Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare. Canberra REP.
28 July - 13 August 2022: Season: Wed - Sat, 8pm, Matinees: 6, 7, 13 August, 2pm
Reviewed by Frank McKone
Directors - Kelly Roberts and Chris Zuber
Cast
Romeo - Pippin Carrol; Juliet - Annabelle Hansen; Capulet - Richard Manning
Lady Capulet - Crystal Mahon; Nurse/Lady Montague - Tracy Noble
Tybalt - Francis Shanahan; Gregory/Paris - Marcel Cole
Sampson - Grayson Woodham; Friar Lawrence/ Prince - Ryan Street
Mercutio - Anneka Van Der Velde; Balthasar - Lachlan Herring
Abram - Blue Hyslop; Benvolio - Mischa Rippon
A Montague/Apothocary - Tasman Griffiths
Designers
Set – Christopher Zuber; Sound – Justin Mullins; Original Composition and Performance – Richard Manning; Lighting – Michael Moloney; Wardrobe: Costume Designer – Jennie Norberry; Coordinator – Jeanette Brown.
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The directing and design concept of Canberra Rep’s Romeo and Juliet is original and very successful. The set design is a good place to begin to understand how and why.
The set for REP's 2022 production of Romeo and Juliet Photo: Helen Drum |
Starting
perhaps from Shakespeare’s placing the play specifically in Verona,
this image of colonnades is about city life where action is constrained
by the spaces between, around and behind walls. Conflict is easily
generated between houses literally; or between “Two households, both
alike in dignity” as the Prologue says.
How ‘dignified’ are they
when the Prince must report “Three civil brawls, bred of an airy word,
by thee, old Capulet, and Montague, have thrice disturb’d the quiet of
our streets”, threatening “If ever you disturb our streets again, your
lives shall pay the forfeit of the peace.”
The moving of the
seeming solid walls and doorways, on secret silent rollers, becomes a
character in the play itself. The unadorned style contrasts
symbolically with the often too, too florid language – in anger, say,
when old Capulet will make his daughter be married to Paris; in
irresponsible fun from Mercutio; in fury because of so-called insult
from Tybalt; from Romeo on first sighting Juliet:
“It seems she hangs upon the cheek of night
Like a rich jewel in an Ethiope’s ear;
Beauty too rich for use, for earth too dear!”
The
acting matched the hard-edge scenery in what I would call
‘presentational’ style, so that the audience is kept at some distance
from the emotional experiences of the characters. As the first act was
ending I felt a bit concerned that – though it was working very well for
the storytelling, often with a sense of comedy – the second half would
need to change gear.
And this was done very well. The opening
after a relaxed interval went immediately into the horror of the young
people actually knifing each other. Using a kind of ‘modern’ dress and
dispensing with swords was powerful. I had at first some qualms about
Mercutio being played by a woman – whose wit was certainly up to the
mark – but when she stabbed and was stabbed, the feeling was awful to
watch; and then more than justified Romeo’s defence of her and his
killing of Tybalt. From here on, the seriousness and depth of feelings
were established right through to the dreadful end.
The casting
was well balanced. Appropriately no roles were allowed to become ‘star’
parts, though it would be unfair not to mention Tracy Noble’s frantic
nurse trying so hard to keep everything together; and the rather
surprising Friar Lawrence as played by Ryan Street – sometimes quite
wildly almost ‘losing it’, frustrated with these people, rather than
being the more usual philosophical adviser.
Overall, then, this
is a realistic Shakespeare – a picture of social dysfunction, when love
is not allowed to have its proper place. Despite old Capulet and
Montague shaking hands and talking of a golden statue to commemorate
Juliet, this production made the final lines feel like the truth we can
never avoid:
For never was a story of more woe
Than this of Juliet and her Romeo.
Pippin Carroll as Romeo and Annabelle Hansen as Juliet. Photo: Helen Drum Canberra CityNews |
© Frank McKone, Canberra
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