Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
  • What’s On
  • Reviews
  • Digital World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Trending
  • Web Stories
Trending Now

iFixit is retroactively giving the Nintendo Switch a 4/10 on repairability Canada reviews

‘The Wrong Paris’ Netflix Rom-Com Starring Miranda Cosgrove Sets September 2025 Release

Israeli soldiers bar journalists from entering West Bank villages on tour organized by Oscar winners | Canada Voices

3rd Jun: Sara – Woman in the Shadows (2025), 6 Episodes [TV-MA] (6/10)

The most exciting Budweiser Stage concerts in Toronto this summer

A free festival full of food and live performances is coming to Toronto

The Polestar 4 now comes from South Korea instead of China Canada reviews

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact us
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
  • What’s On
  • Reviews
  • Digital World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Trending
  • Web Stories
Newsletter
Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
You are at:Home » Antoni Cimolino’s well-acted Winter’s Tale wrestles with oddities in Shakespeare’s script | Canada Voices
Lifestyle

Antoni Cimolino’s well-acted Winter’s Tale wrestles with oddities in Shakespeare’s script | Canada Voices

31 May 20255 Mins Read
Open this photo in gallery:

The Winter’s Tale is considered one of Shakespeare’s ‘problem plays’ for its odd structure.David Hou/Stratford Festival

Title: The Winter’s Tale

Written by: William Shakespeare

Performed by: Graham Abbey, Yanna McIntosh, Sara Topham, Austin Eckert, Tom McCamus, Marissa Orjalo, Tom Rooney, André Sills

Director: Anthony Cimolino

Company: Stratford Festival

Venue: Tom Patterson Theatre

City: Stratford

Year: Until Sep. 27, 2025

“A sad tale’s best for winter,” little Mamillius tells his mother when she asks for a story. As if spoken into existence, the events that follow are very sad indeed, with disastrous implications for Mamillius (Philip Myers on opening night of The Winter’s Tale), his mother (Sara Topham) and his sister (Marissa Orjalo).

When we next see the tiny prince, it’s as a memory – a tiny child forever playing in a starlit afterlife.

Oft-considered one of Shakespeare’s “problem plays” for its odd structure, The Winter’s Tale begins with one of the Bard’s more twisted psychological tests: King Leontes (a superb Graham Abbey), out of his mind with doomy rage, accuses his pregnant wife Hermione (Topham) of infidelity with King Polixenes (André Sills). When she denies the accusations, the play turns tragic: Her newborn daughter Perdita (Orjalo) is exiled to the coast of Bohemia, while the mother and her toddling son die of heartbreak.

The play, so very dark in its first half, is a brooder that, for a while, rivals King Lear or Romeo and Juliet. But after intermission, the work mutates into a pastoral comedy with a decidedly light ending, and in Stratford Festival artistic director Antoni Cimolino’s production, those halves never bind together in a way that makes for a satisfying story.

Open this photo in gallery:

Tom Rooney as Camillo with Austin Eckert as Florizel and Marissa Orjalo as Perdita in The Winter’s Tale.David Hou/Stratford Festival

Down the street at the Festival Theatre, Chris Abraham helms a pastoral comedy with similarly disparate acts. But in As You Like It, Abraham interrogates the relationship between the genre’s form and its content in a way that feels intentional and bold; here, the fault lines in Shakespeare’s dramatic structure are left to echo.

Cimolino leans hard into each tonal shift – the shimmer of early childhood, the draconian gloom of Leontes’s court, the Midsommar-esque merriment of Perdita’s newfound clan – and often the production is enjoyable. But the momentum of the first act, led by Abbey in a tour de force performance as the tortured king, fizzles out by the time we get to know Perdita and her adoptive family.

And once Perdita’s surrogate father (played by Tom McCamus) steps aside for his daughter to rediscover her noble heritage, the play is all but over – an “all’s well that ends well” predicated upon, among other things, a sentient statue.

Oddities in the play’s dramaturgy aside, Cimolino offers a stylish, well-acted production that goes toe to toe with the heavier hitters being staged in the Avon and Festival theatres. Topham is heartbreaking as Hermione, Orjalo buoyant and jovial as Perdita. McCamus, once more this season sharing the stage with Tom Rooney, is breezy and droll as the pastoral shepherd, and Rooney is similarly amusing, clad in fabulous faux facial hair alongside Sills.

