- HAMLET
- Dogpatch, for one
- Best Picture, 1948
- Nephew of Claudius
- Vacillating Dane
- Role for Branagh
- Elsinore Castle resident
- Thus conscience does make cowards of us all observer
- Whence the line "A little more than kin, and less than kind"
- Ophelia's love
- Friend of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern
- Best Picture of 1948
- Friend of Horatio
- Tiny village
- Play set in Denmark
- Whence "Neither a borrower nor a lender be"
- Small village
- One posing a famous question found at the starts of 17-, 27-, 34-, 44-, 52-, and 64-Across
- To be, or not to be speaker
- Shakespeare's Prince of Denmark
- His last words were "The rest is silence"
- Claudius' nephew
- Get thee to a nunnery speaker
- Speaker of the first syllables of the answers to starred clues
- Speaker of the ends of the answers to starred clues
- Play with a ghost
- Village
- What a piece of work is a man speaker
- Small town
- Very small town
- Shakespearean prince
- Tchaikovsky fantasy-overture
- Shakespeare's indecisive one
- The rest is silence speaker
- Memorable indecisive Dane
- The Bard's longest play
- Shakespeare title character
- Slayer of Polonius.
- Lawrence Olivier's most famous movie role.
- Good Night, Sweet Prince.
- Dramatic role.
- Prince of drama.
- 1602 production, off-Broadway.
- Son of Gertrude.
- Man of Denmark.
- Dane.
- Great Dane
- Tragedian's role
- Elsinore name
- Work by 3 Down
- Gertrude's son
- Well-known Dane
- Whistle stop
- Noble vacillator
- Opera by Thomas
- Coveted role for a thespian
- Olivier film: 1948
- Queen Gertrude's son
- Source of quotation
- Melancholy Dane
- Work of 1604
- ... heaven hath pleas'd it so, / To punish me ... speaker
- Classic Olivier role
- To be or not to be soliloquist
- Whence the phrase "Brevity is the soul of wit"
- Whence the line "To sleep: perchance to dream"
- Shakespearean soliloquist
- Source of the line "Frailty, thy name is woman!"
- Whence the phrase "Murder most foul"
- Exemplar of indecision
- Source of the line "Madness in great ones must not unwatch'd go"
- Play containing the line "Good night, sweet prince"
- Who says "To be, or not to be: that is the question"
- Where the phrase "To thine own self be true" comes from
- He says, "One may smile, and smile, and be a villain"
- Gielgud role
- It's smaller than a village
- Shakespearean title character
- Shakespeare play set in Denmark
- Dane of fame
- Literary prince of Denmark
- Shakespearean Dane
- Shakespearean prince of Denmark
- Friend of Laertes
- Speaker of the quote that's found in the middle of the starred answers
- Frailty, thy name is woman! speaker
- Prince Fortinbras delivers its last lines