Monitor [27/10/1963]

Synopsis
Anthology arts series. Huw Wheldon chairs a discussion on Hamlet with Orson Welles, Peter O’Toole and Ernest Milton. O’Toole describes Hamlet as a play about three sons all trying to avenge their fathers in different ways. Welles says that he likes to hear an actor associate Hamlet with Elizabethan times. There is a general discussion on whether Hamlet was deranged. Wheldon asks why didn’t Hamlet kill Claudius; Welles replies that there be no play if he did and there are 5 acts to go. Ernest Milton believes the lines should be spoken with musical rhythm. He says that if you play Hamlet when young then you can go on and play the role when you are much older, but you cannot play it for the first time when you are old.
Series
Monitor
Language
English
Country
Great Britain
Medium
Television
Transmission details
27 Oct 1963 (Channel: BBC)
Duration
45 mins

Credits

Director
Melvyn Bragg
Producer
Huw Wheldon
Contributor
Ernest Milton; Huw Wheldon; Orson Welles; Peter O’Toole

Additional Details

Production type
Documentary/Educational/News
Plays
Hamlet
Subjects
Drama
Keywords
Shakespeare, William (1564-1616)

Notes

Notes
The footage may be viewed at www.bbc.co.uk/archive/hamlet (accessed 12/2009). The entry notes ‘Incomplete. Audio drop out’.
Reviews
Anthony Burgess, reviewing the discussion in The Listener (7 November 1968, p 706) began his assessment ‘I am heartily sick of men sitting around tables’ and went on to write ‘O’Toole’s exhibitionistic parade of scrappy, often irrelevant, reading and Welles’s Ercles roars battered the greatest Hamlet of our time [Milton] to silence. It was a shameful performance’.

Production Company

Name

BBC

Notes
The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)

Archive

Name

BFI National Archive

Web
http://www.bfi.org.uk/archive-collections/searching-access-collections/research-viewing-services External site opens in new window
Phone
020 7255 1444
Fax
020 7436 0165
Address
21 Stephen Street
London
W1T 1LN

How to cite this record

Shakespeare, "Monitor [27/10/1963]". https://learningonscreen.ac.uk/shakespeare/search/index.php/title/av67313 (Accessed 26 Nov 2024)