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Wednesday, December 25, 2024 |
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'Romeo and Juliet' review: Plenty of style, but little love |
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A photo provided by Marc Brenner shows Tom Holland and Francesca Amewudah-Rivers in the title roles in Romeo and Juliet, directed by Jamie Lloyd, at the Duke of Yorks Theater in London. The production sold out in hours, but its understated rendering of the central romance may leave some theatergoers wanting more. (Marc Brenner via The New York Times)
by Houman Barekat
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LONDON.- As the male lead entered the stage in a new production of Romeo and Juliet in London, a single, very loud whoop erupted from the orchestra level. Nobody else joined in this is Britain, after all but the breach of decorum was telling. This particular Romeo is big-screen superstar Tom Holland, of Spider-Man fame, and his pulling power helped tickets for this shows run sell out within hours even though the actor playing Juliet wasnt cast until many weeks later.
Yet this Romeo and Juliet, directed by Jamie Lloyd (Sunset Boulevard, The Effect) and running at the Duke of Yorks Theater through Aug. 3, is no straightforward crowd-pleaser. The visuals are stripped-down and the staging unconventional; instead of indulging the giddy melodrama of young love, the emphasis is on brooding atmospherics. The show is slickly executed by a talented cast and production crew, but its understated rendering of the lovers romantic infatuation may leave some theatergoers wanting more.
The stage is dark, and entirely bare except for a sign that announces the setting in chunky capitals: VERONA. The performers, in monochrome streetwear, are illuminated by hazy spotlights. (Set design and costumes are by Soutra Gilmour.) In several scenes, they speak from fixed positions, stationed behind microphone stands, sometimes facing the audience rather than each other. The gloomy visuals are complemented by snatches of ambient techno and a dull humming sound that conjures a sense of anticipatory dread. To keep the audience on its toes, some scene changes are punctuated by blinding lights and obnoxiously loud flashbulb clacks. (The sound is by Ben and Max Ringham, the lighting by Jon Clark.)
The minimalist staging puts an extra onus on the actors to make the script shine, and they dont disappoint. Holland gives a controlled performance as Romeo, evoking the halting, hopeful awkwardness of a love-struck teenager with understatement. As Juliet, Francesca Amewudah-Rivers is similarly restrained: Tentative and inscrutable during the early phase of the courtship, she is at her best in the scenes in which she stands up to her father, Lord Capulet (Tomiwa Edun) as he pressures her to break it off with Romeo. In these moments, Amewudah-Rivers who is making her West End debut displays an impregnable abstractedness that rings true to the stubborn determination of adolescence.
The supporting cast is also less experienced than the illustrious leading man, but for the most part, you wouldnt know it. Edun convinces as the hectoring, overbearing patriarch. Freema Agyeman plays the Nurse, the affable go-between who enables the lovers forbidden affair, with a fine blend of sassy assertiveness and quasi-maternal tenderness. Ray Sesays Tybalt is impressively menacing and Nima Taleghani, with his wide-eyed and gentle bearing, is tenderly protective as Romeos trusty friend, Benvolio.
At times the spectacle feels more like a reading than a play, but some nifty camerawork injects dynamism. A camera operator intermittently appears onstage and films close-up footage of an actors face, which is relayed in real time onto a screen above the stage. This technique familiar from the work of directors such as Ivo van Hove and Christine Jatahy can sometimes feel frustratingly gratuitous, leading to a sense of visual clutter, but it feels smooth here. During some scenes, actors are filmed elsewhere in the theater in its foyer bar, corridors and balcony while others occupy the stage. This gives a fitting sense of simultaneity in a narrative replete with back-channel dialogues and conspiratorial maneuverings.
Lloyd has tried to condense the story to its essence, just as he did in his Olivier-winning take on Sunset Boulevard. To this end, one or two scenes such as the finale in which the Montagues and Capulets agree to set aside their differences after Romeo and Juliets deaths have been abridged. The productions artful subtlety is encapsulated in the tragic denouement, when the lovers deaths are conveyed simply by Holland and Amewudah-Rivers removing their mics.
The restrained portrayal of the lovers passion is aesthetically brave, but theres a downside: In his determination to eschew the easy charms of melodrama, Lloyd slightly undercooks the romance, which in turn diminishes our investment in its terrible ramifications. There are other Shakespeare plays that lend themselves better to this kind of high-concept treatment, because they are more psychologically complex. (A similarly stylized Macbeth, starring David Tennant, which ran at the Donmar Warehouse last year and will transfer to the West End in the fall, comes to mind.)
Leaving the theater, I encountered an excitable throng of mostly young fans hoping to catch a glimpse of Holland. His superstar status will attract a mainstream audience to this show. But what will they make of it? Spider-Man it most certainly aint.
Romeo and JulietThrough Aug. 3 at the Duke of Yorks Theater in London; thedukeofyorks.com.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
Editor Notes: (EDS: REPEATING to add art note. NOTE: Story first moved Sunday, May 26, at 9:16 p.m. ET.) ; (ART ADV: With photo.)
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