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Fat Ham

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Winner of the 2022 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, James Ijames' Fat Ham reinvents Shakespeare's masterpiece in startling and hilarious ways amidst the backdrop of a family barbecue in the American South.

Winner of the 2024 Lambda Literary Award for LGBTQ+ Drama.

Juicy—a young, queer, Southern man, who is grappling with questions of identity—is visited by the ghost of his father (Pap) at his mother’s wedding/family barbecue. Pap demands that Juicy avenge his recent murder. How will Juicy, a sensitive and self-aware young Black man, trying to break a cycle of trauma and toxic masculinity, avenge his father’s premature death? Fat Ham reinvents Shakespeare’s masterpiece in startling and hilarious ways amidst the backdrop of a family barbeque in the American South.

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First published January 1, 2023

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James Ijames

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5 stars
506 (37%)
4 stars
514 (38%)
3 stars
228 (16%)
2 stars
76 (5%)
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24 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 219 reviews
Profile Image for Alan (the Consulting Librarian) Teder.
2,507 reviews202 followers
March 19, 2025
A Thicc Hamlet
A review of the Theater Communications Group paperback (2023).
GERTRUDE: He’s fat, and scant of breath. - Queen Gertrude comments on her son Hamlet in William Shakespeare's Act V Scene 2.

I recently saw a Toronto production of Fat Ham and, as per usual, I wanted to read the playscript to see how much the stage diverged from the page. Really there wasn't that much difference. This is an often silly and over the top piece, but which still loosely adheres to its original inspiration while at the same time using it as a vehicle for coming out queer and for every human's need for self-expression. For those familiar with the original, much of the fun comes from spotting the easter eggs besides the obvious character parallels.

The only major changes I noticed was in the karaoke 🎤 scenes. The mother Tedra (the Queen Gertrude character) sings Crystal Waters' 100% Pure Love in the script. On stage we saw a performance of Taylor Dane's Tell It To My Heart which included the lyrics projected as surtitles over the stage, inviting the audience to sing along. Sadly most of us didn't know it well enough to risk it 😅.

That was followed by Juicy (the Hamlet character) singing Radiohead's Creep which IS in the script. But added in the stage version Opal (the Ophelia character) does a head-banging, whip-your-hair fan freakout while Juicy sings, including a cartwheel 🤸🏻‍♀�. The audience was roaring along to that 🤣.


Promotional poster for the recent Canadian Stage production of "Fat Ham". Image sourced from .

The scene setting is changed to a Black American family's backyard barbecue in the Southern U.S. instead of a castle in Denmark. The celebration is for Tedra and Rev's (the King Claudius character portrayed by an actor who also doubles as the Ghost character) wedding. Juicy's friend Tio (the Horatio character) provides comic relief. Church lady Rabby (the Polonius character) attends the party along with her children Opal and Larry (the Laertes character). And no, the ending is not as tragic as the original.

This might read as a 3-star on the page, but knowing and seeing its potential brought alive on stage I have no hesitation in calling it a 4-star.


The cast of the Toronto production of "Fat Ham" at curtain call. Image sourced from own photo.

Soundtrack
On YouTube listen to and watch the videos of Crystal Waters' 100% Pure Love , Taylor Dane's Tell It To My Heart and Radiohead's Creep .
Profile Image for Doug.
2,424 reviews836 followers
October 5, 2023
It's an audacious premise, and there are a few clever and funny lines, but it seems very lightweight for a Pulitzer Prize winner - not that they all have to be turgid dramas, but this seemed kind of one-note - but perhaps it plays much better than it reads. The humor is very broad, but isn't all that witty.





Profile Image for David.
706 reviews192 followers
November 30, 2024
A shockingly good fantasia on Shakespeare's Hamlet, seen through the lens of "queer Black joy". The Seattle production in May of '24 was outstanding, and reading the script has brought it all back so vividly. I'm even more impressed now that it's clear where that production journeyed beyond the printed page. Every interpretive flight of fancy was genius.

