Thursday, January 20, 1994
Ventura West Edition
Section: Ventura County Life
Page: J-8
Melodrama Hits Right Note With Its Version of '
Hamlet'; Moorpark troupe's musical version sticks fairly
close to Shakespeare's--but does take some amusing liberties.
By: TODD EVERETT
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES
 
Something may be rotten in the state of Denmark, but everything's OK in Moorpark, where the
Magnificent Moorpark Melodrama & Vaudeville Co. is presenting its production of something called
"
Hamlet . . . the Musical?"
You don't need to be a Shakespeare scholar to appreciate this "Hamlet", although those familiar with the
play--maybe through Mel Gibson's recent film version--might appreciate some of the (if this is the word)
nuances. Nuances are few, though, in a play that turns two of Shakespeare's minor male characters into
a pair of coquettish mall rats named Rosie Krantz and Gilda Stern ("This is a happenin' castle ya got
heah"), and Horatio into a heavy-metal head who makes his entrance playing air guitar and singing the
main riff to Deep Purple's "Smoke on the Water".
Monk Ferris' script sticks fairly close to Shakespeare's, touching most of the high plot points and
well-known soliloquies, and even increasing the number of deaths in the last scene. The Melodrama
production's director and choreographer, Joy Enright, has added a couple of contemporary references
("Saturday Night Live" jokes, mainly) and the show opens with the chorus singing Cole Porter's "Brush
Up Your Shakespeare."
While much of the acting here won't worry the nearby California Shakespeare Company, most is
adequate to the production and some is surprisingly good. Will Shupe II, who plays Hamlet, has
evidently never before acted Shakespeare but could, and Jonathan Graff, who plays the evil Claudius,
has a fairly extensive background in the real thing.  Other particularly notable performances are Kristin
Prewitt and Erin Appling as Rosie and Gilda, Elaine Raleigh as Gertrude's mother, Abigail Jones as
Ophelia, and Mark Tortorici and James Harlow in various roles. The songs are serviceable, if not exactly
memorable, and the cast handles Enright's choreography with enthusiasm. Cheryl Talbot is musical
director and pianist.
So, if the lack of singing and dancing has kept you away from Shakespeare's "Hamlet," the Moorpark
Melodrama's may be the alternative you've been looking for.
Details
* WHAT: "Hamlet . . . the Musical?"
* WHEN: Thursdays at 7 p.m., Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. Matinees
Saturdays and Sundays at 3 p.m., through Feb. 12.
* WHERE: Magnificent Moorpark Melodrama & Vaudeville Company Theater,
45 E. High St., Moorpark.
* COST: Thursday, all seats $6; Friday and Saturday evenings, all
seats $12; Saturday and Sunday matinees, $12 adults, $9.50 seniors and
children. Group rates available for matinees only. Visa and MasterCard
accepted.
* FYI: For reservations or information, call 529-1212.
E-MAIL: webmaster@jimharlow.com
"Hamlet . . . the Musical?"