
Front Row Jessie Buckley on her starring role in the film Hamnet
Jan 8, 2026
Jessie Buckley, the award-winning actress, shares insights about her role as Agnes in the film adaptation of Maggie O'Farrell’s Hamnet, highlighting how she approached the character with a shamanistic language inspired by dreams. She discusses reclaiming Anne Hathaway's story as a powerful figure against Shakespeare's shadow. Alongside critics Bidisha Mamata and Mark Ravenhill, they analyze the film's emotional depth, including its exploration of grief and compelling performances, including that of young Jacoby Jupe as Hamnet.
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Choose Directors For Their Craft
- Buckley chooses directors for their craft, not their gender, and values learning from female directors.
- She advises selecting collaborators for their directorial strength and what they teach you about art.
Form Shapes Shakespeare's Centrality
- Mark Ravenhill argues film's three-dimensional presence re-centres Shakespeare more than the novel does.
- The cinematic form shifts the story toward a more balanced tale of both partners rather than a singular subjective viewpoint.
Emotion Deliberately Amplified
- Bidisha finds Jessie Buckley's performance devastating and the film deliberately manipulative in its emotional pull.
- She credits producers like Steven Spielberg for crafting moments designed to make audiences cry.








