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Girls Will Be Boys

Friday, September 21, 2007
6:30 p.m. Hamlet
Sven Gade, Heinz Schall (Germany, 1920)

Restored Print!

Bruce Loeb on Piano
Introduced by Jennifer Bean


Jennifer Bean is an assistant professor of comparative literature and cinema studies at the University of Washington, and a visiting professor at UC Berkeley this fall. She is currently completing a book titled Bodies in Shock: Gender, Genre, and the Cinema of Modernity, 1912–1924.

Asta Nielsen donned the breeches in front of and behind the camera, freed financially and artistically by running her own film company together with her husband, Sven Gade. This version of Hamlet is based on pre-Shakespearean Danish and German sources, and depicts the Prince of Denmark as a girl forcibly raised as a boy in order to succeed to the throne. Nielsen's performance in the title role is a marvel of expressiveness and restraint as she alternates between adolescent dreaminess and the very real pain of a woman obliged to disguise herself. Behind the pale mask of her androgynous face flash darkening eyes; she is bent on avenging not only her father's murder, but also her mother's gender-meddling. This splendid color restoration—based on the original German distribution print—premiered at this year's Berlin Film Festival.

—Lucy Laird

• Written by Edwin Gepard. Photographed by Kurt Courant, Axel Graattkjer. With Asta Nielsen, Eduard von Winterstein, Mathilde Brandt, Paul Conradi. (110 mins, Silent with German intertitles and English subtitles, Color, 35mm, From Deutsches Filminstitut-DIF)

Preceded by short:
Le duel d'Hamlet (Maurice, France, 1900). An athletic Sarah Bernhardt as Hamlet duels to the death in a film produced for the Paris Exposition of 1900. (1 min, Silent, B&W, 16mm, From Deutsche Kinemathek)

• (Total running time: 111 mins)