
Being a Shakespeare fan, I myself find it odd that I’d never read or seen the King Lear produced. I knew the plot had to deal with a King who gets upset with his daughters, but that was about it. I had no idea that it was the template for The Jerry Springer Show. There are very few characters who are not either mad or really really mean. If you are not either of those things, chances are you’ll get your eyes gouged out or something along those lines. The only chance you have if you’re sane is to disguise yourself as someone of a lower class. Thankfully with everyone else being mad, a little makeup and a change of clothes is enough to convince people you know well that you’re someone else entirely. When you go, and you should go, be sure to pick up one of the yellow sheets at the entrance of the theater it’s a little guide to the play, that will help you follow things a little easier. With probably about an hours worth of cuts made to the play, I think the guide is useful and much appreciated.
The play opens with King Lear proclaiming that he’s going to divide his kingdom between his three daughters, Goneril, Regan, and his favorite Cordelia. He asks them each to tell how much they love him, Goneril and Regan flatter him sickeningly and he bestows a third of his kingdom on each of them and their husbands. Cordelia, tells him she loves him but doesn’t go overboard and this angers the King. So he banishes her and gives her third to the other two daughters. It isn’t long before the King who is clearly losing his cognitive abilities is being treated horribly by his remaining daughters and is eventually left to fend for himself in a raging storm. The Earl of Gloucester who in the B plot has two sons, Edgar who is honorable and Edmund who is a villian. Edmund has his evil fingers in everybody’s pies, convincing their father that Edgar is plotting to kill him and making romantic advances on both Goneril and Regan. Gloucester gives aid to the King and for this, the sisters have his eyes gouged out, on stage. In an ironic turn of events it seems that everyone who is practicing a deception in terms of who they are, are the only true and honest people in the play. The villains are all out in the open, even if some of their tricks are done behind peoples backs.
Lear is played by Meri Golden and she does an excellent job in the role. Her manic pacing and constant movement is a nice physical expression of the Kings restless and unmoored mind. Tim Perfect is well cast as the Earl of Gloucester he brings an air of nobility to the role of what is probably the most honorable character in the play. Luke Langfeldt as his evil son Edmund is perfectly sneary, the kind of villain you want to boo whenever he appears. Langfeldt seems to be having a great time with the role. Taylor Evans does a nice job as Edgar and especially when he is in disguise as “Poor Tom” a mad beggar that the King befriends. I also really enjoyed the work of Danny Kristian Vopava as the King’s Fool, while a lot of his lines aren’t funny, the spin he puts on his line readings are. Patti Gage, Deanne McDonald, and Olivia Denninger as Goneril, Regan, and Cordelia do a nice job as well particularly Gage and McDonald who get more stage time and are meatier female characters than we usually get in Shakespeare. It seems to me that the three sisters could be the inspiration for Cinderella and her two evil step sisters.
The production is directed by George M. Roesler and It moves along at a nice pace, but there are definitely some staging issues. Several scenes took place in the upper areas of the audience, almost directly behind me, It was impossible to see what was happening from my seats. The set design is by Greg Vanselow is simple which allows it to be versatile, there is no need for any scene changes, characters can just exit and enter and we are in a new location. The heavy lifting is done with great panache by Lighting Designer Mark Kieffer and Sound Designer Robert Hoffman. Their creation of the raging storm is a highlight for the lighting and sound.
King Lear runs through October 6th at Theatre in the Round Players in Minneapolis for more information and to purchase tickets go to https://www.theatreintheround.org/king-lear/
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