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PicksInSix Review: Hamnet - Royal Shakespeare Company - Chicago Shakespeare Theater

 
 

‘Hamnet’: “A Wonderous Trick of Nature”
PicksInSix® Review |
Ed Tracy

The Royal Shakespeare Company’s “Hamnet”—a stunning co-production with Neal Street Productions adapted for the stage by Lolita Chakrabarti based on the best-selling novel by Maggie O’Farrell and directed by Erica Whyman—opened the US tour in The Yard at Chicago Shakespeare Theater this weekend. The captivating play imagines the courtship, marriage and family life of William Shakespeare (Rory Alexander) and Agnes Hathaway (Kemi-Bo Jacobs) and provides a fascinating fictional portrait of how Shakespeare’s plays may have been influenced by their time together and the tragic death of their young son Hamnet (Ajani Cabey).

It is, of course, the story that has received recent, multiple Oscar Award nominations for the 2025 film—a separate adaptation by Chloé Zhao, who also directed, with O’Farrell that followed the 2023 play—and places Agnes as the central figure in a family coping with separation, grief and unfathomable loss. If you have seen the film, do not expect a true-to-form stage representation but rather a compelling and emotionally-charged production that shares the same emotional space, but is itself a unique story all its own and richly told.

Despite many theories, history is sparse on Shakespeare’s personal life. Shakespeare and his first wife met, married and Agnes gave birth to a daughter, Susanna (Ava Hinds Jones) and twins Judith (Saffron Dey) and Hamnet (Cabey) in Stratford-upon-Avon. As Shakespeare’s literary career in London began to flourish, he was often away from the day-to-day life of his family. Chakrabarti’s adaption expands O’Farrell’s vision of how those early days unfolded with Shakespeare serving as a Latin tutor to local children of Agnes’s brother Bartholomew (Troy Alexander) who is owed a large debt by Shakespeare’s belligerent father John (Nigel Barrett). During their brief, passionate courtship, Agnes, who is a healer and one with nature, experiences mystical visions of her family and Shakespeare as her soulmate. Throughout the first act, there are moments of foreshadowing of the close relationship between the twins and an ominous event that hangs thick in the air.

The second act picks up a decade forward. Hamnet and Judith are the life’s blood of the home, inseparable and even indistinguishable one from the other. Shakespeare is now well-established in London at the Globe, his company performing before the Queen. Back at home on Henley Street, as Agnes waits for the family to be reunited, Judith is suddenly bed-ridden with only Hamnet there to provide comfort and care until Agnes returns to take charge. Though successful in bringing Judith through the night, Hamnet, who has challenged death to save his sister, falls ill and dies over the three days it takes Shakespeare to return.

Intermixed throughout are vignettes of the players in London, rehearsal scenes and references to Midsummer Night’s Dream, Measure for Measure and Romeo and Juliet—Barrett is hilarious as Globe actor Will Kempe—and a riveting, climactic scene from Hamlet. The shock of a public presentation of a personal tragedy rocks Agnes, compelling her to travel to London with Bartholomew to confront Shakespeare on his perceived insensitivity and discover for herself the powerful relationship between grief, loss and eternal love.

The action unfolds on a massive, multi-story post and beam scenic design that strongly evokes the Globe by Tom Piper who also designed period costumes, all of which utilize bold on-stage transformations that allow the story to move forward remarkably well despite a tendency to linger on exposition in the early going. That is a very minor point since, when the dramatic arc of the story matures, the drama erupts as Cabey’s commanding performance rises to the level of the stellar turns of Jacobs and Alexander, all leading to a revelatory conclusion—every bit as thrilling as one would expect from the world-class partnership between Royal Shakespeare Company and the Chicago Shakespeare Theater.

Audience Notice: Mature themes including scenes of domestic violence, child loss and grief, scenes of childbirth, and depictions of sexual activity.

“Hamnet” runs through March 8 on Navy Pier and then on to the Shakespeare Theatre Company in Washington, DC (March 17- April 12, 2026), and American Conservatory Theater in San Francisco (April 22 to May 24, 2026).

PHOTO | Kyle Flubacker

Chicago Shakespeare Theater
Royal Shakespeare Company
Neal Street Productions
presents
Hamnet
The Yard
Navy Pier
through March 8, 2026


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