Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Teatro. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Teatro. Mostrar todas las entradas

miércoles, 26 de agosto de 2015

Benedict Cumberbatch’s rabid fandom is making ‘Hamlet’ a bit of a thing

Benedict Cumberbatch’s rabid fandom is making ‘Hamlet’ a bit of a thing
BY HENRY CHU, LOS ANGELES TIMES AT 12:08 PM ON AUG 23, 2015

Read Article HERE

To plead or not to plead? After a “mortifying” moment during a preview performance of “Hamlet,” Benedict Cumberbatch decided it was time for a direct appeal.

He’d been onstage, delivering the Prince of Denmark’s most famous soliloquy, when the red light of an audience member’s cellphone camera flustered him so much that he had to start the scene over.

“There’s nothing less supportive or enjoyable as an actor being onstage experiencing that,” Cumberbatch told a gaggle of screaming fans lying in wait for him outside the stage door. “And I can’t give you what I want to give you, which is a live performance that you will remember hopefully in your minds and brains, whether it’s good, bad or indifferent, rather than on your phones.”

So, please, he implored his listeners, could they “tweet, blog, hashtag the s*** out of this one for me”: For those who come see the play, put your devices away. If you don’t, new equipment being installed inside the Barbican Theater will detect violators, who will be ejected, Cumberbatch warned.

The adoring crowd whooped. One delirious fan, a bit ironically, filmed the exchange on her phone. Cumberbatch hastily made his exit.

Such are the slings and arrows these days of his outrageous fortune, a meteoric rise to international fame as the star of the hit TV series “Sherlock” and movies such as “The Imitation Game.” Cumberbatch-mania has hit fever pitch and is now fueling an astonishing frenzy in the London theater world the likes of which few people, if any, can remember encountering.

When tickets for “Hamlet” went on sale in August 2014, a full year before this weekend’s official opening night, the entire 2 1/2-month run sold out within minutes, the fastest of any show in London’s history. One unlucky fan tweeted in disappointment: “Excuse me while I go cry for the rest of my life since there is no chance of me seeing Benedict Cumberbatch as Hamlet.”

Demand was so great that scalpers have reportedly charged as much as $2,340 a pop.

British newspapers have run bemused accounts of Cumberbatch’s obsessive fans, mostly young women, flying in from as far away as Japan and Taiwan to see their hero play Shakespeare’s flawed one. Other self-styled “Cumberb***hes” bought $160 memberships to the Barbican Center for priority booking rights last year, then arranged their vacation schedules accordingly.

Some news outlets have unashamedly ridden the wave themselves, breaking theater-world protocol by racing to publish reviews of the opening preview performance instead of allowing director Lyndsey Turner to iron out kinks before next Tuesday’s media night.

The Daily Mail gave the production five stars, crediting Cumberbatch with an “electrifying” portrayal of the conflicted prince. But the Times of London awarded only two stars in a review that opened, inevitably, with the line: “Alas, poor Benedict.”

The Times of London critic, Kate Maltby, castigated Turner for moving Hamlet’s “to be or not to be” soliloquy from Act III to the play’s beginning, igniting a controversy over whether Turner was right to move it and then whether Maltby was right to reveal it. In a victory for whomever, theatergoers who saw the play this week reported that the passage had been restored to its usual place.

Outside the Barbican, the sidewalk has become a campground for Cumberbatch devotees to sleep, perchance to dream of scoring one of 30 tickets released every morning for that evening’s performance at the unbeatable price of $15.50 each.

Chiara Russo, a 19-year-old Italian, has already submitted to the ordeal twice: an almost 20-hour wait for a ticket to the first night of previews Aug. 5 and another 17-hour wait this week, which was made more bearable by the blanket and pillow she brought with her from bitter experience.

Both times, Russo, a student working in London for a month, was first or second in line, which rewarded her with a seat close enough to the stage that she could admire Cumberbatch’s razor-sharp cheekbones up close.