Lucy Peacock, costumed in an Angels in America-style set of enormous wings, oversees the whole affair as Time, ushering the mortals in Leontes’s orbit through the tribulations that accompany a long life on earth.

It’s perhaps Francesca Callow’s costumes that shine the brightest in Cimolino’s production, luminous gowns and flower crowns that suggest a happier, simpler life in the fabled land of Bohemia. A few mismatched hairpieces aside, the fashion of this production is top-notch, as airy as the springtime celebrations that open the play’s second half.

Open this photo in gallery:

The play is so very dark in its first half, but after intermission, the work mutates into a pastoral comedy with a decidedly light ending.David Hou/Stratford Festival

Other design elements, however, are less impressive. Douglas Paraschuk’s sparse set sees lace doilies hung from the ceiling that raise and lower in accordance with Time’s demands. There’s a neat visual effect that sees the strips of fabric project interesting shadows onto the Tom Patterson Theatre stage, but the choice feels otherwise ungrounded, and strangely minimalistic against Callow’s luxurious costumes.

And, to address the elephant – or bear – in the room, Shakespeare’s most famous stage direction is executed here somewhat disappointingly. “Exeunt, pursued by a bear” is one of the playwright’s wilder directives, and in Cimolino’s production, the bear is neither an actor in a suit nor a puppet (nor even a projected beast). No: The bear, in this case, is a sound cue.

In a lesser year of Stratford Festival programming, this convincingly-acted Winter’s Tale would be a must-see – and indeed, die-hard Bard fans can rest assured Cimolino’s production is perfectly fine. But if a dramaturgically rigorous pastoral is what you’re after – or theatre tech that briefly makes you forget the constraints of live theatre – I’d suggest checking out the fest’s other offerings first.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email

Related Articles

Israeli soldiers bar journalists from entering West Bank villages on tour organized by Oscar winners | Canada Voices

Lifestyle 3 June 2025

3rd Jun: Sara – Woman in the Shadows (2025), 6 Episodes [TV-MA] (6/10)

Lifestyle 3 June 2025

Elden Ring fans find bolus secret that completely changes Nightreign

Lifestyle 3 June 2025

Julianne Hough Shares 'DWTS' Footage of Her 18-Year-Old Self To Celebrate 20 Years of the Show

Lifestyle 3 June 2025

3rd Jun: Deep Blue Sea (1999), 1hr 44m [R] – Streaming Again (5.95/10)

Lifestyle 3 June 2025

Alberta’s David Serkin wins three lottery prizes worth $2.5-million total in under nine months | Canada Voices

Lifestyle 3 June 2025
Top Articles

OANDA Review – Low costs and no deposit requirements

28 April 2024321 Views

Toronto actor to star in Netflix medical drama that ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ fans will love, Canada Reviews

1 April 2025124 Views

Looking for a job? These are Montreal’s best employers in 2025

18 March 202596 Views

The Mother May I Story – Chickpea Edition

18 May 202490 Views
Demo
Don't Miss
What's On 3 June 2025

A free festival full of food and live performances is coming to Toronto

Taste of North York returns to Toronto this weekend, offering all the best the community…

The Polestar 4 now comes from South Korea instead of China Canada reviews

Apple’s 2024 M4 MacBook Pro with a 1TB SSD has never been this cheap

Third Time’s a Palace Charm for Beetlejuice the Musical – front mezz junkies, Theater News

About Us
About Us

Canadian Reviews is your one-stop website for the latest Canadian trends and things to do, follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
Our Picks

iFixit is retroactively giving the Nintendo Switch a 4/10 on repairability Canada reviews

‘The Wrong Paris’ Netflix Rom-Com Starring Miranda Cosgrove Sets September 2025 Release

Israeli soldiers bar journalists from entering West Bank villages on tour organized by Oscar winners | Canada Voices

Most Popular

Why You Should Consider Investing with IC Markets

28 April 202418 Views

OANDA Review – Low costs and no deposit requirements

28 April 2024321 Views

LearnToTrade: A Comprehensive Look at the Controversial Trading School

28 April 202438 Views
© 2025 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.