Hamlet (1603) is one of my favorite Shakespearean plays. It's heavy-laden with gay subtexts, from the tortured Hamlet's buddy-bond with Horatio to the backstage chumminess of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern.
Many contemporary versions, parodies, and pastiches have a queer mentality, too. Remember Mary Anne on Gilligan's Island as a drag-king Laertes listening to his father pontificate?
But I never thought of watching it for the beefcake, until I saw this still of Filip Adeyev in a Russian version of the tragedy.
Aranui High School often wins out over other productions in New Zealand's National Festival of Shakespeare in Schools. In 2006 they gave Hamlet a Maori context, with Te Awhiroa Kuka-Sweet as the Prince of Denmark.
In 2014, Hiraeth Artistic Productions in London mounted an all-male Hamlet set in a Liverpool prison, with both buddy-bonding and multiple shirtless shots.
The Theatre de Vanves in Paris went even farther, with Hamlet (Robin Causse) completely nude throughout (the other players wore clothes).
Earlier this year, chestworthy actor and reality-tv star Tom Sandoval appeared on the Bravo talk show Watch What Happens Live to perform the "To be or not to be" soliloquy with his shirt off. Presumably the intended audience wouldn't pay attention any other way.
Hamlet and Horatio do have a classic bromance which might be more than just that
ReplyDelete"Good night, sweet prince, and flights of angels guide thee to thy rest"
DeleteWell, it's a fucked up and 100% fratricidal (and matricidal) family. A lot of people can relate to the melancholy Dane, even if unlike traditional monarchs, our family trees actually have branches.
ReplyDeleteNow I'm thinking of the Maori short "Twilight of the Gods". You'd like it, it's a tragic romance with an all-new cast. Other than the "tragic romance" part, nothing really screams Wagner.
Hamlet as a gay man makes a lot of sense
ReplyDeleteHe's depressed; how can he be gay?
ReplyDelete