RELATED: Benedict Cumberbatch marries Sophie Hunter, fans everywhere collapse into puddles of tears

“It’s very particular. That’s what makes him different from other actors,” Russo says of her idol’s unconventional looks, adding: “I have very strange taste in people.”

Laurence Bisdee, 20, was less effusive about Cumberbatch’s physical attributes — “he looks kind of like an otter” — but that didn’t stop him and a friend from using their day off from their jobs at a bespoke umbrella shop to stake out a spot in the queue at 2 a.m. They seemed in good position to qualify for a pair of tickets, yet Bisdee was still nervous about his chances of getting to see the actor who’s “kind of become England’s darling.”

“I’ve counted, but in the back of your mind, someone might show up” and cut in line, Bisdee says.

Star turns onstage are, of course, nothing new. Nor is a hunk or heartthrob playing Hamlet.

“If you look at posters of the 18th and 19th centuries, they have play titles you’ve never heard of because they’ve been completely forgotten, but in huge letters there’s the name of an actor who’s famous,” said David Benedict, a veteran arts writer and former London drama critic for Variety. “Every young actor wants to do Hamlet. It’s a great role, so why wouldn’t they?”

David Tennant, then BBC’s “Doctor Who,” essayed the role in 2008 to great acclaim; Jude Law did it a year later to rather less.

Neither sparked anywhere near the hype that has surrounded Cumberbatch’s attempt. Benedict reckons that the only occasions that have come slightly close were Nicole Kidman starring in “The Blue Room” in 1998 and Daniel Radcliffe in “Equus” in 2007 — and even then much of the ballyhoo centered on the fact that both actors appeared nude.

Both had also been international celebrities for some time before their stage roles, unlike Cumberbatch, who was suddenly launched into the celebrity stratosphere by “Sherlock” after years of more niche work.

“It took him, as much as anyone else, by surprise,” Benedict says. “Prior to that he was playing leads on the BBC, he was fronting drama series, he was working all the time, and he was an actor that people knew. He had plenty of screen time, but he was not a pinup.”

Emma Goode, an actress from Los Angeles, spent a few extra days in London after a trip across Europe in order to line up for a ticket to the first preview performance, so she saw the version in which Hamlet’s soliloquy opened the play.

“I was a theater major in college, and I was like, ‘That’s not how this play starts.’ Then it was a moment of, ‘Oh, crap, is this going to be one of these weird adaptations of “‘Hamlet”? Because that’s not what I signed up for,'” Goode, 26, recalls.

But all’s well that ends well — in this case, with a standing ovation for the evening’s lodestar, Cumberbatch. “Despite that weird start, I think it was very true to the story, and I wouldn’t call it a weird production. I would say it was unique,” Goode says. “‘Hamlet’ is my favorite Shakespearean tragedy. … I hopefully will see more spectacular performances, but this is the one to beat for sure.”




lunes, 10 de agosto de 2015

ACTORS TO STAND UP FOR THEATRE ETIQUETTE - ON STAGE

ACTORS TO STAND UP FOR THEATRE ETIQUETTE - ON STAGE

By STEPHANIE LINNING and JENNIFER SMITH FOR MAILONLINE and CLAIRE DUFFIN FOR THE DAILY MAIL
PUBLISHED: 09:16 GMT, 10 August 2015 | UPDATED: 11:05 GMT, 10 August 2015

Addressing fans gathered outside the stage doors after the show, CUMBERBATCH said starting again was made even harder because he could spot the 'red lights' of filming gadgets in the audience.

He told the crowd that there was 'nothing less supportive or enjoyable' than audience members taking sneaking footage, and begged them to end the 'mortifying' practice of using camera phones.

In the speech - which was filmed and posted on YouTube - the Sherlock star also warned that from today fans caught filming his performances at London's Barbican would be thrown out.


Theatre rules insist that mobile phones are switched off before entering the auditorium but it would appear many audience members are ignoring the guidelines.

Cumberbatch asked if he could 'enlist' fans to help him, adding: 'I don't use social media but I would really appreciate it if you did tweet, blog, hashtag the s*** out of this one for me … I can see cameras, I can see red lights in the auditorium … it's blindingly obvious.

