hamlet | Globe to Globe Hamlet

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To be, or not to be: Around the world

When our Globe to Globe Hamlet company set off on a two-year tour with the aim of touring the iconic play to every country in the world, they took this Folio Edition of Hamlet on their travels.

The stage managers asked someone in each country they visited to sign the book and inscribe the line “To be, or not to be” in their own language. If someone from each country inscribes their language into the pages, the text is claimed by the world; remembering performance is difficult, but textual keepsakes can last forever. 

Now that the Hamlet company have returned home, so too has their Folio Edition and its wealth of messages. Take a look.

Discover more about our Globe to Globe production of Hamlet.

(via defying-augury)

Globe to Globe Hamlet: Audience reactions

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Having travelled over 300,000 km and played 293 performances at 202 venues in 197 countries, Hamlet returned to The Globe for its final four performances on the weekend of 23 and 24 April. Here’s what our audiences had to say about the final shows.

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President Obama visits The Globe

US President Barack Obama visited us today, as we mark the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death this weekend. The President was welcomed into the Globe Theatre by the cast of Hamlet, home from their two-year tour to 197 countries.

The Hamlet company performed a selection of scenes from the production for the President. The company have returned home for the weekend for four final performances, having travelled over 300,000 km and played 293 performances at 202 venues in 197 countries.

Dominic Dromgoole, our Artistic Director: 

“At the end of an extraordinary journey all around the world, it is great to return home to the Globe, and to be able to perform a few scenes and to be welcomed home by President Barack Obama. The spirit of ‘Yes we can’ has informed the entire tour, and it’s an honour to meet the man who coined the phrase, and who exemplifies its spirit.”

Image credits: Pete Le May

Discover more about Globe to Globe Hamlet.

Final Day

Our last day and final 2 shows are suddenly upon us. It’s unbelievable and a little bit sad, although our Hamleteers will be very glad to be back home.

See the jig from yesterday’s first show on Twitter:

Globe to Globe Hamlet - when the play is really the thing.

tattooedshakespeare:

On Saturday, April 16th, I had the wonderful opportunity to witness the notorious Globe to Globe Hamlet tour during their only Italian stop. If you’re in the theatre world but have been living under a rock, the tour started in 2014 and it planned to visit every single country on planet Earth in the span of two years, concluding on April 23/24 (again, if you’re living under a rock, April 23 is the day ol’ Mr. Shakes supposedly died) at The Globe in London. I’m not going to tell the whole story of the production, so if you want to know more about the whole project, click HERE.

The notably interesting cast, composed by twelve actors with extremely different backgrounds and experiences, is greatly adaptable, being able to cover the different required roles during the play, but also to take on a different character every performance (as the website says, two years is a long time to play just one part). Our Hamlet for the matinee was Ladi Emeruwa, a stunning young actor who took us by the hand and lead us through his character’s long rocky journey. Horatio was played by Phoebe Fildes, who brought an entire new level of compassion — and love — to Hamlet’s dear friend and confidante, while Rawiri Paratene, Claudius, stood imperious and unbent at Miranda Foster’s side, who was torn between the love for her son, and her duties as queen and wife. Tom Lawrence and Jennifer Leong shone as Laertes and Ophelia, and Keith Bartlett stole the scene as their father, balancing the right amounts of wit and comedy the role calls for. Speaking of scene-stealers, Beruce Khan stole the show teaming up with Matthew Romain for Rosencrantz and Guildenstern and with the other multiple roles he took on during the course of the play (his Osric was absolutely fabulous and deserves to be mentioned).

In my experience, I’ve found two main approaching to telling Hamlet’s tragedy: one where the play is the thing, and one where the play is only one small thing among other things. In the latter, you have a stunning, stupendous, dazzling production with a massive set with details galore where you get easily lost among rich paintings and choreographed table toppers; then you can have a stripped down, simple, gracious, fine, neat, charming production, where it’s the words and the acting that bring the play to life. The bareness and earthliness of this set establishes this telling of Hamlet’s story as coming from the inside, rather than from the outside, it doesn’t allow the audience’s eyes to wonder lost, but it focuses the attention on the actors, who are capable of capturing you with their first word and never letting you go until they exhaled their last one. This production’s sets were surely designed and planned to be able to be handled and shipped and built all around the world in venues that present massive differences in dimensions and nature, nonetheless having such a stripped down atmosphere made a striking contrast in a theatre as luxurious and beautiful as the Politeama Rossetti in Trieste.

With Emeruwa coming from Nigeria, Leong from Hong Kong, Paratene being a New Zealand Māori, and Khan having Pakistani heritage, it’s the most varied Hamlet I’ve ever seen in my life. It was such a refreshing experience seeing so much diversity in such an important production for the history of theatre. Hopefully, there will soon come a day when we don’t have to mention this kind of diversity as surprising and uncommon, but for now, given the horrible times the entertainment business is going through, I feel the need to stress and underline what a marvel it is to see this kind of diversity in such a traditional play. Good job, Globe, I applaud you.

@globetoglobehamlet @shakespearesglobeblog

Thank you for your heartfelt words.

shakespearesglobeblog:
“ Globe to Globe Hamlet ticket lottery Due to popular demand for tickets to Globe to Globe Hamlet’s final performances at the Globe on Saturday 23 and Sunday 24 April, we’re partnering with TodayTix to offer a lottery of...

shakespearesglobeblog:

Globe to Globe Hamlet ticket lottery

Due to popular demand for tickets to Globe to Globe Hamlet’s final performances at the Globe on Saturday 23 and Sunday 24 April, we’re partnering with TodayTix to offer a lottery of tickets for each performance.

There will be 25 yard (standing) tickets available via the TodayTix app for each of the four performances. The digital lottery will open on Monday 18 April and close on Friday 22 April. Winners will be notified that day and given the opportunity to purchase £5 tickets for their selected performance.

To enter the lottery:

  • Download the TodayTix app at the Apple App Store, Google Play Store and Amazon App Store.
  • Tap on the Globe to Globe Hamlet lottery. Select the performance that you’d like to see and enter up to two tickets. The entry period will begin each day at midnight, and continue until winners are notified via email or push notification. 
  • You can pay for your tickets via the app and they will be delivered directly to the “My Order” section. Please add lottery@todaytix.com to your list of approved contacts.
  • Winners have one hour to claim their tickets in-app. If unclaimed, tickets will be offered to other entrants.

Visit todaytix.com to find out more about the app.

Follow Hamlet’s world tour on the Globe to Globe blog