
For a Hamlet junkie like myself Bernhardt/Hamlet is a delight, but it encompasses so much more than just the melancholy Dane, and most of it lands squarely in my basket of intense interests. There are explorations of gender, power, art, interpretation, adaptation, and even a fleeting nod to the invention of cinema. And that’s just the play itself, the production also casts the show without gender bias, including Women cast as men and a gender nonconforming actor cast as a man. The production reflects one of the central themes of the work as life imitate art and shows us that Bernhardt was right. There is no reason that women cannot be cast in male roles, men in female roles, and nonbinary actors as either. The goal should always be to find the best person for any given role. Theatre Pro Rata is a company that has, since I attended my first show of theirs, always been open to this concept. Always sent out press releases identifying the actors pronouns and making sure that those of us who write about the shows are respectful of those pronouns.
In Bernhardt/Hamlet written by Theresa Rebeck we get a fictional take on what the rehearsals and discussions were like when the great actress Sarah Bernhardt was preparing for her controversial appearance in Hamlet as Hamlet. There is so much happening in the play and for theater lovers there is plenty of talk about what is meant by certain lines in the plays, what the characters are thinking, and how the actors should perform them. There is also a love affair that as far as I can tell from perusing Wikipedia, is not based on real life, between Bernhardt and the married playwright Edmond Rostand. Along with many of the famous speeches from Hamlet we also get some extracts from Rostand’s Cyrano de Bergerac. The relationship between Rostand and Bernhardt is a wonderful invention and it’s amazing how well the scenes form Hamlet and Cyrano, when they are performed, comment on and progress the ideologies of the play and it’s characters.
Nicole Goeden plays Bernhardt as someone who is aware of her power and position as well as her celebrity. She gives the impression of someone who simply gets what she wants by doing as she pleases, confident in her ability to inspire submission from those around her, not out of fear but out of affection for her. Her costar and perhaps director Constant Coquelin played by Sean Dillon seems to good naturedly go along with her abrupt desires to work on a different scene in the middle of another one. Dillon plays this with good humor, giving a sense that his character has been through all of this before, and is at peace with Bernhardt’s process. The same is true of Duck Washington’s Alphonse Mucha who creates the posters for Bernhardt’s productions. They are natural and understanding of Sarah’s whims and her gifts, they are friends and collaborators, and both actors convey that nicely to the audience. Em Rosenberg who recently made their debut appearance on the Guthrie stage in Hamlet, how’s that for serendipity, plays Edmond Rostand. Rosenberg is an actor I’ve had my eye on for a while now. I first came across them in the first Theatre Pro Rata show I saw Top Girls. My comments in that review about them began “The stand out for me was Emily (Em) Rosenberg” and that could just as easily be the start of my comments regarding Rosenberg in every show I’ve seen them in including this one. Rosenberg is cast not based on gender but because they are the best actor for the role of Rostand. Every interaction with another character whether it is a passionate embrace with Sarah, an argument with a critic about Bernhardt playing Hamlet, or standing up for his play Cyrano de Bergerac we completely believe this version of Rostand even as we know he is in most ways a fiction of the playwright.
Directed by Carin Bratlie Wethern who seems to have created a sense of ease with these actors so that we feel like their rehearsal is just that, running lines and exploring their characters. There are fun reveals throughout the show of Alphonse Mucha poster art which was recreated for the show by the Set Designer Sadie Ward. There is a link on the Theatre Pro Rata website where you can bid in a silent auction to own these wonderful posters. Ward has done a nice job with the sets, using a lot of curtains and sheets of fabric draping over things, it gives the idea that we are in a theater that is in the early stages of creating it’s sets. Other strong technical elements were the lighting design by Emmet Kowler and the costumes by Raphael Ferreira. I’d also like to mention the work of Annie Enneking as the Intimacy/Fight Choreographer along with Claire Chenoweth for Intimacy/Fight Observer, last summer I got a better understanding of what an Intimacy Coordinator does from conversations at the Great River Shakespeare Festival with one of the founders in the field, and I love that a smaller company like Pro Rata is utilizing people with those skills. It shows a respect for their actors and their audiences.
Bernhardt/Hamlet maybe a little too inside baseball for anyone who is unfamiliar with Hamlet and Cyrano de Bergerac, but if you know the basics of those plays you’ll be on solid ground for this well scripted play that continues the conversation about gender in theater that Sarah Bernhardt began over 100 years ago. It’s a thoughtful and entertaining evening at the theater with a love story that really comes alive thanks to the strong performances of Nicole Goeden and Em Rosenberg. Bernhardt/Hamlet runs through October 14th at the Crane Theater in NE Minneapolis for more information and to purchase tickets go to https://www.theatreprorata.org/category/shows/current-production/
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