He said after the second stoppage he spotted a 'red light on about the third row on the right and it's mortifying'.

Richard Griffiths ordered a woman to leave a performance of Heroes in 2005, after her phone rang.
He told the audience: 'Could the person whose mobile phone it is please leave? The 750 people here would be fully justified in suing you for ruining their afternoon.'

A year earlier, he had asked a man to leave the National Theatre, after his mobile went off six times during a performance of The History Boys.

James McAvoy stopped a performance of Macbeth in April 2013 when he noticed an audience member filming.
According to witnesses, he shouted at him to put the device away before continuing.

Later that year, whilst playing the Queen in The Audience, Dame Helen Mirren took exception to a group of noisy street drummers outside.
Mid-performance and dressed in full costume she went outside to shout at the group to be quiet, after they stopped outside the theatre during a parade.
She told the Daily Telegraph that she had used 'thespian words' to express her disdain.

Actor Kevin Spacey cast the spotlight on an audience member when their phone rang during the opening night of Clarence Darrow at London’s Old Vic in June last year.
Spacey remained in character, turned to the audience and said, 'If you don’t answer that, I will!'.

A Broadway theatre-goer caused outrage in July, after climbing on stage to plug his phone charger in.
The man, who was waiting to watch a performance of Hand To God, soon realised the plug socket was a prop.


Hamlet: Benedict Cumberbatch


viernes, 7 de agosto de 2015

Benedict Cumberbatch rocks laid back ensemble in T-shirt


Benedict Cumberbatch rocks laid back ensemble in T-shirt, jeans and trainers as he readies another night on stage

By FEHINTOLA BETIKU and JJ NATTRASS and KATE THOMAS FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 15:54 GMT, 7 August 2015 | UPDATED: 16:06 GMT, 7 August 2015

He's currently starring in a theatre production of the much loved Shakespeare play Hamlet.
Enjoying some downtime ahead of his next performance, Benedict Cumberbatch ditched his royal robes when he was pictured out in London on Friday.

Putting on a dressed down display, the 39-year-old actor appeared to be in good spirits as he journeyed along clutching onto a canvas bag.

Benedict, who will star in the tragedy till the end of October, looked laid back in a grey printed T-shirt teamed with jeans and white trainers.

With his curly mane styled in a side part, Cumberbatch topped his look with a navy jacket as he accessorised with a silver face watch which featured black straps.
A stylish rucksack finished The Imitation Game star's outfit as he raised a smile while passing waiting photographers.

The previous day Benedict cut a less melancholic and manic figure than his Shakespearean character, as he enjoyed a low-key stroll through London.

Looking slightly dishevelled yet casually stylish, the actor appeared up-beat as he enjoyed a few quiet moments away from the Barbican theatre, where his play is sold out for the entirety of its run.

With his wavy hair slightly tousled and a warm beverage in his hand, the actor - who received an avalanche of plaudits for his role as the troubled Danish prince - appeared to be basking in his glowing reviews.




Cumberbitches

Cumberbitches, Pine-Nuts and Hiddlestoners: the most bizarre celebrity fandoms

With Benedict Cumberbatch devotees flocking to London to catch him in Hamlet, we've taken a look at the biggest, barmiest fandoms on the internet


By Eleanor Steafel2:48PM BST 06 Aug 2015

The streets of London were awash last night, not just with angry commuters battling to beat the tube strike home, but with a particular breed of teenage girl. That's right, the Cumberbitches were in town. For their leader and one true love was making his debut as Hamlet and they weren't going to miss it.

Fans had been camping out all week in a bid to get their hands on a ticket or at least catch a glimpse of their hero, who last night gave his first preview performance as the Dane at the Barbican.

No ordinary Shakespeare production - when tickets went on sale in August last year it became the fastest selling show in London theatre history, with all 100,000 selling out in minutes - the audience last night was made up not just of Shakespeare nuts but was peppered with members of arguably the most hardcore fandom in the world.

