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Justice Kennedy and The Trial of Hamlet

Anthony Kennedy Justice Anthony M Kennedy Above the Law blog.jpgJustice Anthony M. Kennedy has been described by many -- e.g., Jeffrey Rosen -- as a Hamlet-like justice, who agonizes over every decision. And later this week -- perhaps this was his therapist's idea? -- Justice Kennedy will preside over the trial of his dramatic alter ego.

From the NYT:

[Hamlet's] criminal responsibility — whether he was sane at the time of [the] killing [of Polonius] — is the central question of “The Trial of Hamlet,” to be heard here on Thursday at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. The mock trial is a Washington wonk’s dream, stacked with Shakespeare-loving luminaries. Justice Anthony M. Kennedy of the United States Supreme Court, an enthusiastic Shakespeare aficionado who conceived of the idea, will preside over the trial.

“What you realize is that you know Hamlet better than you know some real people, because he tells you exactly what he is thinking,” said Justice Kennedy in a telephone interview. “The trial provides a fascinating, oblique way in which to examine Hamlet, the legal process and the intellect of Shakespeare, who continues to speak to us in our own time.”

It should be a great event, especially if one goes by ticket sales. It sold out, got moved to a larger venue, and sold out again.

We'd love to attend; alas, it's sold out. If you have an extra ticket that you're looking to sell, please email us. Thanks!

Was Dane’s Madness Just Method? Jury to Decide [New York Times]
The Supreme Court Hears the Trial of Hamlet [Kennedy Center]

Comments
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1 Posted by guest | Permalink Tuesday, March 13, 2007 9:44 AM

Weil Gotshal Loses Top Bankruptcy Partners to Cadwalader - as per law.com

It's official: What is going on at WGM these days???

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2 Posted by guest | Permalink Tuesday, March 13, 2007 9:51 AM

Justice Kennedy is better suited to this sort of thing than he is to being a Supreme Court justice.

He can make a show of agonizing, apply whatever law he wants, get credit from intellectual types, and no one gets hurt.

If this goes well, maybe they can convince him to step down and do show trials on a regular basis.

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3 Posted by Ugh | Permalink Tuesday, March 13, 2007 10:54 AM

The world is clearly full of dorks.

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4 Posted by guest | Permalink Tuesday, March 13, 2007 11:56 AM

10:54 - and douchebags!

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5 Posted by NCC | Permalink Tuesday, March 13, 2007 6:11 PM


Will he apply Danish law?

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