The Stratford Festival Review: Haysam Kadri’s blistering production finds devastating psychological clarity inside Shakespeare’s timeless tragedy
By Ross
The first image grabs hold, even before Shakespeare has begun his relentless march toward tragedy. A body slowly emerges from beneath the stage, crawling upward as though clawing its way out of a buried Trojan horse. The figure rises, carrying with him secrets, resentments, and the first poisonous whispers that will soon infect everyone around him. It is a startling theatrical image rich with metaphor, and one that quietly establishes everything Haysam Kadri’s remarkable production of Othello at the Stratford Festival will become. Jealousy is already heavy in the air. It is relentless and inevitable, and it simply needs someone willing to give it a wicked push and a sly voice.
Director Kadri (RMTC’s Life of Pi) has crafted one of Stratford’s strongest Shakespeare productions in recent memory, a blistering, lean, and emotionally devastating staging that trusts both Shakespeare’s language and its audience’s intelligence. Every decision feels purposeful, and every scene is wisely sharpened to expose the psychological machinery driving one of literature’s greatest tragedies. Rather than treating Othello as an inevitable story of murder and betrayal, Kadri carefully traces the terrifying process by which certainty dissolves into suspicion. Shakespeare understood something unsettling about the human mind. Love can rarely be proven, but jealousy requires almost no evidence at all. Once planted, it grows with frightening efficiency like a weed in any well-tended rose garden.

That psychological precision finds its fullest expression in André Sills’ magnificent Othello. Sills (StratFest’s Coriolanus) commands the Tom Patterson Theatre’s long thrust with immense warmth, quiet dignity, and a voice that seems capable of filling every corner of the room without ever forcing itself upon us. His celebrated general carries enormous authority, yet he also reveals the loneliness of a man who has spent his life existing slightly outside the world that now celebrates him. His marriage to Desdemona feels genuine and deeply rooted in affection, making the gradual erosion of that trust all the more heartbreaking to witness.
Watching Sills surrender piece by piece to Iago’s manipulations becomes almost unbearable because we understand exactly why Othello believes what he hears. Every carefully chosen suggestion lands inside existing insecurities until love itself begins to feel impossible to trust. Sills charts that descent with astonishing emotional honesty, allowing fear, vulnerability, rage, and grief to accumulate naturally rather than arriving all at once. By the final act, the tragedy feels painfully earned.

Standing secretly, yet solidly opposed to him, is Evan Buliung’s extraordinary Iago, unwrapping an astonishingly clever construction. Buliung (Coal Mine’s Fullfillment Centre) never resorts to theatrical villainy. His Iago smiles easily, speaks carefully, and wraps every poisonous lie inside the comforting language of friendship. It is precisely that effortless charm that makes him so frightening. Every “honest” observation carries another carefully concealed blade poised to cut deep.
The production, particularly the lighting and sound design, quietly reinforces those private moments of manipulation. As Iago shares his thoughts directly with the audience, Siobhán Sleath‘s shifting pools of light and Thomas Ryder Payne‘s unsettling soundscape seem to isolate him from the rest of the world, giving physical shape to the poisonous thoughts infecting his mind before they spread. The result is not simply theatrical atmosphere but psychological architecture, allowing Shakespeare’s soliloquies to feel startlingly immediate.
Krystin Pellerin brings tremendous grace and emotional intelligence to Desdemona. Rather than presenting innocence as passivity, she creates a woman whose loyalty comes from strength rather than submission. Even as Othello’s accusations become increasingly impossible to comprehend, Pellerin (StratFest’s Casey and Diana) anchors Desdemona with unwavering compassion. She never stops trying to understand the man she loves, even as that love is turned against her. Her heartbreaking restraint becomes one of the production’s emotional anchors.

Yet ultimately, the emotional toll is delivered by Jessica B. Hill and her astonishing Emilia. Hill’s performance steadily gathers force until it explodes with righteous fury in the final scenes. Earlier moments, particularly her quiet bedside conversation with Desdemona, reveal extraordinary tenderness and compassion, creating an intimacy that makes everything that follows almost impossible to bear. When Emilia finally refuses to be silent, Hill (StratFest’s Sense and Sensibility) transforms Shakespeare’s words into something fiercely contemporary without ever forcing the connection. Her determination, moral clarity, and devastating grief become the emotional conscience of the production, delivering one of the evening’s most unforgettable performances.
Brian Dudkiewicz‘s striking scenic design plays an equally important role in telling that story. The abstract architecture evokes the remnants of grand Italian palaces while refusing literal realism. Towering curved and pointed frames rise and fall throughout the evening, their ragged crimson edges suggesting both religious iconography and physical wounds. They shift constantly, colliding, reforming, and rearranging themselves as relationships fracture and trust disappears. The changing landscape mirrors the instability growing inside Othello’s mind. Even seemingly practical scene changes carry dramatic meaning, particularly as Cassio (Jordin Hall) and his reputation crumble before our eyes, and the world itself appears to reorganize around Iago’s deception.

The costumes, designed by Gillian Gallow, effectively distinguish social status and military authority, though they feel somewhat standard rather than inventive. And the oversized leather pants worn by several of the male characters flatten rather than enhance their presence. It is one of the few visual choices that feels less inspired in the otherwise cohesive production.
The Tom Patterson Theatre proves an ideal home for this Othello. Its elongated thrust stage creates remarkable intimacy while still providing generous room for Kadri’s fluid staging. Characters cross the playing space with urgency, their entrances and exits carrying visible momentum that heightens the production’s relentless pace. Even moments of stillness seem charged with possibility because the audience remains so physically close to every glance, hesitation, and whispered lie.
What impressed me most throughout the evening was the remarkable clarity of Shakespeare’s language. Kadri strips away any temptation toward unnecessary ornamentation, allowing every phrase to land with precision and emotional weight. The famous warnings about “the green-eyed monster” resonate not because they have become literary quotations, but because we watch them unfold before us in painfully human terms. Each manipulation builds naturally upon the last until tragedy no longer feels avoidable.

That clarity extends to the production’s pacing. Running lean and tightly focused, Othello never lingers longer than necessary. Every scene pushes the emotional tension forward, every relationship deepens the central conflict, and every design element serves the storytelling. Few Shakespeare productions manage to feel this immediate without sacrificing the richness of the text. Kadri and his company accomplish both.
Perhaps that is why the opening image continues to stay with me. Roderigo (Rylan Wilkie) crawling upward from beneath the stage no longer feels like a clever piece of theatrical symbolism by evening’s end. It becomes the production’s entire philosophy. Jealousy never arrives from nowhere. It waits beneath the surface, searching patiently for fear, insecurity, and doubt to loosen the ground above it. Once released, it reshapes everything it touches. Stratford‘s extraordinary Othello understands that terrifying truth completely, giving Shakespeare’s tragedy an emotional urgency that feels as powerful now as it must have more than four centuries ago. It is devastating theatre, thrillingly performed, and one of the finest productions of the Festival‘s 2026 season.





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