4.5 stars
Profile Image for Rachel Pollock.
Author11 books80 followers
January 8, 2023
This script is a black queer reimagining of Shakespeare's Hamlet, where instead of the royal court of Denmark, it's set in an NC BBQ joint.

If I could pick something higher than five stars, I would. I already have a dream-team in my mind--cast members, directors, costume designers...not that I make those decisions at the theater where I work. I love that this is a North Carolina script, that it's an NC BBQ setting, that it creates a space for this black family to wrestle with Shakespeare and ultimately to blow up cishet white patriarchy.

Such good roles for the actors! Such epic themes and important dramatic actions! Such exciting technical elements in the script like when Rev brings in a pig carcass and throws it in the smoker.

Shakespeare is fine but a play set among the history and culture of BBQ is exciting for anyone who grew up in a place that has Strong Feelings about sauces and meats and how BBQ happens.

This script has made my bucket list of shows I want to work on someday.
Profile Image for Kyle C.
603 reviews66 followers
October 10, 2024
A camp, queer, black, bathetic retelling of Shakespeare's Hamlet. The title, Fat Ham, obviously alludes to its literary progenitor, Hamlet, but it also more subtly points to the biblical myth of Ham—Noah cursing Canaan, the son of Ham, for seeing his father naked (a story that was later reinterpreted as an etiology for black skin and a justification for the enslavement of Africans). In this drama, Hamlet is recast as Juicy, not a prince, not a scholastic at the esteemed university of Wittenberg, but a lonely gay adolescent enrolled in an online course in human resources at the University of Phoenix. Horatio becomes Tio, a porn-addicted dope-head who fantasizes about gingerbread men. Ophelia is Opal, a sassy lesbian who knowingly points out Juicy's weird antics; her brother, Larry, is a closeted Marine (perhaps not unlike his literary antecedent Laertes, the belligerent princeling who went off to France to study and perhaps carouse in a more libertine country). And finally King Claudius is reincarnated as Rev, the new manager of the family-run barbecue restaurant who spends his day roasting and brazing—another pun on the play's title� ham. Rev had only recently arranged the death of Juicy's father (by hiring henchman to shiv him in a prison shower) and has just married Juicy's mother, Tedra. They've spent up Juicy's tuition on bathroom renovations.

It's a hilarious spoofing of Shakespeare. Juicy behaves just like Hamlet as the myopic metaphysician, more interested in dialectics than realpolitik. When confronted with the ghost of his father, he says, "Well if I'm seeing you I can conjecture that you are a ghost by virtue of the fact that I watched you get buried". But Juicy's soliloquies also turn Hamlet's melodrama into a contemporary vernacular pathos. When recounting his father's crimes, he says coldly, "Slit Boogie's throat so deep his head came off. He had to lean into the knife. This is what I was raised in. Pig guts and bad choices. Far fetched?" Like Hamlet, Juicy knows that he is acting a part in an overblown drama; he knows the conventions of the baroque genre he has been thrust into; he knows his circumstances are farfetched but he follows through nonetheless. Mimicking Hamlet's own descent into madness, Juicy even begins to quote Hamlet's own words in a deranged monologic remix (quoting Hamlet's famous lines about how he plans to "catch the conscience of the king" and then later his words to Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, "What is this quintessence of dust?") Citing Hamlet in Shakespearian English, Juicy seems even more manic than Hamlet ever was ("you look crazy out here quoting Shakespeare and shit," his mother says.)

