‘The Winter’s Tale’—Shakespeare on Acid, and More

LSD is illegal and you don’t need to risk it. Just go see The Winter’s Tale. This Quantum Theatre presentation is hallucinogenic, hilarious, and, pardon the cliché, awesome.

Since the 1960s there have been many works of the performing arts that strive to be trippy. By comparison, The Winter’s Tale makes most of them seem about as transcendental as a trip to Sheetz for a pair of hot dogs. This thing is high art in every sense of the term. It contains no prefab sausage or bland white bread.

Better yet, though it’s made from highbrow ingredients—we are talking about a Shakespeare play, set to classical Baroque music and sung as an opera, with modern dance and sophisticated special effects mixed in—one does not have to be a connoisseur of any of those genres to get a kick out of the strange combination of them. The chemistry creates a different animal entirely. And you know you are not in Kansas from the moment the lights go up.

Are you up for a trippy tale? Queen Hermione (Raquel Winnica Young, arms raised) has one and Paulina (Gail Novak Mosites, left, in black) loves it. The dancers (L to R Ashley Williams, Dane Toney, Anthony Williams, Kaitlin Dann) will participate once they remove their pants.

Are you up for a trippy tale? Queen Hermione (Raquel Winnica Young, arms raised) has one and Paulina (Gail Novak Mosites, left, in black) loves it. The dancers (L to R Ashley Williams, Dane Toney, Anthony Williams, Kaitlin Dann) will participate once they remove their pants.

The Naked and The Undead

The Winter’s Tale opens with stunning visual effects. Four dancers (enlisted from Pittsburgh’s Attack Theatre) are cavorting on a nearly naked stage to an overture played by members of the Chatham Baroque ensemble. The dancers themselves appear to be naked and tattooed all over … until you look closely and see they’re wearing transparent body stockings stitched with floral patterns.

Projected behind them, on the curtain that spans the entire backstage, is a much larger floral pattern. It has the look of an ingenious CGI photo collage. In the centers of the big blossoms are the faces of various characters from the play. The images are amazingly lifelike and entrancing. Especially when, ever so slightly, the faces begin to move.

Maybe other people in the audience spotted it sooner, but only at that point did I realize I was not looking at photos of faces or even videos of faces. They were the live heads of actors poking through slits in the curtain.

If you were writing a term paper on the production, you might say that this coming-to-life effect symbolizes the power of theater to bring illusory worlds to life, breaking through the wall of artifice and eventually inducing suspension of disbelief. But my school days are over, which excuses me from having to write meta-baloney about stuff that’s really cool. So I will simply say the device got me hooked and the rest of the show reeled me in.

I had come to The Winter’s Tale as a tough customer. Opera is a form of theater which I have attended little and appreciated less. It always struck me the way Olympic gymnastics did: impressive, but not my game. Another concern was that this opera is based on a lesser known work of Shakespeare, one of the bunch that are seldom performed nowadays. There’s usually a reason for that. I had agreed to review the show on a what-the-heck basis, bringing along an opera-savvy friend who could help me fathom the experience as needed.

How surprised I was to find my concerns vanishing in waves of psychedelic delight. If that’s recommendation enough for you, stop now and get tickets. For more details read on.

From Delusion and Dirty Deeds to Flying Toasters

The original Winter’s Tale, written by William Shakespeare in 1610 or ’11, was a very odd play in its own right. Though it’s been greatly cut back and massively embellished in the joint Quantum/Chatham Baroque/Attack Theatre production, the show stays true to Shakespeare’s plot and uses some of his best language. Let us briefly recap major events.

Leontes, king of Sicily, wrongly suspects that his wife has been sleeping with his old friend the king of Bohemia, and that his royal Sicilian children are actually Bohemian bastards. Caught up in self-spun delusion, Leontes orders dire deeds that lead to the death of wife and son while his newborn daughter is carried off to the Bohemian countryside and abandoned to fate.

This is prime material for stormy operatic arias, which the Quantum players provide. Yet weird comic undertones emerge, filtering through to paint mustaches on the face of tragedy. Then suddenly the story fast-forwards 16 years while shifting into comic overdrive.

The baby girl has been found by a shepherdess and raised as the woman’s beautiful but daffy young ward. The prince of Bohemia, that king’s son, falls madly in love with her, to the outrage of papa who doesn’t want his boy chasing a sylvan slum goddess. A raffish rogue rumbles onto the scene, sowing further discord … and you’ve got to see it all to believe it.

