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Jerry Springer's sea of troubles

Guests of today's show include Hamlet and Fortinbras.

Jerry Springer's sea of troubles

by

Steve Clifford

Guests of today's show include Hamlet and Fortinbras.

Jerry Springer: Today's topic is "Vengeful Stepsons." Our first guest is a stepson who murdered his stepfather. And he is also a prince. Let's give a big welcome to Hamlet.

Audience members: (Cheers, whistles, and shouts of) To thine own self be true!

Jerry: Welcome to the show. Is Hamlet your first or last name?

Hamlet: It's my only name. Like Bono, Cher, or Madonna.

Jerry: Your father was also named Hamlet. That must have been a problem.

Hamlet: Dr. Rothstein thinks it accounts for my indecisiveness, fondness for leotards, and proclivity to murder.

Audience member: There is nothing either good or bad but thinking makes it so!

Jerry: Now, Hamlet, I understand that you're a prince.

Hamlet: Prince of Denmark.

Jerry: Must be an interesting job.

Hamlet: I attend a lot of funerals.

Jerry: And that keeps you busy?

Hamlet: Very busy. We have a lot of funerals in Denmark. Poisoning is our national pastime.

Jerry: National pastime?

Hamlet: Yes, pouring poison into your brother's ear, giving your stepson a poison chalice, watching your wife drink poison, and putting poison on dueling swords. When you add in the suicides and the stabbings, we've got a lot of funerals.

Jerry: And a lot of dead bodies!

Hamlet: That's why we joke "something is rotten in the state of Denmark." Ha. Ha.

Audience member: Give every man thy ear, but few thy voice!

Jerry: And now you have just produced a play.

Hamlet: Yes. The Death of Gonzago.

Audience member: The play's the thing!

Jerry: What's it about?

Hamlet: Poisoning. It's a Danish play.

Jerry: And why did you produce the play?

Hamlet: To catch the conscience of the King.

Audience member: More than kin and less than kind!

Jerry: What advice do you have for youngsters just starting out in the prince business?

Hamlet: Learn to tell a hawk from a handsaw.

Jerry: Is that hard?

Hamlet: It's easy once you get the hang of it. A hawk is a bird. It flies.

Jerry: And the handsaw?

Hamlet: It's inanimate; doesn't move at all. The flying is a dead giveaway.

Audience member: Give thy thoughts no tongue!

Jerry: What is the hardest part of your job?

Hamlet: The soliloquies are difficult.

Audience member: To be or not to be, that is the question.

Audience member: Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer
The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune,
Or to take arms against a sea of troubles,
And by opposing end them?

Jerry: What are soliloquies?

Hamlet: Talks to myself where I reveal my innermost thoughts.

Jerry: You talk to yourself?

Hamlet: To myself. And to ghosts. People used to think I was quite dotty, talking to ghosts and myself all the time. Now they assume I'm just another prince on a cell phone.

Jerry: Could you give us a soliloquy?

Hamlet: I would hardly be talking to myself.

Audience member: There are more things on heaven and earth, than are dreamt of in your philosophy!

Jerry: Good night, sweet prince. And now our next guest is also a Prince. Let's give a big welcome to Fortinbras.

Audience members: (Cheers, whistles, shouts of) This goodly frame, the earth, seems to me a sterile promontory!

Jerry: Welcome to the show. Is Fortinbras your first or last name?

Fortinbras: It's my only name. Like Bono, Cher, or Madonna.

Jerry: Your father was also named Fortinbras. That must have been a problem.

Fortinbras: Dr. Rothstein thinks it accounts for my decisiveness, fondness for leotards, and proclivity to murder.

Audience member: Though this be madness, yet there is a method in't.

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