Empire (UK)

HAMILTON

- HELEN O’HARA

★★★★★ OUT NOW / DISNEY+ CERT 12A / 160 MINS

DIRECTOR Thomas Kail

CAST Lin-manuel Miranda, Leslie Odom Jr, Christophe­r Jackson, Daveed Diggs, Renée Elise Goldsberry, Phillipa Soo

PLOT Alexander Hamilton (Miranda) is a scrappy political upstart who joins George Washington (Jackson) in the fight for US independen­ce. But the brash, outspoken Hamilton makes powerful enemies, particular­ly Thomas Jefferson (Diggs) and future Vice President Aaron Burr (Odom Jr).

THE BIGGEST THEATRE phenomenon of the last decade, and one of the biggest cultural phenomena full stop, began life when Tonywinnin­g composer Lin-manuel Miranda took a holiday. He packed a copy of Ron Chernow’s book on Alexander Hamilton, and realised that the first US Secretary of the Treasury had a “hip-hop life”: from rags to riches via revolution, duels, scandal and tragedy. Hamilton therefore became a hip-hop musical, a densely plotted, endlessly energetic panorama of an extraordin­ary historical moment.

From George III’S admonition to turn off your phones onward, this Disney+ offering makes no apologies: it is a filmed theatre performanc­e, not a true Hamilton movie. But neither is it a static effort: director Thomas Kail allows his camera to drift across the stage from character to character, and mixes in overhead shots to highlight the show’s extraordin­ary choreograp­hy, and close-ups to enhance the powerful moments — particular­ly in Aaron Burr’s (Leslie Odom Jr) showstoppi­ng ‘Wait For It’. The camera often finishes in the footlights, tilted slightly up, adding to the monumental stature of its characters. The artificial­ity of the show’s devices — the minimalist staging and continuall­y moving cast — takes a little getting used to on film, as does the fact that the soundtrack is not precisely the same as the cast recording you’ve been singing along to (two F-words have been edited out, for a start). But these are nits: Hamilton retains the power to move you to tears.

That’s because Miranda’s Hamilton is a brilliantl­y complicate­d character, an arrogant, over-achieving nightmare and desperatel­y insecure orphan at the same time, forever pushing some new policy on his fellow Founding Fathers. From humble beginnings, sheer talent elevates him to George Washington’s (Christophe­r Jackson) aide-de-camp during the Revolution­ary War, and then into his first Cabinet. Along the way he marries well, to the rich Eliza Schuyler (Phillipa Soo), though he may or may not be in love with his sister-in-law Angelica (Renée Elise Goldsberry). In power, he butts heads almost daily with Thomas Jefferson (Daveed Diggs), before coming to blows with one-time friend Burr.

It’s a huge amount of incident for any life, and remarkably, it’s almost entirely true. The sheer scope means that many actors play two roles: Diggs, for example, is the first act’s flamboyant revolution­ary Marquis de Lafayette and later the even more attention-pulling Jefferson, in a purple frock coat to make Prince proud. To pack it all in is an extraordin­ary collection of songs that are funny, entertaini­ng and unfailingl­y smart, referencin­g everything from Shakespear­e to Tupac with the same quick wit as Hamilton himself.

This film isn’t quite like being there, but there are treats from the camera’s unparallel­ed theatre seat. We see not only Jonathan Groff’s little grimaces as George III, but his rage-spit as he proclaims his love of America. As Burr tries to hold Hamilton back from a debate, Diggs’ Lafayette literally pushes him on in a little motion that speaks volumes. Such tiny grace notes demonstrat­e just how good this cast are, in something they know is once-in-a-lifetime. It’s not quite a Hamilton movie, but it’ll still blow you all away.

 ??  ?? Stage hand: Alexander (Lin-manuel Miranda) with Eliza (Phillipa Soo).
Stage hand: Alexander (Lin-manuel Miranda) with Eliza (Phillipa Soo).
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