Countertenor Andrey Nemzer, in the spotlight as naughty Autolycus, deals from the bottom of the deck and sings at the top of the scale.

Andrey Nemzer, in the spotlight here as naughty Autolycus, deals from the bottom of the deck and sings at the top of the scale.

Or to disbelieve it, if you wish. Suspension of disbelief doesn’t matter when your mental circuits are being blown anyhow, by a production that spins diverse threads of Western culture into a mashup even wilder than what Shakespeare once scripted. A few examples:

The rogue, Autolycus, is a familiar Shakespearean type, a mischievous low-life buffoon. For this part Quantum has cast Andrey Nemzer, who (a) comes across as the spittin’ image of nyuk-nyuk Curly Joe Howard and (b) is a countertenor—one of the rare male singers with an ethereally high female voice. When Curly/Autolycus sings the “Ballad of a Fish,” which includes Shakespeare’s line about a woman who “was turned into a cold fish because she would not exchange flesh with one who loved her,” the performance transcends Bard and Stooge alike.

Quantum’s production also borrows from Baroque classics such as Handel’s Messiah. The renowned oratorio, sung to passages from the King James Bible, has a dark verse from Psalm 2 describing God’s vengeance on the ungodly: “Thou shalt break them with a rod of iron; thou shalt dash them in pieces like a potter’s vessel.” For The Winter’s Tale the verse is altered slightly and given to Polixenes, king of Bohemia, who thunders it at the uppity young sheepherder’s gal: “… I will dash you in pieces like a potter’s vessel.” And when tenor Robert Frankenberry draws out the words archly in his best grand-opera style (“like a pah-ah-ah-ah-ah-ah-ter’s vessel”), it becomes satire that could wring chuckles from a heathen who knows nothing of Handel or the Psalms.

And oh, the trippy-ness of the whole trip. In a spellbinding scene at the Oracle of Delphi, the dancers perform graceful homage to a gigantic opalescent beach ball, which represents (I think) the Mother of All Pearls of Wisdom. The projections that ripple across the back curtain surpass the hippie light shows of the Sixties; they are more like the hypnotic screen savers of the 1990s writ large. One of them made me whisper “Flying Toasters”—although the flying objects in this case certainly weren’t toasters. Again, one must see it to believe it or not.

Lovely Perdita (Rebecca Belczyk), born of royal blood but raised among sheep, has flowers for every visitor including "flowers of middle summer given to men of middle age."

Lovely Perdita (Rebecca Belczyk), born of royal blood but raised among sheep, picks the right flowers for every visitor: “These flowers of middle summer are given to men of middle age.”

In the program notes, Quantum’s artistic director Karla Boos wrote that her goals for The Winter’s Tale were to create “barely controlled hysteria” and “brilliant excess.” Consider it done.

On a Serious Note …

My opera-savvy friend is reminding me to say that The Winter’s Tale features seriously good music and singing. The friend particularly liked the voices of countertenor Nemzer and tenor Frankenberry, baritone Dan Kempson (as the love-mad prince Florizel of Bohemia), tenor Cosmo Clemens as The Clown, and soprano Shannon Kessler Dooley who also struck me as a fine actress.

Dooley has a pants role, crossing genders to play the trusty manservant Camillo. In a play filled with male characters who are deluded and/or devious, she convincingly portrays the manliest man of them all.

Closing Credits and Ticket Info

We have a mouthful of credits. The opera The Winter’s Tale has been adapted from William Shakespeare’s play by a team including Karla Boos of Quantum Theatre, music director and conductor Andres Cladera; Andrew Fouts, Patricia Halverson, and Scott Pauley of Chatham Baroque; and Michele de la Reza and Peter Kope of Attack Theatre. Joseph Seamans designed the projections and Justin Wallace contributed additional music to go with the many Baroque masterpieces used.

All roles are played by accomplished singer/actors and the dancers dance wonderfully. The Winter’s Tale was commissioned by The Benter Foundation, with other funders also helping support the two years of work that went into the show.

Through October 3 at the Music Hall in the Union Trust Building, 501 Grant St., Downtown. For showtimes and tickets visit Quantum or call 412-362-1713.

Photos by Heather Mull.

Mike Vargo, a Pittsburgh-based freelance writer and editor, covers theater for Entertainment Central.  

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