Shakespeare’s ‘Tempest’ in DC: The Magic of Theater
- menschmedia
- Dec 13, 2014
- 2 min read
Updated: Dec 20, 2021

The Tempest is thought to be the last play Shakespeare wrote without collaborators. Commentators often describe Prospero, the exiled prince and lord of the enchanted isle where the action takes place, as a stand-in for the playwright. Creating a storm onstage, tormenting characters with magic, making others fall in love, that’s the work of a magician … or a writer. But the play is not successful if the metaphor overwhelms the action. Catharsis comes from the heart and not the head. Director Ethan McSweeny doesn’t belabor the theatrical overlay, but deploys it just enough to create a splendid evening of theater.
As the play begins, lightning flashes and thunder booms, the eponymous storm attacks a ship carrying Alonso, the King of Naples and Antonio, Prospero’s treacherous and usurping brother, along with several other lords. The noisy storm illuminates a decaying proscenium arch, which showcases what we’ll soon see as a sandy island. Frames within frames.

As Prospero, Geraint Wyn Davies owns the stage whenever he’s on it, and makes us miss him in the long stretches when he’s not. Although all the actors have an ease with Shakespeare’s language, Davies uniquely seems to own it as a mother tongue.

And that magic comes to full fruit in the delightful second act, aided by the spectacular puppet designs of James Ortiz. By the time Prospero strips off his magical garments, returning to mere royalty — his daughter safely married and his Dukedom restored — he is, then, paradoxically free to step out of character, and become an actor, begging for our applause as the curtain falls (“release me from my bands/With the help of your good hands.”).
After a night of magic, the audience I sat with rose to its feet at this, and you may, too.
The Tempest continues at the Shakespeare Theatre Company in Washington, D.C. through January 11, 2015
Photos: Avery Glymph as Ferdinand, Rachel Mewbron as Miranda, Geraint Wyn Davies as Prospero, Sofia Jean Gomez as Ariel in the Shakespeare Theatre Company production of William Shakespeare’s The Tempest, directed by Ethan McSweeny. Photo by Scott Suchman.
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