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Stuttgart Ballet
Romeo and Juliet
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Keats said, "A thing of beauty is a joy forever," and,
while Shakespeares Romeo and Juliet hasnt quite been around forever,
chances are it will be. A joy it certainly is, inspiring composers from Tchaikovsky to
Leonard Bernstein, plus painters, playwrights and choreographers down through the years.
Perhaps foremost among the latter is the late John Cranko, who originally made his
evening-long interpretation on the La Scala Ballet in 1958, with the legendary Carla
Fracci as Juliet. Four years later, Cranko presented a reworked version with his own
Stuttgart Ballet and Marcia Haydee and Ray Barra in the title roles. Since then,
Crankos Romeo has become a staple of ballet companies from Canada to
Finland to Australia. A rare West Coast visit on the Stuttgarts current tour (under the artistic direction of Canadian Reid Anderson, a
former Stuttgart dancer and Cranko protege) has afforded California audiences a
chance to see this work in all its glory, many for the first time.
Set to Prokofievs evocative score, Crankos version distills
Shakespeares tragic tale into 12 short scenes, swiftly changing thanks to Jurgen
Roses wonderfully workable set design. The first, set in the marketplace of Verona
where the warring families of Montague and Capulet first come to blows, has the look of a
Renaissance painting perhaps a Paola della Francesca with the umber
background punctuated by the dark browns and bright oranges of the costumes, also by Rose.
The outstanding feature of this scene is the swordplay; deftly choreographed to look less
danced than real. Here the moody, lovesick Romeo (Filip Barankiewicz at the Berkeley
opening) is introduced along with the mocking, quicksilver Mercutio ((Thomas Lempertz) and
the imperious, quarrelsome Tybalt (Ibrahim Onal).
With the fall of a backdrop, the scene changes to Juliets bedroom
where she teases her nurse while her mother brings in her first ball gown. Three casts
rotate during the run of this ballet in each city it visits but its hard to imagine
a more magical Juliet than the graceful, lovely Sue Jin Kang. An exquisite dancer, she
also is an actress, starting out as a child at play and maturing into a woman in love and
a tragic figure in the space of two hours.
Segue to the ball, where the lovers meet, and then to the balcony where
they declare their passion. The balcony scene is the familiar centerpiece of Romeo and
Juliet and there isnt a finer one than Crankos around. It is a thing
composed of moonlight and young lovers dreams. These may be "star-crossed
lovers" but both Barankiewicz and Kang have real star power. A final fillip closes
the scene when Romeo hoists himself up to the balcony rail for one last kiss.
Act Two opens in the marketplace with a joyous tarantella. It is
Carnival and a troupe of mummers enlivens the already-bustling scene. Jorge Nozal danced a
particularly funny and agile Mummer King, his antics delighting the audience as much as
the townsfolk in the square. But, after the brief, simple wedding in Friar Laurences
cell, the merry market turns into the site of a murderous brawl. Tybalt enters in a
particularly confrontational mood. He challenges Romeo who refuses to fight the cousin of
his newly wedded wife, so Mercutio does the honors--a fatal decision but worth it for
Lempertzs death scene, as full of lovable bravado as was his characters life.
Tybalt, on the other hand, flops around the stage like a fish out of water after being
stabbed by Romeos avenging sword. You can fault the choreographer here because the
only thing more melodramatic than that is the overwrought mourning of Lady Capulet
(Melinda Witham) who actually rides offstage on Tybalts bier.
The story proceeds swiftly from here to its tragic end, the only
extended dancing being for the lovers as they part at sunrise in Juliets bedroom
and, moments later, when they part permanently in the Capulet tomb. Particularly moving
was Juliets solo as she first fears, then determines to take, the sleeping potion
that will make her appear to be dead. High marks to choreographer Cranko for cutting to
the chase, eliminating Romeos flight to Padua, the business of buying the poison,
and the waylaid messenger. In fact, all the boring parts of the original (most of them
involving Friar Laurence, who is reduced to a walk on here) are gone.
March 28, 2003 Suzanne Weiss