Fan site Cumberbatchweb has recently dedicated its Twitter feed to promoting the resale of tickets - many of which are going on ebay for upwards of £1,500.

And devotees from around the world will be flocking to the theatre all week to see the star.

Yi Shan Chen, 35, travelled more than 6,000 miles from Taiwan to see the play because of her infatuation with Cumberbatch.

She said on Wednesday: "He's a special actor. I came to England on July 21 and visited Edinburgh and York but this trip was always about coming to London to see this play and him."

Ms Shan Chen added: "It's hard to describe why I like him so much. When you see him act, you see his emotion, the audience can really see that."

But Cumberbatch - who once said of his name: "It sounds like a fart in a bath, doesn't it?" - isn't the only celebrity to benefit from the ever-growing, eternally bonkers and slightly scary world of fandoms.

So in the battle of the fandoms, which star reigns supreme?

Benedict Cumberbatch has succeeded where thousands of teachers have failed

Benedict Cumberbatch has succeeded where thousands of teachers have failed

Judith Woods explains why she'll gladly follow the cult of Cumberbatch


By Judith Woods5:51PM BST 06 Aug 2015

The cult of personality tends to get a bad name especially from those force-marched towards perdition at the behest of the crackpot, the despotic and the downright evil.

Historian Robert Conquest, who died this week, was an ardent Bolshevik before he discovered first-hand the horror of Stalinism. In North Korea, Kim Jong-un’s erratic and barbaric rule is the continuation of a justifiably demonised dynasty.

But over in this country, the cult of personality has become rather a jolly talking point.

In recent days we’ve had reports of Kids Company founder Camila Batmanghelidjh enthralling David Cameron and Gordon Brown by dint of her charisma (and possibly the dizzying colour combinations).

In politics, Nicola Sturgeon, head of a one-party state, is feted as the Boudicca of Sauchiehall Street.
Heroically dour Jeremy Corbyn, a man who thinks blank-eyed zeal is for sissies, continues to rally peri-menopausal Mumsnetters to his Trotskyite cause.

And now Benedict Cumberbatch has succeeded where tens of thousands of English teachers have failed, namely in igniting a passion for Shakespeare.

Or strictly speaking, a passion for Shakespeare as portrayed by the 39-year-old Old Harrovian whose effect on young women must give succour to unconventionally handsome men everywhere.

Having garnered critical acclaim for, inter alia, his portrayals of Sherlock Holmes and Frankenstein, Cumberbatch has now been cast as the Pied Piper of Hamlet, drawing fresh new audiences into the theatre.

How magnificent. Him, and them. And the Prince of Denmark. Is there any chance of block-booking him, I wonder, to perform the entire GCSE and A-Level syllabuses?

Or is it syllabi? Syllabubs? Cumberbatch will know! Bring us Cumberbatch!

What a piece of work is this man. Noble in reason, infinite in faculty. And one leading man we’ll all gladly follow.

jueves, 6 de agosto de 2015

Triumphant Benedict Cumberbatch leaves the theatre with his arm around wife Sophie Hunter following 'electrifying' Hamlet debut

Triumphant Benedict Cumberbatch leaves the theatre with his arm around wife Sophie Hunter following 'electrifying' Hamlet debut
By KATE THOMAS FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 07:21 GMT, 6 August 2015 | UPDATED: 09:34 GMT, 6 August 2015

His performance in Hamlet has been lauded as 'electrifying' and 'epic' by critics.
And Benedict Cumberbatch was on a high as he left The Barbican theatre in London alongside his wife Sophie Hunter on Wednesday night following his debut performance in Lyndsey Turner's new production of Shakespeare's iconic tragedy.
The 39-year-old actor couldn't hold back his excitement, grinning to himself and placing a loving arm around his partner, with whom he welcomed a baby boy in June.


Benedict was dressed down in navy chinos, a matching cardigan and a light blue shirt as he exited the theatre, only to be greeted by an army of cheering fans.

