All Topics
All Topics
Technology
Technology
AI
AI
Business
Business
Entertainment
Entertainment
News
News
Programming
Programming
Security
Security
Science
Science
Design
Design
Environment
Environment
Finance
Finance
Crypto
Crypto
Politics
Politics
Sports
Sports
Education
Education
Gaming
Gaming
Art
Art
Music
Music
Health
Health
Books
Books
Food
Food
Travel
Travel
Personal
Personal
Bluesky
Twitter

Parking Shakespeare brings 'Hamlet' to Parc de l’Estació del Nord

By

Biel Roura Amat

2h agoes

Source

AraParking Shakespeare brings 'Hamlet' to Parc de l’Estació del Nordara.cat
Snippet from the RSS feed
“Summer doesn’t begin until Parking Shakespeare premieres its play in the Til·lers park”. This thought, expressed by the company's actress Ariadna Matas, is a shared sentiment among the audience. With this year's production, the theatre company is performing an open-air play for the seventeenth consecutive year in the Parc de l’Estació del Nord. This summer it’s the turn of Hamlet and the rotten things , directed and adapted by Roger Torns, a free adaptation of the most famous work by the Bard of Avon, which will begin this Thursday the 9th at 7 p.m. and can be seen from Thursdays to Mondays until August 3rd.Like a mystical apparition of Hamlet's father, Parking Shakespeare returns after achieving last year with Cymbeline more than 5,000 people in attendance throughout the summer Cymbeline more than 5,000 people in attendance throughout the summer . From one of the playwright's least recognized works to one of the most acclaimed tragedies of all time, like Hamlet . Although the park is under construction, the company will be able to perform the play normally in a circular space perfect for stage performance. Roger Torns, director of the production, explains how the process of adapting one of William Shakespeare's darkest works for a very relaxed environment has been. “The park allows for lightness, because sometimes we forget that people used to come and go from the theater whenever they wanted,” recalls Torns. The actor and director also emphasized that performing it in an open space “removes the burden of having to do a Shakespeare, with all that it entails.” Bringing Shakespeare to the parks For seventeen years, the company has chosen a play by the English playwright to bring it to the streets and make it accessible to people. Its creator, actor Pep Garcia-Pascual, explains that he was inspired by the way he observed in Dublin of performing Shakespeare's plays in public parks. This modus operandi has led them to perform theater abroad, giving a performance last year at a theater festival in Romania. Even Pascual brought Catalan theater by reading some verses at the Globe Theatre, the reconstruction of William Shakespeare's original theater in London. The company also symbolizes an opportunity for young Catalan talent who often do not have many spaces to make themselves heard. For this reason, they decided to hold an open casting where more than 200 people presented themselves to embody the characters. The hidden part of Hamlet With all the interpretations it has given rise to and all the existential moments that Hamlet contains, we also find a part of commedia dell'arte . As in all of Shakespeare's works, comedy and tragedy merge into a single compound to make the audience's emotions oscillate like a roller coaster, moving quickly from mockery to tears. Roger Torns claims this hidden component of Hamlet . “It doesn't stop having its comical part, our version also has a bit of a spy play,” the actor highlights. “The rotten things” that give the play its title refer, according to Torns, to “the structure that Hamlet has to fight against: the imposed masculine hegemony, the patriarchy where we all have to live in a state of constant surveillance”.The narrative thread of the play will be carried by the character of Horatius, played by Ariadna Matas, who follows the request made by the Prince of Denmark at the end of the original play to explain his story, capturing it in the tragedy that everyone knows. Parking Shakespeare returns for another year and, as Roger Torns expresses, "hopes to continue thrilling audiences like other summers." The performance will last one hour and twenty-five minutes.

You might also wanna read

Comments

Sign in to join the conversation.

No comments yet. Be the first.