Bryn
Boice (far left), director of Commonwealth Shakespeare Company’s free
summer production of “The Winter’s Tale” stands with lead cast members
Marianna Bassham, Nael Nacer and Omar Robinson. Commonwealth Shakespeare Company brings the Bard to Boston Common
A head of state believes he has been betrayed, despite all evidence to the contrary. He sets out to destroy his perceived rival and ruins many people in the process. So begins William Shakespeare’s late-career play, “The Winter’s Tale.”
“It’s a play we need right now — one that becomes a tale of redemption,” says Elliot Norton Award-winning director Bryn Boice, who will direct “The Winter’s Tale” in this summer’s 27th annual Free Shakespeare on the Common production by Commonwealth Shakespeare Company.
A nonprofit theater founded in 1996 by its artistic director Steven Maler, CSC draws more than 50,000 people to its annual productions on the Boston Common, conducted in partnership with the city of Boston. On stage July 16 to Aug. 4 at the Parkman Bandstand on Boston Common, the show is free, and audience members may bring chairs and blankets or rent chairs for $10. Performances are open-captioned as part of CSC’s Access Infrastructure Initiative.
“Shakespeare wrote this play at a mature place in his career,” says Boice, who is CSC’s associate artistic director, speaking by phone two days before the start of rehearsals. “He had been writing comedies, tragedies and history plays. Here, he takes chances on form, with a new way of storytelling that expresses the complexity of life, which is not all comedy or tragedy.”
“The Winter’s Tale” unfolds after King Leontes of Sicilia falsely accuses his pregnant wife, Hermione, of infidelity with his childhood friend, Polixenes, the King of Bohemia.
“The
play starts out tragically, with the central figure, Leontes, believing
his version of the truth,” says Boice. “No one can convince him
otherwise — not even an oracle. He insists on his version of the facts.”
Over
five acts, “The Winter’s Tale” spans 16 years, two generations and two
kingdoms — Sicilia and Bohemia. As they render the story of
transformation at the heart of the play, Boice and her staging team —
including scenic designer James S. Felton and costume designer Rachel
Padula-Shufelt — will contrast the two kingdoms.
“It’s
brutalism versus personal freedom,” says Boice. “We’ll cast Sicilia in a
monotone palette, while Bohemia, a place where anything goes, will
radiate colors worthy of a rave.”
In
Sicilia, noble characters suffer and die, while in Bohemia, a knave’s
mischievous plot fails and a bumbling shepherd rescues an abandoned
infant.
“Shakespeare
creates scenes of cathartic lightness as well as darkness,” says Boice.
“And he gives Hermione and her friend Paulina gorgeous speeches. In
moments when they are denied agency, their words express agency.”
Joining
Boice in conjuring this host of characters is an all-star group of New
England actors, including Nael Nacer as Leontes; Marianna Bassham as
Hermione; Omar Robinson as Polixenes; multi-Elliot Norton Award-winner
Paula Plum, a founding member of Actors’ Shakespeare Project (ASP), as
Paulina; Tony Estrella, Gamm Theatre artistic director, as Camillo;
Richard Snee as the Shepherd; Robert Walsh, an ASP founding member, as
Antigonus; and Ryan Winkles as Autolycus.
“I
love this play. It’s messy. I enjoy that,” says Robinson. “The sudden
rage of Leontes comes out of nowhere. He and Polixenes have been friends
from childhood. A deep relationship is shattered. It’s not a
cut-and-dry tragedy or comedy. It has elements of both. The story begins
in darkness and as time passes it moves into spring and the energy of
youth. Its layers draw me in.”
ON THE WEB
Learn more at commshakes.org