First Nighter: Shakespeare Globe Smartly Does the Bard's Jacobean Works
Pericles--In no other Shakespeare play is the leading character thoroughly good. He hasn't the hint of a tragic flaw. Nothing, not an inkling. Rather, he's a man to whom evil is done--not unlike, when you think of it, the innocents in Alfred Hitchcock's movies. Upon learning his intended bride, whom Pericles (James Garnon) has won as the result of a court guessing game, has been incested by her father, he attempts to do something about it. But the monarch puts a hit on the intrepid lad, which results in Pericles's experiencing a series of hairbreadth adventures. There's a wife supposedly dead in child birth and a daughter also menaced. Many of the playwright's usual themes and incidents--shipwrecks, lost children, deceased spouses revived--materialize but this time more as a picaresque tale than a tragedy. At one point, as abandoned and desolate daughter Marina (Jessica Baglow) is on the (knife) point of being done in by jealous queen Dionyza (Dorothea Myer-Bennett), she's kidnapped/rescued by pirates literally bursting onto the scene. And on Pericles and Pericles go. It's narrated start to finish by Gower (Sheila Reed), who's full of lively iambic pentameter. Dromgoole has no end of fun directing a cast, six of whom double admirably. They're all ready, willing and able to join in the macabre hijinks. It's difficult to imagine the first of the late romances ever being anyone's favorite Shakespeare opus, but rendered with this degree of creativity, it's undeniably entertaining as it passes.
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