Hamlet’s Dresser: A Memoir
Bob Smith
285 pages, Paperback
ISBN: 0743231783
ISBN13:
Language: English
Publish: January 1, 2002
AutobiographyBiographyBiography MemoirBook ClubComing Of AgeLiteratureMemoirNonfictionOwnTheatre
Of what do we write when we write of love? In Bob Smith’s case, it is Shakespeare’s poems and plays. Hamlet’s Dresser braids two strands of his life into a modest, heartbreaking, and soaringly affirmative memoir.
A bookish, lonely child, his crush on the Bard’s work became love when, as an alienated teenager, he joined the American Shakespeare Theatre as Hamlet’s dresser. In time he would dress other characters, perform in small roles, become a coach, and a watcher, and eventually lead senior citizens’ groups in Shakespeare-appreciation courses.
But this ecstatic marriage was haunted by his sad, contorted childhood: an increasingly dysfunctional mother, a distant father, and Carolyn, his profoundly retarded sister. “Art,” he writes, “can be a brutal thing, not just some decoration placed over the truth, but the truth itself.”
Smith’s prose is bluntly ineffable: a rundown theatre looks like ‘Miss Havisham’s bride cake’and the first teacher who didn’t like him was “Miss Shumaker. It was right after I stopped pleasing everybody.”
“The book is thick with short passages from Shakespeare. Placed in perfect context, they leap from the pages, abrupt as panoramic pop-ups.” ~ H. O’Billovich