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Cultural references toHamlet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

See also:Cultural references to Ophelia andWhat a piece of work is a man
Prince Hamlet holding the skull ofYorick. 19th century statue byRonald Gower inStratford-upon-Avon

Numerouscultural references toHamlet (in film, literature, arts, etc.) reflect the continued influence of this play.Hamlet is one of the most popular ofShakespeare's plays, topping the list at theRoyal Shakespeare Company since 1879, as of 2004.[1]

Plays

[edit]

The following list of plays including references toHamlet is ordered alphabetically.

Film and television

[edit]
Main article:Hamlet on screen

Film

[edit]

The following list is ordered alphabetically.

  • Egyptian directorYoussef Chahine has included elements fromHamlet in his films.Alexandria... Why? (1978) feature performances ofsoliloquies from the play. InAlexandria Again and Forever (1990),Hamlet appears as a film within the film.[14]
  • Shakespeare has been used as a base forpornographic parody film. One example isLuca Damiano'sHamlet: For the Love of Ophelia Parts 1 and 2 (1996).[15][16]
  • The 2006 Chinese filmThe Banquet (also known asLegend of the Black Scorpion) has a storyline loosely based on the story of Hamlet.[17]
  • In theStar Wars filmThe Empire Strikes Back,Chewbacca tries to reassemble the body of the robotC-3PO. At one point, he holds C-3PO's head in much the same way that Hamlet is traditionally depicted as holding Yorick's skull. This reference was intentional on the part of the director.[18][19]
  • InIngmar Bergman'sFanny and Alexander,Hamlet is strongly alluded to. The children's father is rehearsing the part ofthe Ghost for a production of the play when he dies, and then appears to Alexander later in the film as an actual ghost. The play's plot is also referenced in other ways, including Alexander's hatred for and confrontation with his new stepfather. A character explicitly tells Alexander that he is not Hamlet.[20][21]
  • In the 2008 comedyHamlet 2 a teacher creates a sequel toHamlet in an effort to save his school's drama program. Apart from some of the names of his characters, there are very few similarities to the original.[22]
  • The plot of the 2012 IndianMalayalam dramaKarmayogi ("The Warrior") is adapted fromHamlet.[23] According to Shakespeare scholar[24] Poonam Trivedi, Shakespeare "has many affinities with an Indian 'classical vision of art'..."[25]
  • Last Action Hero (1993) includes elements from the play, withArnold Schwarzenegger appearing as an action-version of Hamlet.[26]
  • Themes and plot elements from theDisney'sThe Lion King are inspired byHamlet.[27][28]
  • The horror movieA Nightmare on Elm Street alludes toHamlet in connection with the protagonistNancy.[29][30]
  • In the psychological dramaThe Ninth Configuration, characters discussHamlet at length, and asylum-inmates intends to do a production of the play with dogs.[31]
  • In both themusical and the2005 film adaptation ofThe Producers, Max Bialystock's musical version ofHamlet,Funny Boy, closes on opening night, one of his many failures.[32]
  • Hamlet features prominently inRenaissance Man, in which a reluctant teacher uses its plot and characters to introduce a group of under-achieving soldiers to critical thinking.[33][34]
  • Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Undead is a 2009 American independent vampire film. The film's title refers to a play-within-the-movie, which is a comic reinterpretation of Shakespeare'sHamlet and its aftermath.[35][36]
  • InSoapdish, Jeffrey Anderson (Kevin Kline) expresses his desire to perform a One-ManHamlet, which he justifies by saying the whole thing is happening in Hamlet's head, so you only need one actor.[37]
  • The title forStar Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991) is a reference to the soliloquy in Act 3, Scene 1. TheKlingons Gorkon andChang are Shakespeare aficionados, and opines that Shakespearian works are best experienced in the 'original'Klingon. Shakespeare's plays are liberally quoted throughout the film.[38][39] In 1996,The Klingon Hamlet, a translation of the play into the constructed Klingon language was published, and parts of it have been performed by theWashington Shakespeare Company.[40]
  • The 1983 comedyStrange Brew is loosely based onHamlet. Prince Hamlet is represented by Pam, daughter of a murdered brewery-owner whose spirit haunts the brewery's electrical system.[41]
  • In the 1995 comedyBilly Madison, Billy Madison and Eric reenactTo be, or not to be to settle their feud with the winner getting to take over Madison Hotels.[42]
  • Both film versions ofTo Be or Not to Be (Ernst Lubitsch's in1942 andMel Brooks' in1983) heavily alludes to the play.[43]
  • The cult British comedyWithnail and I quotes and alludes to the play.[44]
  • The title and elements inAlfred Hitchcock's 1959North by Northwest has been seen as references to the play.[45][46]
  • Hamlet Goes Business (Hamlet liikemaailmassa) (1987), written and directed byAki Kaurismäki, is a comic reworking of the story as a power struggle in a rubber duck factory.[47]
  • In the 2009 children's filmCoraline Hamlet's "What a piece of work is man" soliloquy is recited as part of a circus act.[48][49]
  • Tony Olmos' 2023 filmHemet, or the Landlady Don't Drink Tea was said to be likeHamlet set inCalifornia.[50]

