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The Arts Intel Report

A Cultural Compass
For the World Traveler
A Cultural Compass
For the World Traveler

Hamlet

Rod Gilfry as Claudius in Brett Dean’s Hamlet.

May 13 – June 9, 2022
30 Lincoln Center Plaza, New York, NY 10023, USA

“Shakespeare offers a gauntlet that shouldn’t always be picked up,” The Guardian noted in its review of the Australian composer Brett Dean’s Hamlet at Glyndebourne in 2017, quickly adding that this new opera “rises to the challenge.” Thus, while a living librettist gets credit, perhaps an opening-night bow, and presumably a piece of the royalties, most of the language we’ll be hearing goes back to the Swan of Avon. The best precedent for this approach is A Midsummer Night’s Dream as “adapted” (the perpetrators’ word) by the composer of the opera, Benjamin Britten, hand in hand with his life partner, the tenor Peter Pears. But mostly, the durable Shakespeare operas—Verdi’s, Gounod’s—are paraphrases in languages other than English. (Paraphrasing in English is its own can of worms; see the misbegotten Tempest of Thomas Adès.) All that said, we’re prepared to approach Dean’s Hamlet with an open mind. We wonder: will we hear that apparently tactless line of Queen Gertrude’s in the final duel? “He’s fat and scant of breath,” she notes in the play, meaning that Hamlet has worked up a sweat and is fighting for air. For the sake of the original protagonist Allan Clayton (@fatboyclayton, seriously), who reclaims his role at the Met, we hope Dean’s word man Matthew Joycelyn has come up with a tactical tweak. —Matthew Gurewitsch

Photo: Karen Almond/Met Opera