Taking theatre to account

New fringe take on Hamlet takes aim at traditional gender roles

Advertisement

Advertise with us

It’s something of a theatre truism: every actor wants to play Hamlet. The protagonist of Shakespeare’s most performed play is often seen as a career-making role, a juicy part for an actor to really sink his teeth into. 

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Subscribe and receive a limited-edition Free Press branded hat or tote.

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $205*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*First annual payment billed as $205.00 + GST for one year. This annual subscription will automatically renew at $233.00 + GST every 52 weeks (10% off the regular annual price of $259.35). Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Opinion

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 19/07/2017 (3283 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

It’s something of a theatre truism: every actor wants to play Hamlet. The protagonist of Shakespeare’s most performed play is often seen as a career-making role, a juicy part for an actor to really sink his teeth into. 

With Inertia, which makes its debut at this year’s Winnipeg Fringe Theatre Festival tonight at 9:30 p.m. at the Rachel Browne Theatre (Venue 8), young theatre artists Gislina Patterson, Davis Plett, Angelica Schwartz and Erin Meagan Schwartz are aiming to excise the ghost of Hamlet from theatre, as well as address harmful power dynamics, toxic masculinity and entitlement.

“We’ve been struggling to figure out a pithy description of the show,” Plett says with a laugh, “but this is a show (that is) a mis-remembered version of Hamlet, set at the Winnipeg Fringe Festival.”

LEAH BORCHERT PHOTO
Scene from the play Inertia, which debuts at the Winnipeg Fringe Theatre Festival tonight at the Rachel Browne Theatre
LEAH BORCHERT PHOTO Scene from the play Inertia, which debuts at the Winnipeg Fringe Theatre Festival tonight at the Rachel Browne Theatre

Hamlet, to put it simply, isn’t exactly what you’d call a great guy, and he serves as something of an avatar for many of the issues the quartet seeks to explore in Inertia. “Hamlet is, as a character, obsessed with maintaining institutions of power,” Plett says. “He’s obsessed with maintaining the status quo.” In the world of theatre, Hamlet — both the text and the character — is an institution unto itself.

Ophelia, who appears opposite Hamlet in the Shakespearean classic, meanwhile, represents the voices who are not heard on the theatre stage, the stories that aren’t often told.

“Ophelia really has no voice in Hamlet,” Patterson says. “She talks very little, and most of her conversations are centred on her virginity, her female-ness. And for a play that is mostly one guy talking about whether or not he should kill himself, there’s a character who commits suicide who doesn’t get to ask those questions in front of the audience and her suicide is seen as a weakness or failure, whereas Hamlet’s contemplations of suicide are seen as brooding and interesting and wise.

“I also think that in the arts community, when you’re dealing with emotional labour, it makes it so much harder to actually do your work and get your voice heard. That’s what Ophelia represents: being stuck in a cycle where she can’t say, ‘I think about this stuff, too.’”

Hamlet isn’t the only text that inspired Inertia, and that the show is set at the Winnipeg Fringe Theatre Festival is intentional. Last July, improv performer RobYn Slade wrote a widely shared Facebook post detailing the sexually predatory behaviour she has witnessed — and experienced — during the festival, and how we can all work together to make the event enjoyable for everyone. Following a media interview with Slade, the festival issued a statement saying it stood in solidarity with any victims and commended those for coming forward.

But, to be clear, Slade’s intention was not to call out the fringe festival itself. Rather, she was looking — as Inertia will be attempting — to draw attention to the broader, systemic problem of men abusing positions of power, status or celebrity to take advantage of young women, and what we can do as a community to stop it. “The takeaway here isn’t ‘a thing happened to a person one time,’ “ Slade wrote when she reshared her post this year. “It’s a dynamic.”  

Patterson agrees. Inertia is set at the fringe festival, but the issues it focuses on are also bigger than the fringe, just as they are also bigger than Hamlet. “I think it’s complicated because often this discussion comes down to who, or what, or when. It’s a specific problem — but it’s also a structural problem. I think we’re hoping that by addressing it in an abstract way in this space where it’s happening, we can approach the structural aspect.

“We’re talking about theatre because that’s where we work, but these issues are present in all arts communities — and all communities, generally,” she adds. “The fringe is an intense time and an intense microcosm of the way arts communities operate, so I think these things that are present everywhere can be really amplified.”

The cornerstone of a festival at which “anything can happen” is freedom: freedom to create, freedom to push boundaries and a freedom to explore difficult ideas. 

“That’s the angel and the devil of this style of festival,” Slade says when I called her on Tuesday. “Anybody can produce a show, so you can self-produce work that you’re trying to say something with, and no one is going to tell you that you can’t.” 