Television

[edit]

Comedy and cartoons

[edit]

Sitcoms alluding toHamlet includeGilligan's Island,[51]Happy Days,[52]Skins,[53]Mystery Science Theater 3000,[54]Frasier[55] andUpstart Crow.[56]

Cartoons includeThe Simpsons,[57][58]South Park,[59]Animaniacs[60] andThe Brak Show,[53]Looney Tunes shortsA Ham in a Role andA Witch's Tangled Hare.[61][62][63]

Drama

[edit]
  • The Canadian seriesSlings and Arrows' title is fromHamlet, and the first season follows a production of the play. The play's artistic director is haunted by the ghost of his predecessor.[64]
  • The Royals television series uses the Hamlet story as its basis for the soap opera for its royal family, and infighting to gain the crown.
  • TheSons of Anarchy series drawsmany elements from the play and has been described as "Hamlet on motorcycles".[65]
  • The Pakistani television seriesSang-e-Mah is loosely based on the play, with some additional subplots.[66]

Horror

[edit]
  • In the 1991Tales from the Crypt episode "Top Billing", a struggling actor commits murder for the role of Hamlet, only to realize he was actually auditioning for the role ofYorick.[67][68]

Mystery and detective shows

[edit]
  • The British detective dramaLewis has referenced Shakespeare, includingHamlet, more than once.[69][70]
  • A 2008 episode of the anime-seriesBlack Butler features a production ofHamlet.[71][72]

Science fiction

[edit]
See also:Shakespeare and Star Trek
  • An episode of the originalStar Trek series, entitled "The Conscience of the King" (1966) features a production ofHamlet, and alludes to the play in other aspects.[73]
  • In an episode ofStar Trek: The Next Generation entitled "Hide and Q" (1987), thegod-like entity Q is quoting Shakespeare toCaptain Picard to justify his tormenting of humanity, and Picard counters him with an earnest quotation of Hamlet's "What a piece of work is man" speech.[74]
  • Hamlet has been referenced inDoctor Who. InThe Chase (1965), the Doctor and his companions watch asFrancis Bacon gives Shakespeare the idea to write a play about Hamlet.[75] InCity of Death (1979), the Doctor claims to have written down Shakespeare's original draft ofHamlet due to the Bard's sprained wrist, but criticises the mixed metaphor "To take arms against a sea of troubles."[76] InThe Shakespeare Code (2007), the Doctor meets Shakespeare and quotes the play, saying "the play's the thing." Later on, Shakespeare coins the phrase "to be or not to be." The Doctor suggests he write it down, but Shakespeare remarks that it is "too pretentious."[77]

Radio

[edit]

