Thine evermore, most dear lady, whilst this machine is to him. Hamlet.
Shakespeare, Hamlet
These words conclude Hamlet’s famous letter to Ophelia, in which he tries to tell the only person he loves that he’s withdrawing from the structure of norms. The word »machine« only appears once in all of Shakespeare. It refers to the body, which, during the early part of the Enlightenment, was often referred to as a machine, as a marvel composed of many parts. Shakespeare’s play itself is also such a machine of theatrical marvels. A reflection on death and religion, on norms and insanity, on power and powerlessness. And besides all this, it’s also a grand text about the theatre itself.
In 1977, Heiner Müller adapted this text in Die Hamletmaschine, which carries »machine« in the title. The Exil Ensemble has been part of the Gorki since the 2016/17 season. Together with Sebastian Nübling, the ensemble’s actors are investigating this and other texts, as well as researching their own positions in an open ended project. With Hamletmaschine, they’re pursuing the dramatist who radically questions the intellectual’s position in a world that is out of joint, dissecting Shakespeare, among others, and then putting the remaining fragments together again.
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Stage Photos: Ute Langkafel