Visibly thrilled with the positive response from his loyal supporters, Benedict weaved his way over to his waiting car, clutching Sophie's hand protectively.
The new mum, who tied the knot with the A-list actor in a romantic ceremony on Valentine's Day in February, was sporting a sheer leopard print blouse and smart black trousers

Benedict cuddled up to Sophie in the back of the vehicle, leaning in for a celebratory kiss as they sped off.
The actor's star turn as tragic hero Hamlet has received largely positive reviews from critics so far.
The Daily Mail’s Jan Moir gave the production five stars and said the Oscar-nominee was ‘electrifying’ in his ‘Hamlet in a hoodie’.

The Telegraph’s Serena Davies said director Lyndsey Turner and designer Es Devlin have ‘created a lavish, epic Hamlet for the Barbican’s vast stage’.
However, Katie Maltby of The Times was not so impressed. She gave the production two stars, calling it ‘Shakespeare for the kids’ and ‘a waste’.
But her thoughts were not shared by many of the members of the public who took to Twitter to praise the British actor.
Yasmin Kaye wrote: ‘#BenedictCumberbatch was electrifying as #Hamlet #hamlet barbican’, while another tweeted: ‘Thrilled to have been at the First Night of #Hamlet! #BenedictCumberbatch #Barbican. We gave him a #standingovulation.. #GreatFunYouKnow’.


And Andrea Williams added: ‘Benedict’s #Hamlet : electrifying.’
Hamlet is at London's Barbican theatre until October 31. The play has been sold out for nearly a year, but it will be screened live in Vue cinemas nationwide from October 15.
Tickets are on sale now at myvue.com and it will be the world’s first live 4k transmission to multiple cinemas. There will also be two encores at Vue cinemas across the UK on the 22 and 29 October.
This marks Benedict's first time treading the boards since his performance in National Theatre’s Frankenstein in 2011.
He follows in the footsteps of stars like Mel Gibson and David Tennant, who have all taken on Shakespeare's tragic hero in the past.

El debut de Benedict Cumberbatch como 'Hamlet' recibe críticas enfrentadas

El debut de Benedict Cumberbatch como 'Hamlet' recibe críticas enfrentadas
Algunos lo consideran "electrizante" y hay quienes lamentan una "producción infantil"

Gente | 06/08/2015 - 10:51h


Londres. (EFE).- El debut del popular actor británico Benedict Cumberbatch en el papel de Hamlet sobre el escenario del teatro Barbican de Londres ha recibido críticas enfrentadas, desde los que lo consideran "electrizante" hasta quienes lamentan una "producción infantil".
El regreso de Cumberbatch a la escena, y en el papel más codiciado y difícil del repertorio teatral, ha suscitado una gran expectación en el Reino Unido, donde las entradas para esta función se agotaron de inmediato, aunque diariamente se ofrecen treinta más a las personas que hacen cola durante horas en la taquilla del centro cultural.
Tras presenciar el preestreno ayer de la obra, la crítica del periódico Daily Mail -uno de los más vendidos en el Reino Unido-, Jan Moir, califica hoy la actuación de Cumberbatch de "electrizante" y le da cinco estrellas. "Su Hamlet encapuchado fue electrizante, una actuación que osciló entre momentos de genuina comedia para después hundirse en las profundidades de la tragedia", escribe.
Esta versión de Hamlet, el personaje más reverenciado de William Shakespeare, vestido con ropa de calle moderna no impresionó a la experta del influyente The Times, Kate Maltby, que la describe como "Hamlet para niños", y le da solo dos estrellas.
Maltby opina que Cumberbatch, famoso mundialmente por su papel en Sherlock y películas como "The Imitation Game", tiene la energía necesaria pero su actuación es "poco sutil". Esta crítica censura la decisión de la directora Lyndsey Turner de abrir la función con el famoso soliloquio Ser o no ser, que normalmente aparece en el tercer acto, lo que tacha de "indefendible". En resumen, Maltby afirma que "es una oportunidad desperdiciada: pura autocomplacencia teatral".
Serena Davies, en The Daily Telegraph, valora que Turner y la diseñadora Es Devlin "han creado un suntuoso, épico Hamlet para el gran escenario del Barbican", y recuerda que éste no parecía tan grande desde que acogió las barricadas de "Los Miserables" en los años 80.
La actuación de la pasada noche se considera un anticipo y los críticos serán invitados formalmente de nuevo dentro de tres semanas para emitir su veredicto, cuando haya madurado la obra, que estará en cartel hasta el 31 de octubre.