Literature

[edit]
Main article:Literary influence of Hamlet

Books

[edit]
  • In Chapter XXI of theAdventures of Huckleberry Finn byMark Twain, a parody of the soliloquy is recited by the Duke, one ofa pair of con artists encountered by Huck and Jim, albeit with other Shakespearean references as well ("Birnam Wood", "Wake Duncan" and others).[80]
  • The ninth chapter ofJames Joyce'sUlysses, commonly referred to asScylla and Charybdis, is almost entirely devoted to a rambling discourse by Stephen Daedalus on Shakespeare, centering on the character Hamlet. As a character predicts more or less accurately in the very first chapter, "[Daedalus] proves by algebra that Hamlet's grandson is Shakespeare's grandfather and that he himself is the ghost of his own father."[81]
  • Gertrude and Claudius, aJohn Updike novel, serves as a prequel to the events of the play. It follows Gertrude from her wedding to King Hamlet, through an affair with Claudius, and its murderous results, up until the very beginning of the play.[82]
  • The Dead Fathers Club, a novel byMatt Haig, retells the story ofHamlet from the point of view of an 11-year-old boy in modern England.[83]
  • Anton Chekhov wrote afeuilleton titledI am a Moscow Hamlet (1891), the mutterings of a gossip-mongering actor who contemplates suicide out of sheer boredom.[84]
  • Brazilian authorOswald de Andrade wroteTupi or not Tupi, that is the question in 1928.[85]
  • Jasper Fforde's novelSomething Rotten includes Hamlet – transplanted from theBookWorld into reality – as a major character. This version of Hamlet frets about how audiences perceive him, complains about the performances of actors who have portrayed him, and at one point resolves to go back and change the play by killing Claudius in the beginning and marrying Ophelia.[86]
  • InKurt Vonnegut's 1965 novel,God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater, the protagonist, Eliot Rosewater, writes a letter to his wife while pretending to be Hamlet.[87]
  • David Bergantino's novelHamlet II: Ophelia's Revenge, set in modern Denmark, portrays Ophelia rising from the dead to get revenge on Hamlet.[88]
  • Nick O'Donohoe's 1989 science fiction novelToo Too Solid Flesh portrays a troupe ofandroid actors designed specifically to performHamlet; when the androids' designer is murdered, the Hamlet android decides to investigate.[89]
  • InKyle Baker's 1996 graphic novelThe Cowboy Wally Show, Cowboy Wally's masterpiece is the filmCowboy Wally's HAMLET, a modernized version produced in secret while Wally is in prison. Wally plans to filmHamlet professionally, but is jailed for an unspecified offense before he can cast actors, and so uses his cellmates as the cast.[90]
  • David Foster Wallace's novelInfinite Jest takes its name from Hamlet's speech about Yorick, and features a main character struggling with his uncle's influence following the suspicious death of his father.[91][92]
  • The plot ofDavid Wroblewski's novelThe Story of Edgar Sawtelle closely follows the story line ofHamlet, and several of the novel's main characters have names similar to their corresponding characters in the play.[93]
  • John Marsden'sHamlet: A Novel is a reinterpretation of the original for young adults. It is set in Denmark and the characters keep their names, their personalities and their functions in the story.[94]
  • InA Christmas Carol,Charles Dickens underscoresJacob Marley's death by an analogy toHamlet:

    There is no doubt that Marley was dead. This must be distinctly understood, or nothing wonderful can come of the story I am going to relate. If we were not perfectly convinced that Hamlet's Father died before the play began, there would be nothing more remarkable in his taking a stroll at night, in an easterly wind, upon his own ramparts, than there would be in any other middle-aged gentleman rashly turning out after dark in a breezy spot … literally to astonish his son's weak mind.

  • Ngaio Marsh's detectiveRoderick Alleyn often talks and thinks ofHamlet in her novels.[97][98]
  • Pamela Dean's novelTam Lin prominently features a production of the play which her characters attend and discuss.[99]
  • The bookTo Be or Not to Be byRyan North uses the play as its core, rendering it as a branching narrative based on theChoose Your Own Adventure series and othergamebooks. The reader is able to follow the play's plot by following the "Yorick Skulls", or to take it in wildly different directions, including bypassing the story altogether.[100]
  • Ian McEwan's novelNutshell (2016) retells the play from the point of view of an unborn child.[101]
  • Prince Hamlet is the main character in the 2010 comic bookKill Shakespeare.[102]
  • Hamlet: Manga Classics, written by Crystal Chan and illustrated by Julien Choy, adapts the story of the play into a Manga format.[103]

