Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, October 4, 1968 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY theatre Ellis Rabb'S Hamlet: Another view By DANIEL OKRENT Feature Editor There is something indeed in the complaint that the APA's Hamlet is not a true Hamlet, not a rendering in standard terms of the life and times of the tormented Dane; but actu- ally, the complaint should only be offered by those guilty of pre-judgment. For Ellis Rabb, in both his direction and his acting, has transcended the image of ;Hamlet that we all dutifully adopted in high school. Perhaps it is the very "stagey" understatement of it all, from the starkness of the set to the even drone of Rabb's soliloquies, that causes the disconcerting production to strike an off- chord for some viewers. Or per-, haps it is the considerable dif- ferences between the rarely- used quarto edition that Rabb employs and the more common- ly seen First ,Folio. In, either case--or in -both cases-it is easy to see how the production can be discomfiting. But Rabb quite clearly knows what he is doing, and as "to be or not to be . ." becomes the logical question of a young man confronted with choices of life- styles and not of life or no life, we see an entirely new play. The re-interpretation's chief vir- tUe is not that it is merely radi- cal and different; rather, it is an exceedingly sensible re-inter- pretation that Rabb develops with sure-footed logic. This new Hamlet that Rabb has so superbly redrawn is never the madman. He is an individual who perceives his en- vironment and comes readily to grips with it. It is not a matter of whether or not Hamrlet should face the gruesome realities of his particular situation; it only becomes a matter of how. Once his choice is made and his course is determined, he stays to it with an almost cocky as- surance and conviction. There are three scenes in par- ticular in which. Rabb (one of three members of the APA com- pany who will be playing the role during its two-week run) exhibits the character's uncan- ny contrpl over his person and his life. 'The first consists of his use of the travelling play- ers' masks to confront Gertrude and Claudius in a net pre-pro- logue to the players' actual per- formance. Here he first tips his hand to his evil parents; here he defines the battle he will en-r ter into with them. The uneasy reactions of king and queen are matched only by the response of the audience as it becomes aware of'fa Hamlet that none of us have met before. Immediately after an inter- mission that is shockingly placed not only in mid-act but in mid-sentence, and forces continuity into the second half of the play, comes Rabb's major coup. It is the play-within-the- play, the stage-managed con- frontation with the evil Clau- dius. As + the actors relate the the crucial stanza inserted by Hamlet. the prince displays ut- ter superiority and control, l- beit vengeful and perhaps sa- distic. As Rabb slowly backs off the stage as the playlet begins, and carefully, proudly passes up one aisle, out of the theater, then down another, he has real- ly delivered the important blow; Claudius, played convincingly by Peter Coffield, fidgets nerv- ously, his ire grows. Hamlet, standing in the audience with chin high and eyes fiercely proud, has successfully drawn both the, on-stage audience and the paid ticket-holders into his prosecution. The last of the "key" scenes is upon Hamlet's return from England. He appears easy, re- laxed; his costume is precisely casual. His interplay with gravedigger Donald Moffat is not in the least self-conscious, Then, as Ophelia's funeral cor- tege arrives at the cemetery, his reaction becomes all the more real by contrast. It is not that' these scenes alone define the tone of the production; Rabb has carefully sorted out disruptive external- isms and focused the entire play on his lead character, Horatio, carefully underplayed by Drew Snyder, is diminished to the role of a hand-maiden; Laertes' (rather falsely played by James Tripp) problems pale before Hamlet's, and Fortinbras is not even in the script. I would have preferred a more subtly insane Ophelia, but even here Rabb's direction profoundly re-draws a character and channels her in- sanity toward the queen by por- traying Gertrude's Oedipal re- lationship with her son in terms of the response of a would-be daughter-in-faw. Before opening night, much publicity was made of the fact that the play would be done "in modern dress," and would reflect on the story's eternal re- levance. But this, too, is under- stated, and the costumes do not represent just our generation (Nehru jackets were plentiful) but spanned all of them. The contradiction of Polonius in a celluloid-collar Babbitt suit cov- ered by a monarchial robe re- flected more on the timeless- ness than could have any num- ber