When I was cast as Ophelia last year, I began by reading the play, and also by seeking out as much other material on her as I could find. There are many, many books on Hamlet, as you can imagine, and all of them take at least a nod at Ophelia. Many of the choices I ended up making about her arose from this reading, whether I tried a suggestion or rebelled against what I saw.
One thing that struck me was this: Ophelia in scholarship is not the same Ophelia as the one in the playing of Hamlet. Although there are many brilliant ideas about her, I found that many of them deny the fact that Ophelia (and Hamlet for that matter) when played on stage are full, complete people in that world.
I have had the desire to write a performance piece on Ophelia for a long time. But as I tried writing I found that I was clearly stuck. I didn't want to write a one-hour lament, I didn't want to write a piece of her "looking back" on what happened to her, and I didn't want to attempt to recreate scenes from the play in the solo format. What became clear to me recently, as I looked over my notes from last summer-trying to find a clue as to how to begin, was that this discrepancy between Ophelia and all I had studied about her was the story I wanted to tell.
These posts will chronicle my process as I write this piece. I write this blog as an archive for myself, to help me discover, as the piece takes shape, how it is that I got there.
"She has become greater than the sum number of words she actually speaks."
ReplyDeleteLove that!
Looking forward to watching Ophelia unfold.