PLAYWRIGHT BURTON BUMGARNER TALKS ABOUT
“HORATIO WILL BE LATE”
Q: WHAT INSPIRED YOU TO WRITE THIS PLAY?
A: A love of Shakespeare, a love of directing, and all of the anxiety dreams
that go with directing. I’ve never had a production go as wrong as this one
goes, but I’m always afraid there will be a first time.
Q: WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE PART OR LINE IN THE PLAY? WHY?
A: Each time the poor director thinks she has the problem solved, something new
arises. I love the part where she thinks she’s getting a professional actor to
play Horatio. When the actor arrives he knows the role of Hamlet, not Horatio.
When cue cards are suggested they find out he’s dyslexic, and can’t read them. I
love the Frankenstein mask being substituted for Yorick’s skull, and the
costumes from "Grease" and "South Pacific" replacing the Elizabethan costumes
that were rented but never arrived. Most of all, I like the “To be or not to be
...” speech being delivered by two actors desperately trying to upstage each
other. Many writers, including Mel Brooks, have satirized this famous speech.
This was my chance.
Q: WHERE DO THE CHARACTERS COME FROM? ARE THEY BASED ON PEOPLE YOU KNOW?
A: The characters are entirely made up, although we’ve all encountered people
like them: actors who think they deserve better roles, prima donnas, the truly
talented as well as the truly clueless.
Q: WHAT DID YOU TRY TO ACHIEVE WITH THIS PLAY?
A: "Hamlet" is an incredible play. It’s Shakespeare’s longest play, and possibly
the most challenging to bring to the stage. I hope that actors and audiences
will want to learn more about it, and other great Elizabethan dramas. I also
hope that actors and audiences who experience "Horatio Will Be Late" will have a
lot of fun. And for directors who worry about everything that can go wrong in a
production, here’s what happens when it does.
Q: ANYTHING ELSE YOU’D LIKE TO SAY ABOUT IT?
A: You may notice that the names of the principal and the director, Duncan and
Quince, are from other Shakespeare plays. Have fun with Horatio. In the words of
Principal Quince, “Go break legs, or whatever it is you actor people do to each
other.”
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