Relocating Hamlet from the late medieval Danish court to a backyard barbecue in the contemporary American South, playwright James Ijames has turned Shakespeare鈥檚 tragedy into a comedy where no one dies at the hand of another.
Of course, the king, named Pap here and not royal but instead a prison inmate, has been murdered by his brother Rev -- Claudius in the original -- before the action of the play starts. The barbecue is a celebration of Rev鈥檚 marriage to Pap鈥檚 widow, Tedra, aka Gertrude.
One of the major themes in Fat Ham, which won the Pulitzer Prize for drama in 2022, is the idea of 鈥渟oftness鈥 as an alternative to all the killing. It鈥檚 embodied by Juicy, Ijames鈥 version of Prince Hamlet, Pap and Tedra鈥檚 gay, overweight son, who is now also his uncle鈥檚 stepson. Besides all the food, the play features karaoke and charades.
鈥淛ames Ijames has taken this centuries-old tale and put it in a new container, and the new container is full of fun, frolicking and freedom,鈥 says Vickie Washington, who is directing Fat Ham at Stage West in Fort Worth in a co-production that will move to the Dallas Theater Center in January.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 the thing that I really want people to lean into and recognize, that it's about people discovering, fighting for and working through their stuff to get to their own freedom. Because sometimes our families keep us twisted.鈥
In the case of Juicy, he doesn鈥檛 feel seen, Washington says. 鈥淗e's a young, Black, queer man in a family, especially the males, that are not embracing nor appreciative of, in fact, downright hostile to his being.鈥
Rather than the elders, the emphasis is put on the young characters, she says, including Juicy鈥檚 best friend Opal, n茅e Ophelia, and her brother Larry, Shakespeare鈥檚 Laertes, who in Fat Ham is a member of the military.
鈥淪oftness is a word that鈥檚 thrown at him by Rev and Pap in a negative way. Larry helps him recognize the power of softness and how getting away from it has taken something away from him. Softness is wrapped in the matriarchy, and there鈥檚 a moment when the patriarchy, symbolically, is dismantled, because we need to be freed of it. For far too long, there are forces among us who are trying to drive us back to a world that is this narrow, that has no room for you, for me, for anybody that stands on that stage in Fat Ham.鈥
Fat Ham is the last entry in Black Broadway Summer, an accidental confluence of three plays by African American writers produced by North Texas troupes toward the end of this season.
It began in June with Soul Rep Theatre鈥檚 rendering of Fort Worth native Jordan E. Cooper鈥檚 satirical Ain鈥檛 No Mo鈥, an off-the-wall series of vignettes built around a high concept: The U.S. government is offering Black Americans a one-way ticket to Africa. It received six Tony nominations for its Broadway run.
Circle Theatre鈥檚 production of the Pulitzer winning musical A Strange Loop followed later in the month, directed by Washington. Her son, Djor茅 Nance, who is music consultant and co-dramaturg on Fat Ham, was the music director for Loop and was part of the cast of Ain鈥檛 No Mo鈥. And it鈥檚 not the only overlap.
Cherish Love, the Loop music supervisor, is in Fat Ham; Jori Jackson, who was in Ain鈥檛 No Mo鈥, is also in the cast of Fat Ham as Opal; and sound designer Cresent Haynes worked on both those shows as well. Washington also brought in a former student, Harold Steward, as assistant director and co-dramaturg. And she鈥檚 known Nikka Morton, who plays Tedra, since the actor was 14, directing her in Stage West鈥檚 2022 production of What to Send Up When It Goes Down.
鈥淎 lot of the people in the show already know each other,鈥 Washington says. 鈥淭he vibe in the rehearsal space is very similar to the vibe in parts of the play. We brought in some barbecue, so we could have our own version of Fat Ham. At any moment, somebody would break out in an old school gospel tune or R&B.
鈥淔or me, it was a very necessary piece of theater. I do theater because I believe it has the power of transformation. I believe it has the power to save lives. I'm convinced that there will be someone who comes to see this production, just like someone who came to see A Strange Loop, and it will resonate with them in such a way that it helps them to move a little further on their journey.鈥
Details
Aug. 28-Sept. 14 at 821 W. Vickery Blvd., Fort Worth. $42.50-$52.50..
Jan. 30-Feb 8, 2026 at Kalita Humphreys Theater, Dallas. $51 - $95.
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