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Robert O'Hara, who is bringing a very reinterpreted version of 'Hamlet' to L.A.'s Mark Taper Forum, talks about its film noir and David Lynch touches.
Before Hamlet returns to the Denver Center for the Performing Arts, only CBS News Colorado was taken behind the scenes to see how dozens of costumes and wigs are created to bring the show to life.
Patrick Ball talks about playing 'Hamlet' in stage in a very unusual adaptation at the Mark Taper Forum in L.A., while resuming work on 'The Pitt.' ...
‘Fat Ham’ is a frivolous but fearless reconception of ‘Hamlet’ To be, or not to be, is the driving question behind James Ijames’s play and Wilbury Theatre’s Rhode Island premiere ...
Elizabeth Helmer plays the title character in Home Made Theater’s production of “Hamlet,” running Feb. 28 to March 9 at Saratoga Music Hall in Saratoga Springs.
Grant Chapman, who was cast to play Hamlet for this production a year ago, said it's a version of the character that he could get behind. "He's someone who is like, 'Oh, God, this is not what I ...
As a result of O’Hara’s construction, several of the characters other than Hamlet are playing a couple versions of themselves – those who Shakespeare wrote and those who we encounter later.
There’s a method to the madness, as a “Hamlet” character might say, in the collaboration between Island City Stage, Brévo Theatre and GableStage for their production of James Ijames’s 2… ...
The documentary, following a production of “Hamlet” within “Grand Theft Auto V,” is a high mark for the machinima genre of in-game filmmaking.
In Hamlet, three other major characters, Rosencranz, Guilderstein and Horatio are also cast without regard to gender. Helmer insists the gender switch is not a big deal.
Director Robert O'Hara's noir version of 'Hamlet,' starring Patrick Ball and premiering at Mark Taper Forum, audaciously but incoherently toys with Shakespeare's tragedy.
“Hamlet” (the original) was written, of course, in 1600s vintage English blank verse; much of “Fat Ham” is in Black English but every bit or more understandable than its forebear, revie… ...