of transistor radios and other modern accountrements that might have found their way on stage. Instead, Nancy Pott's ingen- ious costumes (in the scene in which Hamlet goes to his moth- er's bedroom, the queen's robe allows an occasional glimpse of her nakedness beneath, and one thinks that her son is aware of it) and James Tilton's bold set go just far enough to allow the viewer to come to Rabb's con- clusions on his own. Hamlet first appears framed in the black of the backdrop; the per- spective of his far-back appear- ance established his singular loneliness and importance with- out announcing it with trump- ets. When the APA first announc- ed its schedule for this season, the general reaction was nega- tive. The three-play season would consist of two standards seen too often (The Misan- thrope and Hamlet) and O'Cas- ey's Cock-A-Doodle Dan d y, which alone seemed to make it worthwhile. But just as response to a fine Misanthrope proved the company's first choice cor- rect, so has Ellis Rabb's su- preme artistry salvaged the second inning. I don't know how well the two other Hamlets, Richard Easton and Marco St. John, will respond ;to the role, but if Rabb theacto r has shown them how well it can be played, Rabb the director should be able to show them how to play it. Administrative board, CINEMA II avoids rigid stance (Continued from.Page 1) "When I first joined the board I students one of seven different couldn't figure out what their cri- notices: teria were. It was a year before ANTON ION I'S I felt I knew what the board -An H-action (from "Home-I was looking for." He says now he FAMOUS NUDI E action," the old name) the most can predict the board's action cor- DAVID HEMMINGS VANESSA REDGRAVE serious, asks the student to with- rectly about one quarter of the draw. It is sent to students who time.TH( ( A7....I have had either prolonged aca- "The entire approach arises out T H R E E SH OWS-7-9-J1 demic difficulty or a sudden drop of a sense of educational philoso- in honor points. phy," Robertson says, "and the OCT. 4-5 AUD. A ,D. req. -An NTR ("not to register") worth and dignity of the individ- FRI-SAT. ANGELL HAL 75c which differs from the H-action ual." only in degree. The student must The problems the board faces are receive the board's permission tot register aga.difficult ones, for their decisions reg rain. sawarnmay seriously affect the life of a -Probation is a warning to the student who' comes before them. ;student that unless there is im- One possible factor for example, provement more serious action is the draftr will be taken. -Probation continued is given "We try not to let the draft be to students Who were on probation a factor," Shaw says. "If we admit 3RS and who have improved, but not a student because of the draft, enough to clear them. we are just committing someone -Probation raised is sent to, else to be drafted." students on probation who have ' Even without the draft as aB satisfied the board in their aca- factor, the decisions are not easy. * __. + NOW TODAY AT 1,3, 5, 7, 9 p.m. "BRILLIANT! Luis Bunuel a rmaster of cinematic erotica !" demic record. -AP (action pending) tells the student final action is beng de- ferred until all grades, such as in- completes or late grades are in. -Concern letters are sent to students who drop below 2.0 for one semester but who are still above 2.0 over-all. Regardless of what action is taken, the student is welcome to talk to someone on the board. Thus begins the process aimed at helping the student find the problem that led to his poor aca- demic showing. The great value the board has. Robertson believes, is in forcing the student to come to grips with his problem. "The student is tak- en seriously and knows it," he says. "Even if he is still asked to leave, he should have learned something about himself from the experience." He adds, "There is no way to blueprint this arrangement and individual cases may seem to be contradictory on the surface." This approach, on a personal basis, this seeming capriciousness, caused Shaw to comment once, "The best comparison," Shaw thinks, "is to an umpire. He has rules to direct his decision, but every rule is still based on judg- ment. "It's the same with us. We have rules- and guidelines on who to drop and who toekeep, but every decision ultimately depends on human judgment." Phone 434-0130 &Am O P CPINTIR ROA OPEN 7:00 P.M. 2c f -* SHOCKING,! Remember the guy with the funny things in his neck and the big feet? And remember the guy, with the long teeth, who was always thirsty for the red stuff and afraid of the daylight? Well, they're both back. Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi. "FRANKENSTEIN" and "DRACULA," in the two original 1930's versions. SO DROP IN, BORIS & BELA ARE ALWAYS LOOKING FOR NEW BLOOD. 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