A Little Water - Hamlet in Development
And from her fair and unpolluted flesh may violets spring
As a theatre maker, for many years I have wanted to explore the character of Shakespeare's Ophelia. I am fascinated by who Ophelia is, perhaps because I feel that we only every catch glimpses of her - as a reflection as she passes through life defined, controlled by, viewed and used by others. Her brother, her mother, the Queen and King, Hamlet and the court at large and indeed the country justify their judgements of her by deciding that she is either virtuous or wanting. Ophelia is standing alone in a room begging to be seen, to be loved, to be valued. To have agency. To be herself.
Ophelia deserves better.
We deserve better.
I am a woman theatre director who specialises in re-telling classical stories. While this may not at first seem to be an act of subversion, I am often surprised by how radical people find my work. All I am doing is taking Shakespeare’s words, listening to their meaning and giving their meaning actions – without the male lens. Some audiences think they know these stories because they have seen a constant re-telling of them through the perspective and sensibilities of creative teams of directors, dramaturges, designers and casts dominated by men.
In developing this show, I interrogate the text - asking questions and seeking answers that many others may have taken for granted - or not even thought to ask in the first place due to the tradition of classical theatre. Through challenging the assumptions of the text, through re-contextualising the story from a woman-focused lens, we are performing an act of rebellion.
By presenting these stories through an alternate viewpoint, we are claiming back our space in an art from that has been dominated by an oppressive class.
We are making space for ourselves in the history of storytelling, in what we have been told is the most exclusive form of theatre making – classical theatre – SHAKESPEARE! This “exclusive” form is still dominated by white men.
I am not seeking to just re-tell these stories with contemporary costumes and an exotic location. I am not seeking to provide you with a production of Shakespeare you have seen all your life. I am here to take up space, to re-invent the stories we have inherited and to stake claim over this art form.
I believe that words matter. And Shakespeare has written some pretty brutal words. Our production offers you an opportunity to engage with these brutal words in a safe place – one where women hold the narrative and one where we shape our story.
THE CAST
OPHELIA Rachel Linder
OPHELIA ENSEMBLE Eddy Sipress, Amanda Sonquist & Mariabella Sorini
HAMLET Abdimalik Ahmed
QUEEN GERTRUDE Deanne McDonald Haywood
POLONIUS Penelope Parsons-Lord
LEARTES Ezra Jackson-Smith
KING CLAUDIUS Joel Reyer
The Crew
DIRECTOR/CREATOR Penelope Parsons-Lord
ASSISTANT DIRECTORS Emma Coty & Aleksander Sievert
COSTUME DESIGN & CONSTRUCTION Penelope Parsons-Lord & Krista Weiss
MAKEUP & HAIR DESIGN Mariabella Sorini
PUBLICITY DESIGN Aleksander Sievert, Will Hanson, Penelope Parsons- Lord & Rachel Linder
VIDEO CREATION/PHOTOGRAPHER Will Hanson
LIGHTING DESIGNER CONSULTANT Tony Stoeri
WATER COLOUR PAITINGS Maureen Kahn
PRODUCER Penelope Parsons-Lord
ASSOCIATE PRODUCERS Krista Weiss & Rachel Linder
NOTE ON THE COSTUMES
All our costumes have been made from donated, found, or recycled materials.