Poetry

[edit]

Short stories

[edit]
  • In the short story "Much Ado About (Censored)" byConnie Willis, a pair of high school students volunteer to help their teacher edit the play in a satire onpolitical correctness.[110]
  • "In the Halls of Elsinore", a short story by Brad C. Hodson, takes place in an Elsinore occupied by Fortinbras. Told from Horatio's point of view, the story is about a malignant presence that resides in Elsinore – the same presence that appeared to young Hamlet as his father.[111]
  • Margaret Atwood's 1992 collectionGood Bones and Simple Murders includes "Gertrude Talks Back," in whichHamlet's mother responds to Hamlet's harsh criticism during Act III, Scene 4, and reveals that it wasn't Claudius who killed his father: "It was me."[112]

Music

[edit]

Opera

[edit]

Several operas have been written based onHamlet, including:

Instrumental

[edit]

Instrumental works based onHamlet include:

Contemporary

[edit]

Contemporary popular music mentions include:

  • Hair: The Tribal Love-Rock Musical (1967) by James Rado and Jerome Ragni, contains the song "What A Piece of Work Is Man", which is taken completely fromHamlet and set to music by Galt MacDermot.[132]
  • "Cruel to Be Kind" is a 1979 single byNick Lowe. The title of the song is taken fromHamlet, Act III, Scene 4: "I must be cruel only to be kind. Thus bad begins and worse remains behind."[133]
  • Steampunk bandAbney Park recorded a song entitled "Dear Ophelia", in which the vocalist sings as Prince Hamlet, and apologizes to Ophelia for all the things he had done, even telling the story of his father, who died when "his brother crept out, and poured poison in his ear"[134]
  • The title track of the albumElsinore by Swedish musicianBjörn Afzelius is about a prince locked up in the castle ofElsinore.[135]
  • The title track off of the 2017 albumTo Kill a King, by American heavy metal band Manilla Road is based on Hamlet.
  • The Birthday Party recorded a song called "Hamlet (Pow Pow Pow)" on theJunkyard album.[136]
  • TheDream Theater song "Pull Me Under" is influenced by, and makes reference to,Hamlet.[137]
  • "Hey There Ophelia" is the thirteenth track off the album,This Gigantic Robot Kills byMC Lars. It features lyrics about Ophelia, Claudius, and Hamlet's father's ghost from Hamlet's point of view.[138]
  • TheSerbianhard rock band,Riblja Čorba, released an album entitledOstalo je ćutanje (trans. "The Rest Is Silence") in 1996. Album features a track entitled "Nešto je trulo u državi Danskoj" (trans. "Something's Rotten in the State of Denmark"), the song itself referring to Serbia. Album cover features band's frontmanBora Đorđević holding a skull.[citation needed]
  • Richard Thompson, British singer/songwriter, sings a live version of the story ofHamlet on "The Life And Music Of – CD 4 – The Songs Pour Down Like Silver". The interpretation is not terribly serious ("Like a hole in the head, Denmark needed that prince").[citation needed]
  • Suicide is Painless from thefilm andTV-seriesM*A*S*H, written by Mike Altman, contains the line "Is itto be, or not to be?"[139]
  • Opheliac byEmilie Autumn, features two songs referring to the play. The title track and "Liar".[140]

Video games

[edit]

Other

[edit]
Main article:Hamlet in common English

The play has contributed many phrases to common English vernacular, including the famous "To be, or not to be".

It (as well as the Shakespearean canon as a whole) is frequently given as an example of a text which would be reproduced under the conditions of theinfinite monkey theorem.[146]

Gallery

[edit]

Artworks inspired by the play includes works byEugène Delacroix,Henrietta Rae andWilliam Blake.