The trouble begins when that freedom is misinterpreted as a permission slip to behave however one wants. “It’s a chance to let loose and do whatever we want, which can be a really positive environment, but can also be negative if it goes unchecked and unacknowledged,” Patterson says.  

The press materials for Inertia include a modification to festival’s tagline: “Anything can happen — and we let it.” But the “we” in that instance refers to everyone. The cast of Inertia hopes their show gets audience members thinking about the ways in which they contribute to and support these power structures, and what they can do make sure everyone gets to enjoy the magic of the fringe festival. That might look like trusting your gut when you’re out fringe-ing and you see something that looks wrong. 

“When we, as adults, are getting the ‘No’ feeling, why aren’t we stepping in?” Slade asks. “There are creeps everywhere, in every circle.”   

One of the most powerful and positive aspects of the fringe festival is that shows such as Inertia can start these conversations. Slade, 31, is inspired by the Inertia cast — all in their early 20s — and the generation of fringe theatre creators coming up behind her.

“I’m proud of these people for having the words I didn’t, and for using them,” she says. 

jen.zoratti@freepress.mb.ca

Twitter: @JenZoratti

Jen Zoratti

Jen Zoratti
Columnist

Jen Zoratti is a columnist and feature writer working in the Arts & Life department, as well as the author of the weekly newsletter NEXT. A National Newspaper Award finalist for arts and entertainment writing, Jen is a graduate of the Creative Communications program at RRC Polytech and was a music writer before joining the Free Press in 2013. Read more about Jen.

Every piece of reporting Jen produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print – part of the Free Press‘s tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press’s history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.

 

Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.

Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

Police to report Tuesday on Linden Woods shooting

1 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 2:35 PM CDT

The Winnipeg Police Service will hold a news conference Tuesday to provide details about a shooting involving an officer in the Linden Woods neighbourhood Monday night.

No other details have been released.

The 1 p.m. news conference will be livestreamed on the WPS's YouTube page.

Manitobans on hook for $40M in unpaid medical bills racked up by non-Canadians

Tyler Searle 6 minute read Preview

Manitobans on hook for $40M in unpaid medical bills racked up by non-Canadians

Tyler Searle 6 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 6:20 PM CDT

Manitoba Nurses Union president calls the amount “shocking.”

Read
Updated: Yesterday at 6:20 PM CDT

Name-change sex abuser pleads guilty

Dean Pritchard 4 minute read Preview

Name-change sex abuser pleads guilty

Dean Pritchard 4 minute read Yesterday at 2:01 AM CDT

A convicted child sex predator who changed his name before going on to abuse another victim is now facing a likely 15-year prison sentence.

Ryan Knight, 44, pleaded guilty Monday morning to sexual interference and making child sexual abuse and exploitation material.

Knight remains in custody and is expected to be sentenced in the fall, when Crown and defence lawyers will jointly recommend the repeat offender serve 15 years in prison.

Knight, who was born Ryan Gabourie, has been in custody since last July when he was charged with sex crimes involving a 13-year-old boy.

Read
Yesterday at 2:01 AM CDT

Sheriff’s officer dies in collision with train

Erik Pindera 2 minute read Preview

Sheriff’s officer dies in collision with train

Erik Pindera 2 minute read Updated: 11:13 AM CDT

Manitoba’s premier says the “service and sacrifice” of a sheriff’s officer who died in a train collision near Portage la Prairie on Tuesday morning will “never be forgotten.”

RCMP were called to the collision between a van and the train on Road 40 West, west of Portage, on Tuesday at 8 a.m.

RCMP say it appears a Manitoba Sheriff Services van collided with the train, causing it to roll and land in the ditch.

The driver, a 27-year-old man from Portage, died at the scene, while a passenger received minor injuries and taken by paramedics to hospital as a precaution.

Read
Updated: 11:13 AM CDT

Puzzles Palace

1 minute read Monday, Jul. 13, 2026

To solve our puzzles, please subscribe with this special offer: |

Carney trumps Trump with Gordie Howe bridge deal

Dan Lett 5 minute read Preview

Carney trumps Trump with Gordie Howe bridge deal

Dan Lett 5 minute read Monday, Jul. 13, 2026

The dispute over the opening of the Gordie Howe Bridge was always and only going to end when U.S. President Donald Trump could declare he had got the better deal.

Even when he didn’t.

Trump gleefully posted on social media Saturday that after refusing to allow the completed bridge between Windsor and Detroit to open in late June, he got a “MUCH BETTER DEAL” from Prime Minister Mark Carney. Political opponents and a handful of opinion writers rushed to shake their heads at how Carney was used and abused by the big fella in Washington.

It’s not surprising that Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre would do an end-zone dance as he lamented Carney’s “terrible deal; the leader of the official Opposition’s default setting is “condemn.”

Read
Monday, Jul. 13, 2026