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Hamlet

  • 1964
  • 3h 11m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
555
YOUR RATING
Hamlet (1964)
Drama

The highly successful 1964 Richard Burton Broadway production of "Hamlet", deliberately staged in the style of a "dress rehearsal", but performed in front of a live audience.The highly successful 1964 Richard Burton Broadway production of "Hamlet", deliberately staged in the style of a "dress rehearsal", but performed in front of a live audience.The highly successful 1964 Richard Burton Broadway production of "Hamlet", deliberately staged in the style of a "dress rehearsal", but performed in front of a live audience.

  • Directors
    • Bill Colleran
    • John Gielgud
  • Writer
    • William Shakespeare
  • Stars
    • Richard Burton
    • Hume Cronyn
    • Alfred Drake
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    555
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Bill Colleran
      • John Gielgud
    • Writer
      • William Shakespeare
    • Stars
      • Richard Burton
      • Hume Cronyn
      • Alfred Drake
    • 22User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos2

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    Top cast27

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    Richard Burton
    Richard Burton
    • Hamlet
    Hume Cronyn
    Hume Cronyn
    • Polonius
    Alfred Drake
    Alfred Drake
    • Claudius
    Eileen Herlie
    Eileen Herlie
    • Gertrude
    William Redfield
    William Redfield
    • Guildenstern
    George Rose
    George Rose
    • First Gravedigger
    George Voskovec
    George Voskovec
    • Player King
    Hugh Alexander
    • Cornelius…
    Philip Coolidge
    Philip Coolidge
    • Voltimand
    Kit Culkin
    Kit Culkin
    • Player Queen
    • (as Christopher Culkin)
    John Cullum
    John Cullum
    • Laertes
    Michael Ebert
    • Francisco…
    Dillon Evans
    • Reynaldo…
    Clement Fowler
    • Rosencrantz
    Geoff Garland
    • Lucianus
    John Gielgud
    John Gielgud
    • Ghost
    • (voice)
    John Hetherington
    • Player Prologue
    Barnard Hughes
    Barnard Hughes
    • Marcellus…
    • Directors
      • Bill Colleran
      • John Gielgud
    • Writer
      • William Shakespeare
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews22

    7.6555
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    Featured reviews

    Kirpianuscus

    provocative

    I suppose, provocative is the fair term to define it. For rehearsal, street clothes. For splendid acting of Richard Burton , deserving , no doubts, his Hamlet. For the high loyalty to text. For Hume Cronyn as impressive Polonius.

    Sure, many adaptations, some more than ambitious.

    Indeed, I see as the best Gamlet of Kuznetsov and the acting of Innokenti Smoktunovski remains, for me, the unique one to perfect. But this version has the precious gift of entire honesty , the wise perspective of Sir John Gielgud and a smart driven minimalism .

    Each of them works in admirable manner and, in essence, this is the main virtue of it.
    7AlsExGal

    Burn after reading

    Filmed, or rather videotaped, performance of the Broadway production of Shakespeare's play. Richard Burton stars as the Danish prince who plots revenge against his mother and uncle for the murder of his father. Also featuring Hume Cronyn as Polonius, Alfred Drake as Claudius, Eileen Herlie as Gertrude, Linda Marsh as Ophelia, John Cullum as Laertes, George Voskovec as the Player King, William Redfield as Guildenstern, Clement Fowler as Rosencrantz, and Barnard Hughes as Marcellus. John Gielgud, who staged and directed the play, also provides the off-stage voice of the Ghost.

    Running a cool 3 hours and 10 minutes, this presentation is the opposite of the Russian version I watched last night. This strips away the visual, and focuses completely on the text. It's presented as a sort of dress rehearsal, with the performers wearing street clothes, and the sets bare and virtually nonexistent. Burton is good, although he's said to have detested this recording, made over several days from several performances in front of live audiences, and then edited together seamlessly. I thought Hume Cronyn stole the show, and wasn't surprised to learn that he won the Tony that year for his performance. For some reason, there was a contractual stipulation that after the theatrical run, all prints and negatives of this were to be destroyed, and the film was thought lost for a long time, until a single copy was found in the possession of...Richard Burton.
    9wobelix

