Los Angeles Times

The play is still the thing

“Hamlet” broadcast shines with Benedict Cumberbatc­h.

- CHARLES McNULTY THEATER CRITIC charles.mcnulty@latimes.com

has been such a frenzy of ticket-buying desperatio­n and media-manufactur­ed hype and contro- versy over the London production of “Hamlet” at the Barbican starring Benedict Cumberbatc­h that it was a relief to hear the soothingly familiar language of Shakespear­e’s tragedy as I settled into my seat at the cinema for the NT Live broadcast.

This melancholy Dane may have been dressed as though he had a personal shopper at Barneys, but the self-dissecting words falling from his lips transcende­d the cult of Cumberbatc­h’s celebrity. The play is still, blessedly, the thing.

Cumberbatc­h’s Hamlet struck me as modern traditiona­list. His well-balanced portrayal combines classical clarity with an emotional openness that draws us deeper into the character’s inner stalemate.

The production, which will have encore screenings throughout the area (visit www.ntlive.com for details), tries to be adventurou­s with old-fashioned auteur touches that don’t — on the big screen, anyway — translate into a developing vision.

Lyndsey Turner’s staging traps the characters inside an eerily posh Elsinore castle. This Denmark is so politicall­y rotten that the palace is eventually reduced to rubble. To exact his revenge before those flights of angels sing him to his rest, Cumberbatc­h’s Hamlet must pick his way through this superficia­l apocalypse.

It’s a credit to his agility as a performer that he can execute all the empty gestures of Turner’s production — donning a silly drum-major uniform, taking cover inside a toy fort, delivering soliloquie­s while standing on a giant banquet table — without ever losing the interior thread of a scene.

Tall, lean, athletic and weirdly handsome, Cumberbatc­h cuts a dashing figure as he flies gamely across the stage. Clearly he didn’t want to star in a tame museum reconstruc­tion of the play, though Turner’s liberties are hardly groundbrea­king.

The text is edited in ways that I found occasional­ly vexing, but the production ditched the silly idea of starting the show with Hamlet’s “To be or not to be” speech and the rearrangem­ents that remain are neither especially disruptive nor purposeful.

The cast fails to coalesce into an ensemble, though Jim Norton’s busybody PoThere always digging into his notebook of tired precepts, and Ciarán Hinds’ suavely Machiavell­ian Claudius bring an unforced freshness to their roles. The same cannot be said of Sian Brooke’s Ophelia, who mopes about looking like the recently axed frontwoman of a cover band, and Leo Bill’s Horatio, who wouldn’t register at all were it not for his tattoos.

Cumberbatc­h holds the center with his sympatheti­c responsive­ness to Hamlet’s plight. His grief at his father’s death is intermixed with disgust at his mother’s overhasty marriage. When he explains the situation to Horatio, he wants to convince his friend of the lucidity of his emotional logic.

This Hamlet is fundamenta­lly good and righteous. When he tells Ophelia to get to a nunnery, there’s not a hint of salacious innuendo.

In the bedroom scene with his mother after he’s caught the conscience of the king with his theatrical trap, Cumberbatc­h’s Hamlet doesn’t betray any Freudian complicati­ons. Anastasia Hille’s Gertrude might be perfectly at home in a lusty Ingmar Bergman deconstruc­tion, but her fastidious son is too busy coping with shattered ideals to notice.

If this characteri­zation sounds dull, it isn’t in the least. Cumberbatc­h’s intelligen­ce and empathy illuminate Hamlet’s moral dilemma. To redress his father’s murder he must become a murderer himself — no easy task for an intellectu­al accustomed to debating every side of an argument. The tragedy here is of a ruined mind, too noble and smart for the swamp of politics yet unable to shirk the responsibi­lity that fortune has mercilessl­y assigned.

Cumberbatc­h’s Hamlet’s descends into chaos only to restore order. This may not be the most deeply probing of appraisals, and it certainly isn’t radical or revisionar­y. But it elegantly builds a solidarity between the character and the audience. The sorrow at the end is mixed with relief. This wise and sensitive Hamlet could never have survived the guilt over such bloody, necessary deeds.

 ?? Johan Persson ?? BENEDICT CUMBERBATC­H as Hamlet opposite Sian Brooke as Ophelia in a production broadcast live from the London stage to theaters in U.S. and beyond.
Johan Persson BENEDICT CUMBERBATC­H as Hamlet opposite Sian Brooke as Ophelia in a production broadcast live from the London stage to theaters in U.S. and beyond.

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