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Benedict Cumberbatch, trascendiendo a Shakespeare

Benedict Cumberbatch, trascendiendo a Shakespeare
El nuevo Hamlet no solo llena el teatro de fans sino que los ha puesto a leer al clásico

PATRICIA TUBELLA Londres 6 AGO 2015 - 00:06 CEST

Que una producción del clásico Hamlet se haya convertido en el acontecimiento teatral del agosto londinense, habitualmente volcado en ofertas ligeras con vistas al turismo, tiene como responsable a un actor cuyas sólidas credenciales se ven casi ahogadas por su fama. La presencia en cartel de Benedict Cumberbatch, el Sherlock televisivo, se traduce desde ayer en aglomeraciones frente a la taquilla en pro de una misión casi imposible: conseguir una de las pocas entradas que se ponen a la venta a diario, porque el grueso desapareció en minutos cuando salieron al mercado hace ya un año. Todo un récord en la historia teatral del país.


La prensa británica ha bautizado como Cumberbatchmania ese fenómeno que ha movilizado a los fans del intérprete, procedentes de todo el mundo, y forzado al teatro del Centro Barbican a imponer un estricto sistema de control para evitar que el mercado negro dispare el precio de las entradas. Una medida casi inútil en la era de Internet, donde algunas están cotizando a casi 2.000 euros.

Tal es la capacidad de arrastre del actor que muchos de sus seguidores han confesado en los foros de la Red estar leyendo por primera vez la obra de William Shakespeare. A sus 39 años, este británico cuenta con una dilatada carrera teatral que le ha dado el prestigioso premio Olivier, y es un asiduo del cine de Hollywood, que lo nominó el año pasado al Oscar por su trabajo en la película Descifrando Enigma. Pero su proyección como estrella internacional vino de la mano de una exitosa serie en la que encarna al detective Sherlock Holmes, papel que retomará en primavera cuando empiece el rodaje de la cuarta temporada.


Link a la foto AQUI

Más que interesados en las vicisitudes del príncipe de Dinamarca, los fans de Cumberbatch, que meses atrás se lanzaron en masa a la compra de las 100.000 entradas puestas entonces a la venta, quieren ver en directo a ese Sherlock, o a la atractiva estrella hollywoodense o al villano de voz maravillosa de la última entrega de Star Trek. Son aquellos que conocen al detalle la vida personal de su ídolo, como su reciente boda con la actriz y reputada directora teatral Sophie Hunter o el nacimiento de su primer hijo en junio.

Lo que cautiva a crítica y aficionados al teatro, sin embargo, es la posibilidad de ver en escena a uno de los grandes actores jóvenes británicos encarnando el reto de meterse en la piel de Hamlet. Desde los legendarios Laurence Olivier o Peter O’Toole, hasta los hoy emergentes Rory Kinnear y David Tennant, pasando por los consolidadísimos Simon Russell Beale y Mark Rylance, por citar sólo algunos, Hamlet es un desafío obligado para todo actor británico en los albores de la madurez. Ahora le llega el turno a Cumberbatch, un intérprete que años atrás logró cautivar a Harold Pinter durante la representación de una obra de Ibsen, aunque el dramaturgo británico vaticinó erróneamente que con ese nombre un punto pomposo y complicado le sería difícil llegar a lo más alto.

Las críticas a su actuación no llegarán hasta la noche del día 25 (fecha del estreno oficial, tras las funciones previas que arrancaron ayer) y las expectativas son muy altas. Porque, tal y como ha subrayado el crítico teatral de The Guardian, Michael Billington, el Hamlet de Cumberbatch no es una operación publicitaria que bebe de la fama de su intérprete, sino “un gran papel para un gran actor”.