References

[edit]
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  79. ^Association, British Shakespeare; Shmygol, Maria (2022-02-04)."Andrea Smith: Radio Productions of Shakespeare's Plays".British Shakespeare Association. Retrieved2023-04-14.
  80. ^Mark Twain."Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1885)/Chapter 21" .Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1885) .
  81. ^Pelaschiar, Laura (2015).Joyce/Shakespeare. Syracuse University Press. p. 92.ISBN 9780815653127. Retrieved11 January 2019.
  82. ^"Gertrude and Claudius".www.publishersweekly.com. Retrieved11 January 2019.
  83. ^"'Dead Fathers Club' Puts Modern Twist on 'Hamlet'".NPR.org. Retrieved11 January 2019.
  84. ^Gottlieb, Vera (1982).Chekhov and the Vaudeville: A Study of Chekhov's One-Act Plays. Cambridge University Press. p. 188.ISBN 9780521241700. Retrieved11 January 2019.
  85. ^Revista de Antropofagia (in Portuguese). May 1928.Archived from the original on 31 October 2022. Retrieved17 June 2023.
  86. ^Shaughnessy, Robert (2007).The Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare and Popular Culture. Cambridge University Press. p. 130.ISBN 9781107495029. Retrieved11 January 2019.
  87. ^Habermann, Ina; Witen, Michelle (2016).Shakespeare and Space: Theatrical Explorations of the Spatial Paradigm. Springer. p. 235.ISBN 9781137518354.
  88. ^Habermann, Ina; Witen, Michelle (2016).Shakespeare and Space: Theatrical Explorations of the Spatial Paradigm. Springer. p. 236.ISBN 9781137518354.
  89. ^Loftis, Sonya Freeman; Kellar, Allison; Ulevich, Lisa (2017).SHAKESPEARE'S HAMLET IN AN ERA OF TEXTUAL EXHAUSTION. Routledge.ISBN 9781351967457.
  90. ^CMJ Network Inc (April 1996)."CMJ New Music Monthly". CMJ Network, Inc. Retrieved11 January 2019.
  91. ^Leith, Sam (26 February 2016)."Infinite Jest at 20: 20 things you need to know".The Guardian.
  92. ^Walsh (Jr.), James Jason (2014).American Hamlet: Shakespearean Epistemology in David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest. Cleveland State University. pp. Abstract.
  93. ^"American Hamlet".Washington Post. 8 June 2008. Retrieved11 January 2019.
  94. ^reviewer, Oscar Kettle (5 September 2008)."Hamlet: A Novel".The Sydney Morning Herald. The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved11 January 2019.
  95. ^Dickens, Charles (2004).Hearn, Michael Patrick (ed.).The AnnotatedChristmas Carol:A Christmas Carol in Prose.W. W. Norton. pp. 4–5.ISBN 9780393051582.
  96. ^Edmondson, Paul (20 December 2010)."Shakespeare andA Christmas Carol".Blogging Shakespeare.Shakespeare Birthplace Trust. Retrieved11 January 2019.
  97. ^DuBose, Martha Hailey (2000).Women of Mystery: The Lives and Works of Notable Women Crime Novelists. St. Martin's Press.ISBN 9780312276553. Retrieved11 January 2019.
  98. ^"Ngaio Marsh".www.ngaio-marsh.org.nz. NGAIO MARSH HOUSE & HERITAGE TRUST. Archived fromthe original on 12 January 2019. Retrieved11 January 2019.Alleyn thinks very frequently of Hamlet, perhaps his favourite Shakespearean play. When eaves-dropping on one occasion he observed wryly to Inspector Fox, "next stop, with Polonius behind the arras in a bedroom" (False Scent, Ch. VI), and when asked to give advice by one Miss Meade, Alleyn thinks of himself as "a mature Hamlet" (Killer Dolphin. Ch.9).
  99. ^Altmann, Anna E.; Vos, Gail De (2001).Tales, Then and Now: More Folktales as Literary Fictions for Young Adults. Libraries Unlimited. p. 132.ISBN 9781563088315.
