Thanks to the fresh, new approach taken by PlayMakers Repertory
Company guest director Davis McCallum, the current PRC production
of William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet is
truly a timeless tragedy, set in a ruined Renaissance building
in Verona, Italy, in Shakespeare's time — or was it
yesterday? Moreover, the show is performed in an eye-catching array
of elaborate costumes and hats that combine Renaissance clothing
styles with modern accoutrements, such as baseball caps and motorcycle
leathers.
McCallum and choreographer Casey Sams, fight choreographer Craig
Turner, and vocal coach Bonnie Raphael do yeoman's work
in freshening this familiar script and injecting some delightful
surprises
that enliven the action. Set designer Scott Bradley's magnificent
multilevel set and costume designer Olivera Gajic's wondrous
wardrobe for the crackerjack cast are truly terrific; but it is
lighting designer Matt Richards who steals the show, with his moody
atmospheric lighting — particularly his use of bare lightbulbs,
dangling from above, to simulate a starry sky or the candle-lit
tomb of the Capulets.
Director Davis McCallum has New York actor Matt Dickson and PRC
actress Janie Brookshire play Romeo Montague and Juliet Capulet — most
expressively and with lots of teenaged angst — as impetuous
youngsters who fall head over heels in love despite the epic blood-feud
between their two families. PlayMakers mainstay Ray Dooley is terrific
as Romeo’s sympathetic friend and confessor Friar Laurence,
and Kathryn Hunter-Williams is highly amusing as Juliet's
Nurse and co-conspirator in deceiving her unsuspecting parents
about her secret romance with Romeo.
Justin Adams adds a charismatic characterization of Romeo's
friend Mercutio, and David McClutchey is equally provocative as
Juliet's kinsman the fiery Tybalt. (The unusually vigorous
swordplay between Mercutio and Tybalt is one of the show's
high points.) Also providing strong support in this must-see drama
are Jeffrey Blair Cornell as Capulet, Joy Jones as Lady Capulet,
Wesley Schultz as Benvolio, Marshall Spann as Juliet's erstwhile
suitor the Countie Paris, David Adamson as Montague, and Prince
T. Bowie as the increasingly exasperated Duke of Verona, who is
furious that the Montagues and Capulets and their followers have
turned his streets into battlegrounds.
Romeo and Juliet brilliantly overlaps two separate scenes
in which Romeo and Friar Laurence and Juliet and her Nurse are
discussing their forbidden romance. Director Davis McCallum also
makes some of the familiar plot twists seem fresh and new. His
only misstep is the overwrought staging of the discovery of Juliet's
body in her bedroom after she takes the sleeping potion to feign
death, but the rest of the evening pays more than sufficient dramatic
dividends to amply reward PlayMakers Repertory Company patrons
for that minor miscalculation.
PlayMakers Repertory Company presents Romeo
and Juliet Tuesday-Saturday, Oct. 2-6 and 9-13, at 8 p.m.;
and Sunday, Oct. 7 and 14, at 2 p.m. in the Paul Green Theatre
in the Center for Dramatic Art at the University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill. $20-$32, except all tickets $10 for Tuesday Community
Nights (general admission seating). 919/962-PLAY (7529) via the
presenter's site. NOTE 1 : PlayMakers
offers assisted-listening devices and wheelchair access at every
show, and Arts Access, Inc. of Raleigh will audio-describe PRC's
8 p.m. Oct. 9th All Access performance, which also features
Braille playbills, large-print playbills, and a tactile tour
(arranged in advance) for patrons with impaired vision. NOTE
2: There will be special Educational Matinees at 10:30
a.m. on Oct. 3rd, 5th, and 9th, followed by group discussions
between students and members of the PlayMakers cast and artistic
staff. (For details, visit http://www.playmakersrep.org/tickets/studentmatinee.aspx.
To make reservations, telephone PRC's interim director
of education and outreach Jeff Meanza at 919/962-2491.) NOTE
3: There
will be post-show discussions Oct. 3rd and 7th with the Romeo
and Juliet dramaturg Adam Versenyi. NOTE 4: On
Oct. 13th and 14th, there will be FREE interactive MINDPLAY psychoanalytic
discussions, hosted by PRC and sponsored by the Lucy Daniels
Foundation
and the N.C. Psychoanalytic Society,
during which a psychoanalyst will explore emotion, character,
and relationships in the play. PlayMakers Repertory Company: http://www.playmakersrep.org/.
Shakespeare Resources (courtesy the University of Virginia):
http://etext.virginia.edu/shakespeare/ [inactive
3/10].
E-Text (courtesy UVa): http://etext.virginia.edu/toc/modeng/public/ShaRJF.html2 (1623
First Folio Edition) and http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/toc/modeng/public/MobRome.html (1866
Globe Edition).