'Yamlet' - incorporating the Black Country word 'yam', meaning 'you are' - will see the titular character perform translated excerpts in locations around the town of Cradley Heath in the West Midlands region.
Yamlet will be portrayed by Birmingham School of Acting postgraduate student Stuart Ash. The actor, who comes from Stourbridge in the Black Country, will be filmed on location in period Elizabethan costume, and his performances will be broadcast throughout April on Facebook, Twitter, 'YowTube' and 'InstaYam'.
"I've picked up a few words and phrases from the script that I'd never heard before. It'll be really interesting to see what people who are from the Black Country - and people who aren't - will make of it."
The Black Country is an area of the West Midlands in England, north and west of Birmingham. In the Industrial Revolution, it became one of the most industrialised parts of Britain with coal mines, coking, iron foundries and steel mills producing a high level of air pollution.
The distinctive dialect and language of the Black Country has preserved many archaic traits from Early Modern English and Middle English and is thought to be one of the last forms of early English still spoken today.
'Yamlet' has been devised by Philip Holyman and Gareth Nicholls, Co-Directors of Walsall-based theatre company Little Earthquake and Visiting Lecturers at Birmingham School of Acting, part of Birmingham City University.
"'Yamlet' is intended as a tongue-in-cheek response to some serious cultural problems; chiefly, the enshrinement of Shakespeare's work as a monument to high - or non-popular - culture, which excludes many people from experiencing it, and the question of how to preserve individual cultural heritage in drama training," Holyman said.
'Yamlet', therefore, is designed to take a step towards making Shakespeare more accessible by relocating sections of his most famous play to the Black Country - in terms of language, space and performer - and also through non-theatre-based distribution platforms.
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