The Table's Set For a Grand Feast

    For director Kevin Coleman, “The Winter’s Tale†is all about language.  “This is a play from near the end of Shakespeare’s life, when his mastery was absolute,†Coleman declares.  “The poetry is sublime.â€

   “The Winter’s Tale†is an odd hybrid in the Shakespeare canon:  The first half is tragic, the second bucolic and comedic. A king suspects his pregnant wife and best friend of adultery.  He imprisons her, tries to poison the friend and orders the child — a girl — taken to the wilderness after birth to die. But the oracle declares him wrong and warns he will suffer until he can make amends.  Soon his wife is reported dead, and his only son dies as well.

   Suddenly the play shifts location and jumps ahead 16 years. The daughter was found by rustics and is living happily in sunny Bohemia. Tragedy gives way to a tale of love, a daughter’s redemption of her father, and pastoral joy. This is the play with Shakespeare’s most famous stage direction, “Exit, followed by bear,†and a miraculous coup de theatre at the end.

   Coleman got his cast moving and speaking on day one of rehearsals. 

   “I didn’t want them sitting around a table reading from scripts.  I wanted them on their feet, speaking lines — often fed to them by others — and interacting. I think this immediately opened up the visceral experience of the language. We had people sobbing at that first rehearsal.â€

   This director sees himself as the audience’s advocate, ensuring that the language with all its “richness and side trips and embellishments†comes through naturally and clearly.  “If we can just let the language loose, the audience will enjoy a 25-course feast,†he promises.

   “The Winter’s Tale†was written in five acts, but Coleman is presenting it in two manageable halves, each only a little over an hour.  (Judicious cuts tighten the script but preserve story, characters and famous language.)  Scenery is minimal, costumes period.

   And at the end, Shakespeare & Company audience favorite Elizabeth Aspenlieder as the marble statue of the dead queen is “breathtaking,†Coleman says.     

   “The Winter’s Tale†opens Friday, July 23, at Shakespeare & Company in Lenox, MA, and runs through Sept. 5.  For tickets call 413-637-3353 or go to shakespeare.org.

   

    

   

     

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