ARTS
HIGH SCHOOL FALL PLAY NOVEMBER 21â23, 2019
In previous directorâs notes, I have suggested that, in essence, Shakespearean comedy is about âstanding on the brink of tragedy and then dodging the bullet.â Well, The Winterâs Tale is not a comedy, but it is not a tragedy either. In fact, we donât really know what to call it. By the end of his career, Shakespeare was defying genere; scholars tend to refer to his final plays simply as âthe late playsââor sometimes as Romances. By romance, they do not mean romantic, but something more like fantasy. In
18 | ENSWORTH ENSIGHTS
Shakespeareâs day, a winterâs tale was synonymous with an old wiveâs tale, or a fairy tale. It was a fableâan unlikely and incredible storyâone that dealt with essential questions and essential truths. Shakespeareâs The Winterâs Tale exists in a fantasy world that is as capable of darkness as it is of light. It is a world where accidents and errors unfold at a pace and on a scale that is utterly shocking, but it is a world where redemption and grace can always
rush in with equal force. A Midsummer Nightâs Dream, which we have also performed twice, is about going to bed wanting what you donât haveâand likely donât deserveâand then waking up in the morning and finding it laying in your lap, no idea how it got there. In the world of The Winterâs Tale, we are going to be asked to be a bit more mature; we are going to be kept wanting for longer than the space of a dream, and if we do indeed receive grace, it is not going to come while we are sleeping.