Dead Centre\'s new solo work for an eleven -year-old boy is devoted to Shakespeare\'s only son, Hamnet, who died in 1596, only eleven himself.
Hamnet is too young to understand Shakespeare..
Condemned not to be, he now seeks to understand the world from which he has been wrested.
Unlike the Prince, he cannot ask \'to be or not to be\'.
A single letter separates Hamnet from the philosophical heights of Hamlet.
Dead Centre\'s new solo work for an eleven -year-old boy is devoted to Shakespeare\'s only son, Hamnet, who died in 1596, only eleven himself.
Two generations, asking each other what they want to pass on and receive.
We are too old to understand Hamnet.
Hamnet is too young to understand Shakespeare.
Condemned not to be, he now seeks to understand the world from which he has been wrested.
Unlike the Prince, he cannot ask \'to be or not to be\'.
A single letter separates Hamnet from the philosophical heights of Hamlet.
Dead Centre\'s new solo work for an eleven -year-old boy is devoted to Shakespeare\'s only son, Hamnet, who died in 1596, only eleven himself.
Two generations, asking each other what they want to pass on and receive.
We are too old to understand Hamnet.
Hamnet is too young to understand Shakespeare.
Condemned not to be, he now seeks to understand the world from which he has been wrested.
Unlike the Prince, he cannot ask \'to be or not to be\'.
A single letter separates Hamnet from the philosophical heights of Hamlet.
Dead Centre\'s new solo work for an eleven -year-old boy is devoted to Shakespeare\'s only son, Hamnet, who died in 1596, only eleven himself.
Two generations, asking each other what they want to pass on and receive.
We are too old to understand Hamnet.
Hamnet is too young to understand Shakespeare.
Condemned not to be, he now seeks to understand the world from which he has been wrested.
Unlike the Prince, he cannot ask \'to be or not to be\'.
A single letter separates Hamnet from the philosophical heights of Hamlet.
Dead Centre\'s new solo work for an eleven -year-old boy is devoted to Shakespeare\'s only son, Hamnet, who died in 1596, only eleven himself.
Two generations, asking each other what they want to pass on and receive.
We are too old to understand Hamnet.
Hamnet is too young to understand Shakespeare.
Condemned not to be, he now seeks to understand the world from which he has been wrested.
Unlike the Prince, he cannot ask \'to be or not to be\'.
A single letter separates Hamnet from the philosophical heights of Hamlet.
Dead Centre\'s new solo work for an eleven -year-old boy is devoted to Shakespeare\'s only son, Hamnet, who died in 1596, only eleven himself