But whereas Hamlet ends in internecine carnage, where the cast are either stabbed or poisoned to death, Fat Ham offers its characters hope and catharsis. After Rev chokes on a bone and dies refusing help from his queer step-son, the other characters decide they want to live. Breaking the fourth wall, the characters look out toward the audience and question the dramatic need for death at all. In the end, Larry doesn't die like Laertes did in an ill-advised jousting match. Larry does get in a skirmish with Juicy breaking his nose, but his last stage appearance isn't a violent death but a bright-lit drag performance. The characters escape the role-play conventions of masculinity and femininity that have been scripted for them and they are liberated from the tragic denouement of their plot. The future is queer for Hamlet, and Juicy doesn't have to recapitulate a cycle of intergenerational suffering.
Profile Image for caro .
243 reviews16 followers
August 17, 2023
i would pay money to work on this show
Profile Image for max theodore.
608 reviews195 followers
November 30, 2024
JUICY
Why the sheet?

PAP
I was trying to look more like a ghost.

JUICY
You're dead.

PAP
So.

JUICY
Well if I'm seeing you I can conjecture that you are a ghost by virtue of the fact that I watched you get buried. Hence... no need for you, the newly deceased, to dress up as a ghost.


juicy is such a clever and hysterical rendition of hamlet and this play has some of the best gertrude + laertes takes i've ever seen in a hamlet retelling. also butch ophelia. i need to see this live it would change me irrevocably
Profile Image for Rob.
667 reviews33 followers
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June 4, 2024
I read this almost immediately after reading Hamlet, so the tragedy was fresh on my mind. Fat Ham certainly derives plot points and occasional dialogue from Shakespeare's play, but it is its own thing. Or at least it is close to its own thing. It is almost a foil to Hamlet. I don't know if the play could stand on its own without an audience member having at least a cursory knowledge of Hamlet, maybe it could.

Where Hamlet is tragic, brooding, and definitely long, Fat Ham is spontaneous, funny, and couldn't possibly take more than 90 minutes to perform. I say Fat Ham funny, but don't allow that word to trivialize the play. It is most certainly serious, a critique of Hamlet. Hamlet is set against a backdrop of warring European states and complex geopolitical politics, and Fat Ham takes place in a single afternoon in a backyard barbecue. Prince Hamlet descends into a solitary madness, whereas Juicy (Fat Ham's protagonist) seems to be surrounded by madness in everyone else. Where Hamlet is a conquest of the masculine, Fat Ham is a celebration of the feminine. Fat Ham is soft and Hamlet is hard, and so on.

Fat Ham wants to be a lot of things. It's a meditation on trauma, sexuality, race, history, violence, and the theater. For the most part, the play succeeds. I can't help but feel, however, after reading it, that Fat Ham is ultimately superficial. It lacks the depth and scope of Hamlet, but maybe that's partly the point. Things don't have to be epic and international to be important.

I haven't seen Fat Ham live, and I will probably never have the opportunity to see it, but I would watch it if I had the chance. Reading the play was a great way to spend an evening. It gives me a lot to think about. I didn't agree with it all (and I hated the ending--actually, I loved the ending until the very last page, but then again my masculinity leans towards the toxic end), but I appreciated the way Ijames writes and I had fun reading .
Profile Image for mengwe.
130 reviews
July 3, 2023
if i could give this six stars i would, love this, love u james, so happy i got to see it on stage too! this is just everything my black, nerdy, gay, shakespeare & comedy obsessed self needed 🤎 personally requesting more Willy remixes 😌 lets seeee, how about a Thirteenth Night? The Triumph of Love’s Hard Work? A Very Tragic Story with No Mistakes? jk haha anyways will probably reread a bajillion times before we do it at school…crossing my fingers that i get to play opal 😄😄😄😄😄😄😄
Profile Image for Victoria.
250 reviews17 followers
April 7, 2024
This is one of those plays that while you read them you just feel like want to work on a production of it. Anyone else ever get that feeling?
Profile Image for lisa.
135 reviews1 follower
October 29, 2024
this is how modern shakespeare adaptions need to be done
Profile Image for Karen Michelle.
56 reviews1 follower
December 19, 2023
It was divine intervention that I came across the play Fat Ham. An old friend was in town with her son and wanted to see Broadway shows. She is a theatre professor and he loves theatre. A twist on Hamlet that featured a queer Southern Hamlet seemed like the perfect choice. The performance was cathartic - we laughed, cried, grieved and sang. I know it was written before the pandemic but the play felt acted as a vehicle to process the pandemic and all we went through. I then read the play. It is so smart.
Profile Image for manu.
113 reviews4 followers
July 14, 2024
La verdad me sorprendió mucho Fat Ham, no sé si para bien o para mal. Creo que me esperaba otra cosa y que el impacto hubiera sido mucho más positivo viendo una puesta en escena de la obra mas que leyendo el libreto.
Rescato algunas cosas pero siento que es esa clase de obras que te gustan más las actuaciones y el contexto donde están pasando las cosas que el texto en si.
Me divierten las diferencias de Juicy con Hamlet; específicamente sentir que Hamlet tiene un mundo interior muy caótico y en la historia de Juicy el caos está en el mundo que lo rodea. Me pareció una propuesta interesante.
Profile Image for Jeff.
1,089 reviews20 followers
February 17, 2025
Fat Ham is a retelling of Hamlet where the family is a contemporary African-American family; Hamlet (Juicy), Laertes (Larry), and Ophelia (Opal) are gay; and the setting is a bbq joint in the South instead of the court of Denmark.

