The Lion In Winter

The Lion in Winter details one royal family's Christmas gathering in France during the thirteenth century. The family is that of Henry II of England (including Eleanor of Aquitaine, Richard the Lionhearted, and the future King John, among others); the invited guest is Philip Capet of France, and the holiday gathering takes place at Henry's castle of Chinon. No one's mind is on presents; rather, everyone is thinking of provinces - who controls them, who gives up what for which concession, and so on.
Author James Goldman has grounded his setting historically and then let the characters go to work on one another, with some of the wittiest, most brutal, and most heart-wrenching dialogue you'll find in any play. His characters all carry around razor-sharp wits. We get to know them, not through their actions, but through their words, through the verbal snares they set, and the verbal barbs they cast at one another. Therein lies, also, the great tragedy of the play: no one can show affection without being suspected of deceit, no one can give a kind word without receiving cruel treatment. And yet, beneath the jousting, we can see the characters aching for love - Eleanor's almost-but-not-quite admissions that she wants Henry back, Richard's heartbreaking confession to Philip.
Photographs
Cast
Henry II: William Campbell
Eleanor: Janet Carr
Alais: Cate Wolfenbarger
John: Nick Poublon
Richard: Alexander Pawlowski
Philip: Nicholas T. King
Geoffrey: Tadhg Simmons
Crew
Director: Reva Kaufman
Stage Manager: John-Michael McLean
Costumes: Lee Ann Wiley
Set Design: Bill Campbell
Lighting Design: Amanda Ferguson
Light Board Technician: Carole Hillabrant
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