"The Winter's Tale". Royal Shakespeare Theatre
Yaël Farber. The clue is in the name, and its German root, meaning 'colour'. Farber is a colorist. Rather than approaching Shakespeare through literary analysis, she wields hues, images and symbols. She directs as if she were a painter. Like her thrilling Macbeth at the Almeida, her Winter's Tale is, first and foremost, a feast for the senses. And it's a hearty meal. This production boasts movement and dance pulsing with pagan might, constant rhythmic music like electro-Stravinsky, elemental powers of earth, air, fire and water, the blue of a winter sky, and the gold of a summer solstice. Above it all, suspended like a watchful deity, is a gigantic moon. I've seen moons on stage before - projections, cutouts in cycloramas, beams of twinkling light. But I've never seen one like this: cold, old, beautiful, vast, with a surface slowly evolving under wisps of ever-changing shadow. If ever a set was a symbol, this is it. That moon stands for change and femininity, ...