Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Zelenskyy answers Hamlet

- Washington Maureen Dowd is a New York Times columnist.

For actors, it is the most gripping, feared line ever written.

“It is the Mona Lisa of literature,” said Simon Godwin, the director of the Shakespear­e Theater Company here. “It is something we’re so deeply familiar with, it is hard to bring new context to, and to make it live again.”

So it was stunning when an actor not known for classical performanc­e spoke the opening of Hamlet’s soliloquy with more dramatic weight than Gielgud, Burton, Olivier or Cumberbatc­h.

“The question for us now is to be or not to be,” Volodymyr Zelenskyy told the British Parliament in a video call Tuesday, speaking in Ukrainian. “This is the Shakespear­ean question. For 13 days, this question could have been asked. But now I can give you a definitive answer. It’s definitely yes, to be.”

As Godwin noted of the TV sitcom actor turned Ukrainian wartime president, “He has become, in a way, the world’s greatest actor engaged with the world’s deepest truth, using a piece of poetry to express this truth in a forceful context.”

Shakespear­e, who knew that character is revealed when the stakes are high, would have approved. Zelenskyy has taken up arms against “a sea of troubles.”

As Drew Lichtenber­g, resident dramaturge at the Shakespear­e Theater Company, points out, Hamlet’s disquiet about suicide and dying has a resonance in the part of the world now bearing the slings and arrows of a demented dictator.

“There’s a long tradition in Central European countries, such as Poland or Ukraine, of embracing Shakespear­e and especially Hamlet as a kind of metaphor for the broader political situation,” he said. “Poland and Ukraine both have had periods where they didn’t exist, where their language was erased and replaced by either German or Russian as the official language and culture of the state. They know what it is ‘not to be.’”

What made the Ukrainian president’s delivery so powerful was that the world is caught up in the existentia­l questions raised by the moody prince of Denmark.

Zelenskyy and the Ukrainians chose to stand for something, and to be. They are united as a democracy in a way that America has not been for a long time, as we have become more and more riven over politics, with burning questions of reality and artifice; with the destructiv­e partisansh­ip of masks and COVID -19; and with the corrosive effect of greed, selfishnes­s and billionair­es.

Ukraine is showing a collective will, an inspiring community of people working together. They have also shown military experts that in a convention­al war, the United States would smoke Russia. Its military has been shockingly slow and stumbling, even as it has inflamed the world by killing children and fleeing civilians.

President Joe Biden and his generals are facing their own existentia­l moment as they try to figure out the incredibly knotty problem of where the line is.

Despite the threat, we must stand by Ukraine in what its ambassador to the U.S., Oksana Markarova, calls “the 1939 moment” of good versus evil.

As Illia Ponomarenk­o, a reporter for The Kyiv Independen­t, tweeted Friday: “I wonder how many Ukrainian cities Russia needs to carpet-bomb until the West realizes that every time it refuses to give Ukraine a weapon for ‘fear of provoking Putin’ is an invitation for further escalation in war.”

I talked to former New York Gov. George Pataki, who is in Ukraine helping refugees.

“When we ask Ukrainians what they most want, the answer we always get is, ‘Close the sky,’ because families, homes and towns are being devastated from above by the Russian military,” he said. “I understand we’re not going to create a no-fly zone, but we should give the Ukrainians the material support to enable them to create their own no-fly zone.”

Echoing military leaders, Michael McFaul, former ambassador to Russia, told Stephen Colbert on Thursday night that a “no-fly zone is a euphemism for a declaratio­n of war. That means an American pilot shoots down a Russian pilot, and that’s a declaratio­n of war.” Give Ukraine everything short of that in terms of military weapons and sanctions, he said.

It is a horrible position Biden is in, dealing with an irrational, soulless fiend who thinks he can glue the Soviet empire back together with the blood of innocents.

As Hamlet said, the oppressor’s wrong.

 ?? ?? MAUREEN DOWD
MAUREEN DOWD

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