Tag Archives: youth council

Youth Council meets Hamlet cast and creatives

Adam Hipkin, a member of the Young Vic Youth Council and Director of Teafilms Ltd., met with some Hamlet actors and creative team members recently to interview them to produce some content for DVDs that we especially make for schools. Here are some of his thoughts…

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Hamlet is arguably one of the most recognised of Shakespeare’s plays. It sits amongst Macbeth, Romeo and Juliet, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Othello and King Lear, as the most popular plays of his canon (the latter of which was performed at the Young Vic in 2009 by the now late Pete Postlethwaite.).

The Director Ian Rickson, who is taking on his first Shakespeare production, is in charge of an exciting cast headed up by Michael Sheen. We went into their rehearsal rooms just up the road from The Young Vic, with a couple of cameras to chat to some of the cast and crew.

The first person we spoke to was Maxine Doyle. Maxine is the Associate Director of Punchdrunk and is the Choreographer on this production. “Hamlet is a super complex play. My process with the work to date has been essentially kind of delving into the psychological investigation of the text”.  Maxine also mentioned to us a part of the play that is being kept top secret by the production team, but I think it’s fair to say that it draws on her work with Punchdrunk.

Next we spoke to Claire Louise Baldwin and Elle While, (Assistant Stage Manager and Assistant Director) about what a modern audience will get from this production. Claire was adamant that “with regards to the actual show and the way it is set, I don’t think it has been done this way before.” Elle on the other hand focused more on the main character: “It’s [about] someone who has lost someone very important in their life. We could all probably think of someone in our own lives going through that right now.”

After a short break while we waited for the actors to come back from lunch we spoke to James Clyde who is playing Hamlet’s uncle, Claudius. We asked him why he thought Hamlet was such a popular play, one which is always being produced somewhere in the world. “It just has this extraordinary verse. If you look at some of Hamlet’s soliloquies every other line has become part of every day speech. It’s the title of a movie or the title of an album. It’s probably the most borrowed from piece of literature in the English language.”

We then caught up with actor Eileen Walsh who is playing the part of Rosencrantz. This character and his friend Guildenstern are both close friends of Hamlet’s, the other key fact being that these roles have always been played by men. Although the casting of Adeel Akhtar (Four Lions) as Guildenstern sticks to this set up, the casting of Eileen as Rosencrantz sees the first women to play the part. “It feels like a piece of new writing. A women hasn’t played it before so it’s just a new take on the whole thing and certain lines that a man says, once they are said by a women, just have a completely different angle.”

The last actor we managed to have a chat with before the afternoon rehearsals started was Pip Donaghy who is playing three different characters: Barnardo, The Player King and the Gravedigger, the latter of which sparks one of the most famous scenes in the play with Hamlet holding the skull of his old Court Jester, Yorick. “In our production they [Barnardo, Player King and Gavedigger]  are going to have the same soul, they are going to be kind of the same character manifesting themselves in different guises.”

As we finished chatting to Pip the rehearsals picked up again and so we had to make room and pack down the kit.

Filming Interviews for The Glass Menagerie

The Glass Menagerie is the Young Vic’s 2010 Christmas show for its 40th Anniversary Season. I was teamed up with Adam Penford who compiles education packs for the Young Vic and accompanied him in filming interviews with Joe Hill-Gibbins (Director), Abigail Graham (Assistant Director), Kyle Soller (the actor playing ‘Jim’), and Jeremy Herbert (Set Designer). The finished product will go to local schools as an educational DVD about the show.

“I feel very lucky on this production that we’ve such good people [involved]” said Joe ahead of the first week of rehearsals, “It was actually David’s [Lan] idea [to put the play on] but I knew the play very well and have loved it for a long time”. Abigail echoed his enthusiasm: “it’s Tennessee Williams, the man is a bit clever”.

One of the topics that were discussed, was whether the Slides and Captions that appear in Tennessee Williams detailed stage directions would be kept in. Joe’s response? “I don’t know yet, we haven’t decided.” As it was so early in the rehearsal process this freshness was a common recurrence within their chats with Adam P and myself. Kyle, however, had the slight advantage as he had played his character “Jim” only a few months previously in a different production, “what I found with Jim is he’s a lot more than what appears on the surface, he’s a tip of the iceberg kinda guy.”

One thing that was confirmed was the music which is being composed by Dario Marianelli who won an Oscar for his score in Atonement, “music is a huge part of the play… as soon as you put music under a speech it goes somewhere”  said Jeremy.

So it looks like The Glass Menagerie is all set to be a hit this Christmas. When asked if modern audiences would be able to relate to the period piece Abigail pointed out that “the play is relevant to contemporary audiences… everyone has a family and family dynamics are difficult.”

Adam Hipkin for The Young Vic’s Young Council

The Glass Menagerie opens at the Young Vic on the 11th of November and runs until the 1st of January 2011.

Behind The Scenes on “The Human Comedy” at The Young Vic

I was asked to come into the Young Vic and film a rehearsal of The Human Comedy on the day that the cast had their first rehearsal on the Main Stage. This short films’ primary use was to go as part of a trio of shorts I shot (as part of the up and coming Media Lab) for The Young Vic on their 40 Years Young anniversary.

It was a very busy day as it was also The Cast and Community’s first day of Tech in amongst the set (designed by the ridiculously talented Jon Bausor). I found that I had very little work to do, there were so many things happening that all I had to do was point and shoot and 9/10 I caught something interesting. To add to the rehearsal footage, I interviewed the a-for mentioned Designer Jon, the actors Brenda Edwards and Terel Nugent, and members of the community choir; Ceilidh, Anthony, Kayode, Tyrel, Zoe and Cathy. The thing that struck me about them all is their excitement and passion of being involved in this production.

All in all I hope this video encapsulates one of the many things that make the Young Vic unique; its involvement with the local community, and its ability to make all who take part, feel like a star.

Adam Hipkin, Young Vic Youth Council