Tuesday, July 23, 2024

HAMLET - Opera Australia


Allan Clayton (Hamlet) and the cast of  Opera Australia's production of "Hamlet"

Composed by Brett Dean – Libretto by Matthew Jocelyn

Conducted by Tim Anderson – Directed by Neil Armfield AO

Set Design by Ralph Myers – Costumes designed by Alice Babidge

Movement directed by Denni Sayers – Fight Director Nigel Poulton

Lighting designed by Jon Clark –Sound Designed by Bob Scott.

Joan Sutherland Theatre – Sydney Opera House July 20th - to August 9th, 2024

Opening night performance on 20th July reviewed by BILL STEPHENS.


Allan Clayton (Hamlet) - Rod Gilfry (Claudius) - Kanen Breen (Polonius) - Catherine Carby (Gertrude) - and the cast of "Hamlet".


Premiered at the Glyndebourne Festival in 2017, with an all-Australian production team led by Neil Armfield, this production has since been performed at the Adelaide Festival in 2018, at the Metropolitan Opera in 2022, and most recently at the Munich Opera Festival in 2023.

Finally it is Sydney’s turn to experience what has been acclaimed as the most successful opera ever composed by an Australian.

Anyone who experiences this production is unlikely to dispute that claim. It has certainly been worth the wait, particularly with this cast of outstanding singers led by Allan Clayton as Hamlet and Rod Gilfry as Claudius in the roles they originated in that 2017 Glyndebourne premiere, and Lorina Gore repeating her Helpmann Award winning performance as Ophelia.

Catherine Carby (Gertrude) - Lorina Gore (Ophelia) in "Hamlet".


Although Matthew Jocelyn’s libretto utilises only about twenty percent of the text of Shakespeare’s play, the story-telling and character motivations are clear throughout. All the famous quotes from the play are there but not always sung by the characters for which Shakespeare wrote them, and while the opera is sung in English, surtitles are used to ensure that none of the lyrics are lost.

Neil Armfield’s production looks spectacular with an ingenious setting by Ralph Myers which becomes part of the story. Similarly Alice Babidge’s stylish costumes have a timeless elegance about them which supports the action without drawing attention away from the characters.

Armfield’s direction is deservedly admired, not only for the compelling characterisations he has encouraged from his singer, but for his  imaginative scene changes and the way he manages to maintain focus on the main protagonists while  moving the large chorus around the stage so efficiently that it is often a shock to realise that the chorus has left the stage.

Having the nobles wear white makeup gave them a slightly butoh-like appearance which removed them from the constraints of reality into a heightened theatrical world where their emotional excesses felt completely relatable especially in a world driven by the sounds of Brett Dean’s idiosyncratic and compelling  orchestral inventions.

This is not an opera that sends you off into the night humming the melodies. Brett Dean’s extraordinary score, brilliantly rendered by the Opera Australia Orchestra under Tim Anderson’s guidance, is so powerful and inventive that it becomes a sonic experience in its’s own right.

In addition to the large onstage chorus, eight additional singers performing as part of the orchestra but  situated high in the auditorium balconies, along with percussion and other instruments, contribute otherworldly noises in what is known as ‘extended vocal technique’.

Christopher Lowrey (Guildenstern) - Russell Harcourt (Rosencrantz) -  Allan Clayton (Hamlet) - Catherine Carby (Gertrude) - Rod Gilfrey (Claudius) - Kanen Breen (Polonius) - Lorina Gore (Ophelia) - Iain Hendersion (Player 3) - Jud Arthur (Player 1) and the cast of "Hamlet".


Following the only interval, the entire chorus sings from around the auditorium walls, creating an extraordinary surround-sound impression of being inside Hamlet’s head, while an onstage piano-accordionist helps create a heightened sense of chaos to Claudius’ reaction to the performance arranged by Hamlet to embarrass him in front of his guests.

Nor is the role’s creator, British tenor, Allan Clayton’s Hamlet a fey young man tugging at his forelock. This Hamlet is a maddeningly self-centred young man so occupied with his own grief as to be oblivious of the effect of his reckless actions on those around him.

Clayton’s towering performance is matched by that of Rod Gilfrey, returning to the role of Hamlet’s scheming stepfather, Claudius, which he also originated at Glyndebourne.

Lorina Gore (Ophelia) - Russell Harcourt (Rosencrantz) - Christopher Lowrey (Guildenstern) 


Watching Lorina Gore repeat her Helpmann Award-winning performance as Ophelia is an unnerving experience. Her superbly nuanced interpretation of Ophelia’s disintegration into madness at Hamlet’s rejection, especially in the second act when wrapped in her dead father’s jacket she writhes around the floor, is a performance to cherish for its bravery and commitment.

Similarly memorable was Catherine Carby as Hamlet’s mother, Gertrude.  Carby’s  beautifully burnished soprano and elegant bearing made her perfect casting in a role original performed in Adelaide by Cheryl Baker, then scheduled to be played this season by the late Jacqueline Dark, the memory of whom this season is dedicated.

Nicholas Jones (Laertes) - Catherine Carby (Gertrude)


Nicholas Jones is excellent as Ophelia’s brother, Laertes, as is Kanen Breen as the supercilious Polonius. Counter tenors, Russell Harcourt and Christopher Lowrey, delighted as the twittering duo, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, while Samuel Dundas offered a strongly sung, Horatio and Jud Arthur made the blood run cold with his haunting performances in dual roles as the Ghost of Old Hamlet, as well as the Grave digger.

Brett Dean’s “Hamlet” is a masterpiece of contemporary operatic composition, as is Neil Armfield’s conception and direction. This current production, featuring so many of the original cast and creatives offers a rare opportunity to experience the original, brilliant, well-honed production which has  not only been lauded around the world, but is also extraordinarily entertaining and compelling. For anyone with even a passing interest in the history of Opera in Australia, this season offers an opportunity that should not be missed.



                                                     Images by Keith Saunders.



                    This review also published in AUSTRALIAN ARTS REVIEW