We all know the plays I’m talking about, right? The characters are usually family or very close friends and they enter the play facing hardship or strife. Conflicts may be aired but the True Meaning of Christmas finally gets through and everyone remembers the Reason for the Season and makes up in time to unwrap presents. Cue the Figgy Pudding and Curtain, we’re finished. Well, those don’t do it for me. I watched “Father Knows Best” episodes when I was a kid and those happy families on the stage only added to my confusion and neurosis. I’ll take the dysfunctional Plantagenet family in “The Lion in Winter” for Christmas instead. They show me I’m not insane. James Goldman’s”The Lion in Winter” is a fictional take on the real life Plantagenet family and their problems in 1183. The patriarch, Henry had been King of England nearly thirty years by then and time was catching up to him. It was time to reflect on his accomplishments, (he reigns over England and controls a good bit of France) think about retirement and (to quote Lear) ” shake all cares and business from our age, conferring them on younger strengths.” At least that’s…