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Theatre review: A Winter’s Tale

Shakespeare prompts contemporary questions for John Nathan

April 30, 2021 14:54
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2 min read

This is the first and, if the pandemic continues to subside, possibly last time a Royal Shakespeare Company production will receive its world première on TV.

As psychologically odd as Lear, the play’s King Leontes is a trusted ruler who becomes suddenly and inexplicably overcome by Othello-like jealousy, resulting in the banishment and all but certain death of his Queen Hermione (Kemi-Bo Jacobs) and their newborn child.

In Erica Whyman’s 1950s-set production the unhinged king is played by the terrific Joseph Kloska who simultaneously coveys the state of being green with envy and seeming red with rage, a condition that overwhelms Leontes’s default setting of civility and kindness. As his queen Jacobs is also excellent, her Hermione transitioning from the poise of being raised for royalty to a tormented contempt for her husband’s irrational mind.

It is all too easy to get bogged down in the whys and wherefores of this newly barmy ruler’s condition. But the timing of the production, in an era in which much of the world is ruled by the inadequate and/or insane, encourages focus on the opposition put up by this leader-turned-tyrant’s staff. The play calls for dissent.

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Theatre