  100. ^Flood, Alison (27 November 2012)."Hamlet rewritten as choose-your-own-adventure game book".The Guardian. Retrieved11 January 2019.
  101. ^Clanchy, Kate (27 August 2016)."Nutshell by Ian McEwan review – an elegiac masterpiece".The Guardian. Retrieved11 January 2019.
  102. ^Desmet, Christy; Loper, Natalie; Casey, Jim (2017).Shakespeare / Not Shakespeare. Springer. p. 154.ISBN 9783319633008. Retrieved1 July 2019.
  103. ^"Graphic Novel Adaptations of Regular Books",Using Graphic Novels in the English Language Arts Classroom, Bloomsbury Academic, 2020,doi:10.5040/9781350112728.0015,ISBN 978-1-3501-1269-8,S2CID 242977569, retrieved2023-04-14
  104. ^Booth, A. (2015).Reading The Waste Land from the Bottom Up. Springer. pp. Chapter "Line 172".ISBN 9781137482846. Retrieved11 January 2019.
  105. ^Crawford, Robert (10 January 2015)."TS Eliot: the poet who conquered the world, 50 years on".The Guardian. Retrieved11 January 2019.
  106. ^Newey, Vincent; Thompson, Ann (1991).Literature and Nationalism. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 52.ISBN 9780389209546.
  107. ^"Hamlet by Boris Pasternak, 1958, translated by Ann Pasternak Slater".TheGuardian.com. 6 November 2010.
  108. ^"An alternate translation of B. Pasternak's Hamlet by G. Veles".
  109. ^Burzyńska, Katarzyna (2012-01-01)."A Polish Hamlet: Zbigniew Herbert's 'Elegy of Fortinbras'".New Readings.12: 35.doi:10.18573/newreadings.84.ISSN 1359-7485.
  110. ^Marx, Peter (2016).Hamlet-Handbuch: Stoffe, Aneignungen, Deutungen (in German). Springer-Verlag. p. 448.ISBN 9783476005168.
  111. ^Kabatchnik, Amnon (2014).Blood on the Stage, 480 B.C. to 1600 A.D.: Milestone Plays of Murder, Mystery, and Mayhem. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 323.ISBN 9781442235489.
  112. ^Kabatchnik, Amnon (2014).Blood on the Stage, 480 B.C. to 1600 A.D.: Milestone Plays of Murder, Mystery, and Mayhem. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 322.ISBN 9781442235489.
  113. ^Neill, Michael; Schalkwyk, David (2016).The Oxford Handbook of Shakespearean Tragedy. Oxford University Press. p. 676.ISBN 9780198724193.
  114. ^Saunders, Harris S. (2002)."Ambleto | Grove Music".www.oxfordmusiconline.com.doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.O900112.ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0. Retrieved8 February 2019.
  115. ^Champlin, John Denison; Apthorp, William Foster (1899).Cyclopedia of Music and Musicians: Easter-Mystères. C. Scribner's Sons. p. 219. Retrieved8 February 2019.Hamlet had been previously set to music, as Amleto, by Gasparini, Rome, 1705 ; Domenico Scarlatti, ib., 1715
  116. ^McClymonds, Marita P. (2002)."Amleto (i) | Grove Music".www.oxfordmusiconline.com.doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.O900296.ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0. Retrieved8 February 2019.
  117. ^"A forgotten 'Hamlet' opera reappears in Baltimore".Washington Post. Retrieved8 February 2019.
  118. ^Davis, Peter G. (12 March 2010)."In Defense of Ambroise Thomas's 'Hamlet'".The New York Times. Retrieved8 February 2019.
  119. ^"Classical Music: Music on Radio".The Independent. 14 June 1996. Retrieved8 February 2019.
  120. ^Senior, Evan (1968).Music and Musicians. Hansom Books. p. 24.
  121. ^Official Site of composer Sergei Slonimsky | Saint Petersburg Contemporary Music Center reMusik.org
  122. ^Christiansen, Rupert (12 June 2017)."Brilliant music, rapturously received - Hamlet, Glyndebourne, review".The Telegraph. Retrieved8 February 2019.
  123. ^Wells, Stanley; Shaw, James (2005).A Dictionary of Shakespeare. Oxford University Press. p. 17.ISBN 9780192806383.
