Images: 
Total Rating: 
****
Previews: 
May 10, 2011
Opened: 
May 30, 2011
Ended: 
October 14, 2011
Country: 
Canada
State: 
Stratford
City: 
Ontario
Company/Producers: 
Stratford Shakespeare Festival
Theater Type: 
International; Festival
Theater: 
Stratford Shakespeare Festival - Festival Theater
Theater Address: 
55 Queen Street
Phone: 
800-567-1600
Website: 
stratfordshakespearefestival.com
Genre: 
Comedy
Author: 
William Shakespeare
Director: 
Frank Galati
Review: 

Stratford's opening night was a gala production, and joyously received, but though it was unusually handsome looking and boasted a cast of literally great actors, it was not great Shakespeare because The Merry Wives of Windsor isn't. Despite occasional delicious castings, the basically nonsensical play usually strikes me as Shakespearean self-parody that becomes tiresome as it repeats itself and throws in everything including the kitchen leftovers (and also some non-salacious dirty laundry). But Chicago's master-director Frank Galati, making his Stratford debut, had a number of nifty comic ideas, and the peculiar but elegant production looks splendid.

Without losing the roguery that made Falstaff such a beloved character that Queen Elizabeth is said to have asked Shakespeare to bring him back in another play -- Geraint Wyn Davies creates an entirely original Falstaff and gets every laugh and nuance from his dialogue.

As the two merry wives who share Falstaff's identical love-notes to them and conspire to make life miserable for the drunken knight, Laura Condlin as Mistress Page and especially Lucy Peacock as Mistress Ford are funny and very attractive. Peacock, a very pretty longtime Stratford leading lady, has been having fun with frump roles recently, so it's a pleasure to see her good-looking Alice Ford and, in Camelot, her very glamorous Morgan Le Fay.

Master Ford is intended to be a funny, hotheaded, jealous husband, but Tom Rooney makes him such a ranting jealous husband that he's an excerpt-worthy comic creation all by himself. Some of his physical schtick is priceless, and it's hardly specifically suggested by the text.

James Blendick's commanding Justice Swallow is a revelation in an often predictable fool-role. Tom McCamus, whose voice and presence make him the least forgettable actor in any production, not only makes Master Page commanding but may be the most likable one I've seen. Andrew Gillies as the Welsh Parson who trains the improbable children is a delight. And Dan Chameroy as Falstaff's crony Ensign Pistol, and the irresistible Janet Wright as Mistress Quickly, make their uneven roles here seem as notable as those characters are in Shakespeare's King Henry plays.

Except occasionally, and only in parts, I've not understood why The Merry Wives of Windsor is so popular. At Stratford's opening this year, I did.

Cast: 
Nigel Bennett, Michael Blake, James Blendick, Caitriona Buckley, Dan Chameroy, Laura Condlin, Nicholas Dolan, Victor Dolhai, Ryan Field, Barbara Fulton, Andrew Gillies, Randy Hughson, Robert King, Monique Lund, Tom McCamus, Zachery Misener, Annie Lockerbie Newton, Trent Pardy, Lucy Peacock, Christopher Prentice, Tom Rooney, Steve Ross, Andrea Runge, Stephen Russell, Maddy Smart, Jake Stern, Timothy D. Stickney, Sophia Walker, Abigail Winter-Guilford, Janet Wright, Geraint Wyn Davies.
Technical: 
Set: Robert Perdziola ; Lighting: Alan Brodie; Music/Sound: Josh Schmidt.
Critic: 
Herbert M. Simpson
Date Reviewed: 
June 2011