Ato Blankson-Wood and Marcel Spears Are a Pair of Hamlets for the (Modern) Ages | 半岛体育

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Special Features Ato Blankson-Wood and Marcel Spears Are a Pair of Hamlets for the (Modern) Ages

Blankson-Wood plays the Danish Prince at Free Shakespeare in the Park's Hamlet this summer, while Spears stars in Fat Ham on Broadway.

Ato Blankson-Wood in Hamlet, and Marcel Spears in Fat Ham

Few plays have lingered on the collective mind for as long as William Shakespeare鈥檚 Hamlet. Since the first performance of this play well over 400 years ago, the revered drama has cemented itself in the Western canon, and for good reason. Theatre just does not get any messier.

The story introduces us to young Hamlet鈥攖he brooding Prince of Denmark鈥攁s he grieves his recently deceased father, King Hamlet. Hamlet senior鈥檚 brother, Claudius, takes advantage of the opportunity and marries King Hamlet鈥檚 widow, gaining power over the throne in the process. From there, King Hamlet鈥檚 ghost visits the prince, reveals the truth about his murder (spoiler alert: Claudius did it), and orders the young man to avenge his death by killing Claudius. Case in point: mess.

That villainous command sets the prince on a psychologically taxing journey of revenge, betrayal and, of course, love. As actor Marcel Spears explains, 鈥淗amlet鈥檚 wrestling with himself and sitting under the burden of this responsibility he鈥檚 been tasked with. And the way that he navigates that trouble speaks directly to the human experience. You of course don鈥檛 have to be trying to avenge the death of your father in order to sit up and ponder: Am I able to do this? Is it right for me to do this thing? What is the cost?鈥�

Spears thinks a lot about the relationship between Hamlet and humanity because he plays Juicy鈥� a contemporary kind of Hamlet鈥攊n James Ijames鈥� Pulitzer Prize-winning Fat Ham, which opened at The Public Theater in 2022 ahead of its 2023 Broadway run. But Spears鈥� version of the prince is pointedly different from what audiences are used to: Juicy is gay, Black, and the only thing royal about him is his Cleopatra-like eyeliner.

Spears has a companion though in actor Ato Blankson-Wood, who also steps into the role of Hamlet this season for The Public Theater鈥檚 61st Free Shakespeare in the Park. Blankson- Wood joins the ranks of artistic greats Sam Waterston, Michael Stuhlbarg, and Oscar Isaac, who all played the part in previous Public Theater productions, but this new staging, directed by Kenny Leon, hinges on a present-day interpretation of the classic.

Nick Rehberger, Ato Blankson-Wood, and the company of Hamlet Joan Marcus

Spears and Blankson-Wood are both young, gifted, and beautiful Black men who consider the titular role a dream come true. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e gonna do the canon, there are certain pieces as a young man that you look at and think, 鈥榠ight, there鈥檚 gonna be a time when I do that.鈥� Hamlet is one of those,鈥� Spears explains. 鈥淚t鈥檚 Shakespeare鈥檚 longest play. There are seven or eight soliloquies where Hamlet is just unpacking all of his angst and fear and insecurity and pain. It鈥檚 a dream role, but you have to be up for the task鈥攊t鈥檚 a meaty one.鈥�

Fat Ham doubles down on that meatiness in a literal way: Ijames sets the play at a Black family barbecue in North Carolina. All of the Bard鈥檚 tropes and some of those aforementioned soliloquies are still there, but Fat Ham clearly shoots for comedy, not tragedy. Before Broadway, however, Spears did have a go at a more traditional Hamlet back in graduate school and he credits that classical training for his success now.

Blankson-Wood finds similar strength from his previous educational and professional experiences: Graduate school planted the seeds for his burgeoning love of Hamlet as well. Before then, he did not have a ton of familiarity with the Bard. 鈥淲hen I got to school, I fell in love with this language and the roadmap that Shakespeare lays out for his characters. Hamlet, in particular, always felt aligned with aspects of who I am.鈥�

Blankson-Wood is no stranger to The Public鈥檚 stages or audience. Most recently, he starred as Orlando in the Public Works production of As You Like It. But this opportunity still came with its fair share of pressure. 鈥淚 found out about this production back in November or December [of 2022] and went through the whole journey of imposter syndrome鈥攖he fear, the excitement, all of it. Eventually, I landed in a place of 鈥楲et鈥檚 just go! Let鈥檚 get in this room and go.鈥� I was ready, you know?鈥�

The cast of Fat Ham Joan Marcus

鈥淭hat sounds like the arc of Hamlet,鈥� Spears points out. And it鈥檚 true. Hamlet is perhaps most famous for his self-doubt, but by the end of the play he is brave enough to conquer his enemy. When asked what helped him move from fear to excitement, Blankson-Wood credits an early conversation with Leon.

Leon, like Blankson-Wood, is a part of The Public family. The Tony-winning director left his latest mark on the institution with the 2019 Shakespeare in the Park production of Much Ado About Nothing which featured an all-Black cast. 鈥淸Leon] was immediately like a coach. And he made me feel like we鈥檙e gonna climb this mountain together. He understood that this was a huge undertaking for many reasons. But he knew if I trusted him and he trusted me, that we could do this together," says Blankson-Wood. "There鈥檚 something about that invitation to play that is really exciting. And Kenny is about us, right? So for that reason, I鈥檓 like, if I鈥檓 ever going to play Hamlet, I would like to do it with someone who has got my back.鈥�

Even though Fat Ham and Shakespeare in the Park鈥檚 Hamlet take two different approaches, both plays are interestingly reset to the American South: North Carolina and Georgia, respectively. These states are a far cry from Denmark, so when Spears, born in Louisiana, and Blankson Wood, born in Maryland, are asked what makes the South so ripe for Shakespeare adaptations, they ponder a minute before answering.

鈥淔rankly, I think a lot of this work is happening because of the racial reckoning that began in 2020,鈥� Blankson-Wood begins. 鈥淣ew York audiences need to see Hamlet through a Southern lens. Our shows center the weight that鈥檚 put on Black men specifically (and Black people more generally) and I think this moment in history requires us to process Hamlet鈥檚 agony through us.鈥�

鈥淪hakespeare was very specific and aware of who his audience was,鈥� Spears adds. 鈥淗e knew the time he was writing in and who was going to be watching this thing. That鈥檚 why there are so many different folios; Shakespeare was always adjusting. As storytellers we are supposed to reflect the world around us. That鈥檚 the job and that鈥檚 what we鈥檙e doing. Even if you don鈥檛 happen to be a Black person from North Carolina or Atlanta, you should be able to empathize with our characters and recognize our shared humanity in the same way you do with a little white dude from Denmark.鈥�

Free Shakespeare in the Park's Hamlet runs through August 6 at the Delacorte Theatre in Central Park. Fat Ham concludes its Broadway run at the American Airlines Theatre July 2. 

Take a Look at The Public's Free Shakespeare in the Park's Hamlet

 
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