Ijames has had little time to process the landmark win. He received news of the prize on Monday afternoon while at a showcase of work by his graduating students at Villanova.
The next morning, he hustled to the Wilma Theater where he is directing rehearsals of the forthcoming play “Fairview,” which, coincidentally, won author Jackie Sibblies Drury the Pulitzer Prize in 2019.
“I’m actually glad that I have work, because otherwise I’d be sitting somewhere, you know, obsessing about this,” Ijames said. “I’m hoping that I get to the point where I’m not working quite as much, but I love it.”
Ijames’ idea for reimagining “Hamlet” grew out of a college theater assignment he was given years ago to workshop a single scene from “Hamlet”. He chose the second scene from Act 1, a court scene wherein almost all the main characters are present.
“The whole play could take place at that moment,” he said. “My play is essentially that court scene, and then I just smash every other part of Hamlet into that moment.”
After an early version of the play was given its first staged reading by Philadelphia’s Azuka Theatre through its New Pages writers workshop, Ijames saw that his idea might have legs. He turned the famous Shakespeare tragedy into a comedy about how trauma is inherited down through familial generations.