    Electronovision... Forgotten technique capturing Glory

    Looking at this stage performance on dvd (and thank goodness it is available !!!) you will probably start with thinking: well, this is a relic, and so it will be great. The start will confirm that. Lighting is crude, and camera-angles give purely the idea of being inside a theatre (which is marvelous !! why don't they do this more often ? Why not make more dvd's of glorious stage performances ?!) After a while though, the performance takes over. This is Shakespeare, but quick-paced and lucid, never heavy or dull. This is Shakespeare in the 60ies. And it is true magic. It is just what we need nowadays ! Magnificently acted and paced and just that touch of humor, openness and charm ... All what we are lacking today. Look around us !! We can do with another shot of the cocktail we call 60ies ! Look around us ! Within this HAMLET, so classical and so brilliantly played, breathes the 60ies. Only the undertone, yes. But is there. How refreshing.
    7madbeast

    A theatrical experience

    For those looking for a strictly cinematic version of "Hamlet" you should probably look elsewhere, but for a theatrical experience of the classic tale of the Melancholy Dane, you could do worse than pick up this version of the 1964 Broadway production starring Richard Burton.

    Essentially a photographed performance of a stage production, this "Hamlet" was directed by John Gielgud with the concept of being a dress rehearsal (to pacify Richard Burton's dislike of wearing period costume) with actors in street clothes and bare bones set and props. The concept falls flat but Gielgud does a fine job of staging the action (the convention of showing the ghost as a massive shadow voiced by Gielgud works wonderfully well), making one wish that he'd used a more conventional look for the show. The cast is decidedly uneven, ranging from brilliant (Hume Cronyn in his Tony-winning role as Polonius) to incompetent (Alfred Drake as a rather hopeless Claudius). While Burton is hardly the definitive Hamlet, frequently resorting to vocal pyrotechnics which are ultimately meaningless, there is no doubting his intelligence or brooding charisma in the role. He may not have hit a bull's eye, but he is so far beyond such recent mediocre Hamlets as Ethan Hawke, Kenneth Branagh and Mel Gibson that his performance truly gives the viewer a splendid example of what a distinguished classical actor is capable of. His handling of the soliloquies (especially "Oh, what a rogue and peasant slave am I") are very effective indeed.

    Those who quibble with the lack of close-ups or iffy cinematic qualities are missing the point of the experience: the faraway perspective makes the viewer fell like they are seated at an actual live performance at the Lunt Fontanne Theatre in 1964, and gives a much more uniquely theatrical experience than attempts to "cinemize" the play such as Branagh's vulgar and miscast film version or Olivier's celebrated bowdlerized adaptation (whose gutting of the text frequently plays like "Hamlet's Greatest Hits").

    Not much thought was given to the Special Features of the DVDs: the listing of the awards won by Burton, Cronyn and Gielgud are laughably incomplete, and it seems to me that the producers missed an opportunity by not including observations by a living cast member on a second voice track (cast members William Refield and Richard L. Sterne each wrote books on the production, and it might have been rewarding to hear the remembrances of Hume Cronyn or John Cullum or Alfred Drake on this DVD).

    But despite it's faults, this is a valuable little treasure for anyone with serious interest in Shakespeare's play and a unique opportunity to see a memorable theater production without leaving your living room.
    the_captainjcs

    IT WAS REALLY A DRESS REHEARSAL!

    Whereas it is true that this version of "Hamlet" with Richard Burton in the title role was a hit on Broadway, that's just part of the story behind the video release.

    Burton had become an immensely popular actor after his scandalous marriage to Elizabeth Taylor during the rigors of filming "Cleopatra," in which he played the love-crazed Mark Anthony. After that film's long-delayed release (late 1963), the pair became "Hollywood royalty" with a world-wide following.

    Developers/producers of Electronovision capitalized on their phenomenal popularity by arranging the taping of a dress rehearsal. It was released theatrically during the course of the play's Broadway run.

    Electronovision was another version of closed-circuit TV; hence, the master videotape is in black-and-white.

    A later try with Electronovision was the 1965 closed-circuit, theatrical release of "Harlow," which starred Carol Lynley as 1930s movie actress Jean Harlow. It barely preceded the 1965 film of the same name (Carroll Baker in title role). Although that film was forced to rush through production, it didn't finish in time to be the "first."

    Critics of that period, who were not all impressed with this "new medium," really lashed out at this one, which they claimed went "against all ethics."

    To my recall, that controversy ended Electronovision.

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    Drama

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Richard Burton was dissatisfied with the movie and wanted all copies destroyed. However, two copies survived.
    • Connections
      Edited into Voskovec & Werich - paralelní osudy (2012)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 23, 1964 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Richard Burton's Hamlet
    • Filming locations
      • Lunt-Fontanne Theatre - 205 West 46th Street, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA
    • Production company
      • Theatrofilm
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $8,720,000
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 3h 11m(191 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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