The play is laugh out loud funny at points. I chuckled to myself as Juicy sang karaoke to Radiohead’s “Creep� and the Claudius figure (Uncle Rev) thought that he was insane for loving this “funeral music.� I also laughed when, at the end, the cast breaks the fourth and realizes they’re all supposed to die, if this is truly a retelling of Hamlet.

Well executed, meaningful, and enjoyable.
Profile Image for HayTinaLou.
174 reviews3 followers
June 5, 2024
I’ve always had difficulty with old English stories, I get stuck on the language, the syntax of Shakespeare trips me up. This I could understand and enjoy! Tragic and relatable, daddy issues, I’m here for it.
Profile Image for Lauren.
161 reviews1 follower
October 15, 2024
Both a hilarious and earnest adaptation of Hamlet set in a NC backyard barbecue, Fat Ham is so entertaining! Characters are strong revisions of the familiar ones, some closer to the source than others. The central themes of cycles of violence and fate vs. free will are incredibly developed through Black cultural history. Loved this.
Profile Image for Josephine.
185 reviews
March 30, 2024
the idea that the feminine saves hamlet is crushing me, it’s SO GOOD
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for mar.
44 reviews4 followers
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April 18, 2024
“You decide that gingerbread man blow jobs are definitely gonna be a big part of your new world.�
Profile Image for Megan.
8 reviews
May 30, 2024
One of the best things I’ve read in a really long time.
Profile Image for Liz Farrow.
151 reviews2 followers
Read
June 7, 2024
Black queer reimagining of Hamlet. Darkly funny. Delightful.
Profile Image for Maddie Woda.
73 reviews7 followers
Read
August 5, 2024
I regret not springing for tickets when it was at the Public but at least I could spend a nice 40 minutes reading the script
Profile Image for Kyla Oldham.
48 reviews
November 20, 2024
Some good funny lines but not my vibe. Wished for more character development.
Profile Image for heather sheedy.
4 reviews
Read
January 27, 2025
smart and hilarious. loved how ijames twisted Hamlet’s themes of sexuality and (for lack of better words) daddy issues into modern day.
Profile Image for Alexis.
1,340 reviews46 followers
October 6, 2023
I wish I could have seen it, but reading it worked pretty well. It reads comedically, and based on the clips I have seen, I imagine it is performed that way as well. It's a really fun, queer take on Hamlet. I particularly love how much license the playwright gives to future productions - suggestions and musings for staging abound.
Profile Image for Jean Pirozzi.
85 reviews1 follower
February 6, 2024
This was not for me. At least it was very short. I don’t know Elizabeth but I don’t think it would appeal to you either.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 219 reviews

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