  124. ^Huss, Fabian (2015).The Music of Frank Bridge. Boydell & Brewer. p. 167.ISBN 9781783270590.
  125. ^Shakespeare, William (2014).Hamlet: Third Series. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 567.ISBN 9781408142882.
  126. ^Hamilton, Katy; Loges, Natasha (2014).Brahms in the Home and the Concert Hall. Cambridge University Press. p. 166.ISBN 9781107042704.
  127. ^Le Guide Musical: Revue Internationale de la Musique Et de Theâtres Lyriques (in French). 1897. p. 99.
  128. ^Sadie, Stanley (1980).The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Macmillan Publishers. p. 650.ISBN 9780333231111.
  129. ^"Hamlet, symphonic poem for… | Details".AllMusic. Retrieved6 March 2019.
  130. ^Porte, John F. (2018).Edward MacDowell. Seltzer Books.ISBN 9781455313464.
  131. ^Russell, Peter (2018).Delphi Masterworks of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (Illustrated). Delphi Classics.ISBN 9781786561237. Retrieved6 March 2019.
  132. ^"Review: 'Hair: The American Tribal Love-Rock Musical' at City Theater Company in WiImington, DE". 3 April 2016. Retrieved19 March 2019.
  133. ^"21 Everyday Phrases You'd Never Believe Were Invented By Shakespeare".Reader's Digest. Retrieved19 March 2019.
  134. ^Icons of Beauty: Art, Culture, and the Image of Women. ABC-CLIO. 22 December 2009.ISBN 9780313081569. Retrieved19 March 2019.Gothic band Abney Park has a song titledDear Ophelia (2006), which is an imagined letter of apology from Hamlet to Ophelia.
  135. ^"Min tro är något vackert – något jag står för". Dagen. Retrieved19 March 2019.I den absolut sista text som min hjälte Björn Afzelius skrev, sjunger han om Elsinore, slottet från Hamlet.
  136. ^Shakespeare and Popular Music. Bloomsbury Publishing. 23 September 2010. pp. 106–107.ISBN 9781441134257. Retrieved19 March 2019.
  137. ^"Complete Guide to Dream Theater 'Pull Me Under'".Ultimate Guitar. Retrieved19 March 2019.
  138. ^Singer-Songwriters: Music and Poetry in Language Teaching. Narr Francke Attempto Verlag. 16 July 2018. p. 94.ISBN 9783823392385.
  139. ^Avant-Garde Hamlet: Text, Stage, Screen. Rowman & Littlefield. 10 September 2015. p. 82.ISBN 9781611478563. Retrieved19 March 2019.
  140. ^Morris, Kevin (2015)."The world according to Emelie Autumn"(PDF). TWF Magazine. p. 31. Retrieved4 September 2025.
  141. ^Fazel, Valerie M.; Geddes, Louise (2017).The Shakespeare User: Critical and Creative Appropriations in a Networked Culture. Springer. p. 38.ISBN 9783319610153. Retrieved21 October 2019.
  142. ^Lien, Tracey (10 October 2012)."Shakespeare meets video games in 'Hamlet: The Text Adventure'".Polygon. Retrieved21 October 2019.
  143. ^""To Play, or Not to Play?" Alawar Entertainment Releases Hamlet Video Game for PC - IGN".IGN. 8 April 2010. Retrieved21 October 2019.
  144. ^"Ryan North's To Be Or Not To Be".www.pocketgamer.com.Pocket Gamer. Retrieved21 October 2019.
  145. ^"What to play: In the 'Hamlet' remix 'Elsinore,' Ophelia is caught in a time loop".Los Angeles Times. 9 August 2019. Retrieved21 October 2019.
  146. ^Owen, Ruth J. (2013).The Hamlet Zone: Reworking Hamlet for European Cultures. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 182.ISBN 9781443845069.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Smith, Kay H. (2004). ""Hamlet, Part Eight, the Revenge" or, Sampling Shakespeare in a Postmodern World".College Literature.31 (4):135–149.ISSN 0093-3139.JSTOR 25115232.

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