Centre 42 » Ophelia https://centre42.sg Thu, 16 Dec 2021 10:08:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.2.30 OPHELIA by Cake Theatrical Productions https://centre42.sg/ophelia-by-cake-theatrical-productions-2/ https://centre42.sg/ophelia-by-cake-theatrical-productions-2/#comments Tue, 03 May 2016 04:13:32 +0000 http://centre42.sg/?p=4730

“Shakespeare on steroids”

Reviewer: Walter Chan
Performance: 17 March 2016

You’ve never seen Shakespeare done this way before

Jo Kukathas in Ophelia. Photo: Cake Theatricals.

In short, Ophelia is mad.

More specifically, it is a play about madness as Shakespeare’s tragic maiden, Ophelia, is plucked from the pages of Hamlet, and cast in a different light. (I mean this quite literally as well with the harsh working lights being switched on as the show begins.)

Viewers familiar with Hamlet will appreciate the added emotional complexity in this version, as well as the sly allusions to the original—the line, “mic check, 1, 2… 2… to be or not to be” earns a hearty chuckle from the audience. However, if you aren’t familiar with Hamlet – and that’s okay too – the show doesn’t beat you over the head for it (but I just might… come on, it’s the classic Shakespeare text!).

“Ophelia is madness.”

That is the basic summary of Hamlet’s Ophelia, which Cake Theatricals takes as its premise. The catch-22 that outlines Ophelia’s situation is given a feminist treatment in the play: How can she convince us that she is not insane? Through forceful articulation? Through skittish histrionics? Through silence? Through death?

Director Natalie Hennedige carefully peels away at the layers of Shakespeare’s Ophelia, and then puts her back together again by rearranging the pieces in a different order. Disjointed fragments of the script blur the line between the play and the plays-within-the-play, in typical Cake fashion, and its acerbic and irreverent edge is not lost. There is a mop masquerading as Hamlet’s father’s ghost. An actor, brandishing a knife, leaps right into the audience. And, among others, a bra on a naked male torso. A Nerf gun. A bassoon solo.

Sounds like madness to you?

Notwithstanding the eclectic mix of theatrical elements, I do feel there is a method to the madness. This makes it all the more maddening because this play shows immense potential in casting off the shackles of Shakespeare’s text, while still maintaining its bitter fatalism. The latter half of the show, which focuses more on the actor/auteur dynamic than the relationship between Ophelia and Hamlet, seems clunky and repetitive as the parody quickly degenerates into farce.

A quick note here: this piece was actually a shorter work called “Instructions for Swimming; Notes on Drowning”, shown at Cake’s 10th anniversary celebration last November. It’s a pity that what you see now is twice the length, but half the fun.

“The whole world is your five stages of grief”, Ophelia muses at one point in the play. Yet, even as she angrily struts and frets her hour(s) upon the stage, it is at her most subdued that Ophelia is most stirring. Ophelia/Ophelia: woman and word coalesce until they are indistinguishable from each other as the show invokes her corporeality that is ineffable, ineluctable, and incandescent.

Truly, Ophelia is mad.

Do you have an opinion or comment about this post? Email us at info@centre42.sg.

ABOUT THE PRODUCTION

OPHELIA by Cake Theatrical Productions
17 – 19 March 2016
Esplanade Theatre Studio

ABOUT THE REVIEWER

Walter Chan has recently starting dabbling in play-writing, most usually writing for fun, but hopes to develop his hobby into something more substantial in the future.

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OPHELIA by Cake Theatrical Productions https://centre42.sg/ophelia-by-cake-theatrical-productions/ https://centre42.sg/ophelia-by-cake-theatrical-productions/#comments Mon, 21 Mar 2016 08:37:29 +0000 http://centre42.sg/?p=4570

“Ophelia”

Reviewer: Jorah Yu
Performance: 18 March 2016

To start: Ophelia is absolutely wonderful.

The story is about Shakespeare’s Ophelia – expectedly – and deliberately reconfigures the time and space of the universe belonging to Hamlet, in the context of story/play, and in relation to Hamlet the character. But without a doubt, Ophelia is the main attraction.

Placing the Hamlet/Ophelia coupling in differing circumstances on many accounts, Ophelia is a lovely taste of Contemporary Shakespeare, and an excellent example of how love and grief can either make, or destroy us.

The script, boldly and passionately written by Michelle Tan and Natalie Hennedige, has Ophelia saying “The whole world is your five stages of grief!” to Hamlet at several points which is possibly the funniest thing I’ve heard coming out of anyone for the past month. The play gives the poor girl so much character and appeal supplemented by Jo Kukathas’s fierce execution of Ophelia’s thoughts and utterances. Ophelia is so much more than the all-consuming depression that eventually led her to her death in Shakespeare’s text and I cannot express in words how much meaning the actor gives to her life and sheds light on her eventual drowning.

Many of the design choices also seems cleverly picked, with it set in a modern, yet ageless sort of world. The actors come on stage in simple clothing, black or white, most of the time, and many hints of water as an element of the show are obvious from the set, to their attire, and the overall colours.

Overall, Ophelia has been largely successful as a character study and portrayal of one of Shakespeare’s most romanticised female characters. Ophelia, unexplored but beloved, is never mentioned after her funeral in the original Shakespearean script. Cake Theatrical Production’s rendition of Ophelia in Ophelia presents to the audience the magnificence that she should have been.

 

Do you have an opinion or comment about this post? Email us at info@centre42.sg.

 

ABOUT THE PRODUCTION

OPHELIA by Cake Theatrical Productions
17 – 19 March 2016

Esplanade Theatre Studio

ABOUT THE REVIEWER

Jorah Yu is currently pursuing a Diploma in Technical and Production Management at Lasalle College of The Arts, and is an avid lover of Theatre, Life, Travels and Food.

 

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