could come up with for the parts he was casting. They two young men were indistinguishable axm fodder with no timing and no presence. The women didn’t do themselves any favours visually and had universally jarring accents; two of them attempted an exaggerated RP that failed miserably to disguise estuary vowels and messy consonants - their own accents would have been much less intrusive.
The lead woman performed the entire piece on one monotonous, over enunciated and under-paced level as though we were five year olds. Deaf five-year olds.
I won't even go into how abysmal the 'comedic' interpretations of Shakespeare as a piece of devised physical musical theatre were. I can't remember when I've squirmed so much.
The show is badly designed, badly staged, badly lit... I really want to say something nice about it but I can't - it was also achingly smug and luvvie and ultimately disappointing for someone who loves Shakespeare and loves comedy enough to get the references and see what the writer was trying to do.
If you like coarse acting to the point you can watch it for two hours straight without longing for a G&T, you'll love this. If you are a church-hall am-drams enthusiast, again, buy a ticket. Otherwise, seriously, do yourself a favour and give it a miss.
- 217.19.131.29)
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