Simon Godwin Directs Ibsen’s Seldom Produced Psychological Drama The Wild Duck at the Shakespeare Theatre Company
The Wild Duck
Shakespeare Theatre Company
Jordan Wright
October 24, 2025
Special to The Zebra

Maaike Laanstra-Corn (Hedwig), David Patrick Kelly (Old Ekdal), Nick Westrate (Hjalmar Ekdal), Melanie Field (Gina Ekdal), Alexander Hurt (Gregers Werle) in The Wild Duck (Photo/Gerry Goodstein)
Seeing Henrik Ibsen’s play The Wild Duck was a first for me and, according to director Simon Goodwin, it is rarely produced, though its impact ushered in a new dynamic in realism in the theatre. Its portrayal of edgily complicated family life was a groundbreaking concept in the Victorian era. Known in the late 19th century as “Modern Drama”, Ibsen’s work affected and inspired playwrights such as August Strindberg, Anton Chekhov and George Bernard Shaw who wrote in 1887, “Where shall I find an epithet magnificent enough for The Wild Duck... to look on with horror and pity at a profound tragedy, shaking with laughter all the time at an irresistible comedy…”
The innovative nature of such a play for its time, The Wild Duck reveals the uncomfortable complexities and sticky realities of family life. The drama blends seamlessly with irony and humor as it meets at the intersection of an upper-class family and a working-class family whose sons have become close friends. Gregers Werle, scion of a wealthy family, and Hjalmar, a family portrait photographer is married to Gina, a former housekeeper to Gregers’s father. The men have known each other since childhood and reunite at a dinner party at the lavish home of the Werle family.
As he is aging, Gregers’s father, the widower Hakon Werle, expects his son to take over the sawmill business. But Gregers, turns him down, accusing him of being cruel to Hjalmar’s family. Meanwhile, the lively Mrs. Berthe Sørby is being courted by Hakon with an eye to marriage. At the party, Hjalmar’s father, the elder Ekdal, an employee of the sawmill, suddenly appears. He is shunned by his son who is embarrassed by his rough appearance and is shown the door. We soon learn there are scandalous family secrets, reputations to be restored, and evil undercurrents in both families that will be revealed. With all the twists and turns and shocking revelations, this psychological drama is akin to a Hitchcock movie!
Gina, Hjalmar, the couple’s young daughter, the sweet and precocious, Hedwig, and the old man, an avid hunter, live in the Ekdal home cum photography studio. They keep a menagerie of pigeons, chickens, rabbits and Hedwig’s beloved wild duck in a loft. Rescued by her grandfather, the wild duck is a Nordic symbol from folklore as the only creature at home in sea, sky and on earth.
Self-exiled from the family home, the piously manipulative Gregers, on a treacherous mission to reveal a difficult truth, comes to live with the Werle family and sets in motion a horror that cannot be undone. “You have a poison in you,” Gregers admonishes Hjalmar whose growing madness threatens his entire family. “Chronic righteousness is a national disease,” Relling warns Gregers. All this in the first act! The second act quickly becomes everyone’s undoing, though I won’t spoil it for my readers.
Faultless performances and keen direction from an experienced hand, grace this uniquely haunting Ibsen play.

David Patrick Kelly (Old Ekdal), Maaike Laanstra-Corn (Hedwig), Melanie Field (Gina Ekdal)*, and Robert Stanton (Hakon Werle). (Photos by Gerry Goodstein* and Hollis King)
With Alexander Hurt as Gregers Werle; Robert Stanton as Hakon Werle; Nick Westrate as Hjalmar Ekdal; Melanie Field as Gina Ekdal; Mahira Kakkar as Mrs. Sørby; Maaike Laanstra-Corn as Hedwig; David Patrick Kelly as Old Ekdal; Alexander Sovronsky as Jensen; Bobby Plasencia as Mr. Flor; Matthew Saldivar as Relling/Captain Balle; and Katie Broad as Peterson.
Adapted by David Eldridge; Scenic Design by Andrew Boyce; Costume Design by Heather C. Freedman; Lighting Design by Stacey Derosier; Sound Design by Darron L. West; Production Dramaturg, Jonathan Kalb; Wig & Hair Design by Satellite Wigs, Inc.
Through November 16th at Shakespeare Theatre Company’s Klein Theatre, 450 7th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20004. For tickets and information call the box office at 202.547.1122 or visit www.ShakespeareTheatre.org.
