The BBC have given us a first look at David Tennant's episode of Shakespeare Uncovered. David takes a look at Hamlet in the one-hour documentary, the last in the series where noted actors and directors explore the stories behind and the meanings of some of Shakespeare's best loved plays. David's episode can be seen at 11.20pm on BBC Two on Tuesday 17th July. It will be repeated at 11.50pm on Wednesday 18th on BBC HD.
In the clip from the show, David visits the RSC shop in Stratford-upon-Avon to see how much merchandise the play has inspired. Watch it below (UK only, sorry!)
In Hamlet, David Tennant, whose own RSC performance was a
huge hit, meets other actors who have played the role - from the legendary
David Warner in the 1960s to the recent Jude Law. He also tries, alongside
Simon Russell Beale and Ben Whishaw, to unravel the meaning of the play and the
reason why it is considered by many to be the greatest play Shakespeare ever
wrote.
David Tennant surprised when he took on the role of Hamlet -
most did not know that he had trained in and worked for many years at the Royal
Shakespeare Company. But that didn't mean he wasn't scared stiff at the
prospect of taking on the legendary role. Now he takes up the challenge of
unravelling the story and trying to uncover what it is about it that has made
Hamlet the most famous of all of Shakespeare's plays.
He revisits his own performance, alongside his director Greg
Doran, and he meets up with other actors who have tackled the role. With the
historian Justin Champion he tries to enter the mindset of the 16th century
audiences who would have watched this story and he discovers how different
generations of actors, directors and scholars have interpreted the play.
What he discovers is that Hamlet is a play full of questions
rather than answers - but they are the questions we all continue to ask
ourselves to this day. Questions about who to believe, who to trust, how to
live and how to love, how to understand life and how to face death. What all
the actors who have played it seem to share is that the process of acting the
role is deeply and profoundly personal - and perhaps that is why audiences also
feel that the play touches them more than any other play before or since.
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