Total Rating: 
***1/4
Opened: 
February 16, 2002
Ended: 
March 24, 2002
Country: 
USA
State: 
Pennsylvania
City: 
Philadelphia
Company/Producers: 
Philadelphia Shakespeare Festival
Theater Type: 
Regional
Theater: 
Philadelphia Shakespeare Festival
Theater Address: 
2111 Sansom Street
Phone: 
(215) 496-8001
Running Time: 
2 hrs, 45 min
Genre: 
Drama
Author: 
William Shakespeare
Director: 
Carmel Khan
Review: 

 Many critics call King Lear Shakespeare's tragic masterpiece, but the public has never ratified that judgment. Hamlet, Othello, Macbeth and Romeo and Juliet have more mass appeal. Maybe the reason people don't love Lear as much as the others is because it has a major problem with plausibility. Shakespeare gives us almost no text to explain Lear's rashness when he disinherits his most beloved daughter because she won't make a flattering speech, nor does the playwright adequately explain why Cordelia so stubbornly refuses to say a few nice things to the father whom she genuinely loves. It is left to actors to telegraph a subtext to us.

In my experience, only Morris Carnovsky successfully did this with Lear, using his resonant voice and commanding presence to create a self-involved persona who struck fear into everyone, including his daughters. In this excellent production, Buck Shirner doesn't do that, but he does create a touching, sympathetic king, and John Peakes mirrors him with a heartfelt Duke of Gloucester. This is a fitting parallel, because Shakespeare's Gloucester shows that more than one man can make a rash misjudgment about his children.

Sara Valentine is an appealing Cordelia, and E. Ashley Izard is fine as the sexy bitch Regan, but J.J. Van Name isn't strong enough as the oldest and nastiest daughter, Goneril. Greg Giovanni is a particularly charming Fool, Michael Whistler is great as the multifaceted good son of Gloucester and Bev Appleton creates a wonderful characterization as the loyal Kent.

Carmen Khan directs with sweep and spectacle, fully using a small space. The duel scenes are vivid, and Khan's staging of the blinding of Gloucester is bloody and graphic, a great moment of theater. After we get past that problematic first scene, the play unfolds beautifully as we see a family disintegrate and an old man endure fate and grow to understanding.

Parental: 
violence
Cast: 
Bev Appleton, John Peakes (Duke), Kevin Glaccum, Buck Shirner (Lear), J.J. Van Name, E. Ashley Izard, Sara Valentine, John Jezior, John Lopes, Michael Whistler, Ray Saraceni, Greg Giovanni, William B. Collins, Jared Michael Delaney, Jason Andrew Williams, Joseph Nevin.
Technical: 
Set: Donald Eastman; Lighting: Peter J. Jakubowski; Costumes: Vickie Esposito; Original Music & Sound: Obadiah Eaves
Critic: 
Steve Cohen
Date Reviewed: 
March 2002