(L-R) Derrick Moore (Laertes), Shannon Uphold (Ophelia) and Shannon Hill (Hamlet) in Hamlet. Credit: Photo courtesy of Houston Shakespeare Festival

Shannon Hill, a 2013 graduate of the University of Houston theater masterโ€™s program, will be the first woman to play the title role in Hamlet in the Houston Shakespeare Festival. Her background in many ways makes her a natural for it since when she was in grad school she achieved โ€œan advanced actor combatant certificationโ€ in six different weapons.

โ€œRapier dagger, knife, single sword, small sword, quarter staff and unarmed [fists],โ€ she rattles off quickly adding that in the five years since she hasnโ€™t kept up with all of them. โ€œAs a woman in theater I donโ€™t get the chance to do stage combat.โ€

But now she will once again and pronounces herself more than ready for it.

โ€œJack [Young, artistic director of the Houston Shakespeare Festival] was very keen on the actors playing these roles. So gender wasnโ€™t part of it so much,โ€ Hill said.

Young had a lot to do with Hill going to UH to begin with. A graduate of Western Michigan University, she auditioned in Chicago for grad programs and says Young was there. โ€œHe was the only person that pushed me during my audition to go beyond what I thought I was capable of. That was a challenge I wanted to accept.โ€

She got in theater to begin with because โ€œI love telling stories and I think thereโ€™s an importance to telling them and watching them as part of the human experience.โ€

As for portraying the sometimes dreary Danish prince?

โ€œItโ€™s one of the greatest roles ever written and the chance to say these words that are so iconic โ€“ to explore the journey that Hamlet goes on is a gift.โ€

In describing her character Hill says โ€œAt the beginning of the play heโ€™s an unsure young man who feels hurt by the events in his life. As the play progresses he kind of comes of age as a good leader and fufills his promises.โ€

Those promises, of course, are that he would avenge his father โ€“ which he does by killing his uncle, King Claudius โ€“ and that he doesnโ€™t hurt his mother, Gertrude.

Unusual compared to previous years is that the two casts are relatively small with eight actors in Hamlet, she said. โ€œEvery single actor in this production is carrying a huge load. Everyone is equally impressive and important.โ€

The story rolls out in about two hours and ten minutes (there have been some not insignificant cuts to the Fortinbraus disagreement with Poland ) She is prepared for the Houston heat at the outdoor event at Miller Outdoor Theatre, saying she once did a musical in the summer in Palo Duro, TX, weating 1800s style clothing. โ€œI am not a stranger to performing in the heat.โ€

Performances of Hamlet are scheduled for 8:15 p.m. on July 27, 29, 31, and August 2 and 4 at Miller Outdoor Theatre, 6000 Hermann Park Drive. Shown in repertory with Comedy of Errors. For information, visit the Houston Shakespeare Festival website. Free.

Margaret Downing is the editor-in-chief who oversees the Houston Press newsroom and its online publication. She frequently writes on a wide range of subjects.