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Romeo and Juliet review: Radical adaptation with the pace of a thriller

Toheeb Jimoh and Isis Hainsworth excel as director Rebecca Frecknall brings air of street menace to story of star-crossed lovers

June 29, 2023 09:08
Romeo and Juliet - Isis Hainsworth and Toheeb Jimoh - Credit Marc Brenner
1 min read

Romeo and Juliet
Almeida | ★★★★★

After reworking, rethinking and reimagining Cabaret, which over two years since it opened is still among the most sought-after tickets in the West End, director Rebecca Frecknall has turned her attention to Shakespeare’s most famous tragedy.

For my money the play is the Bard’s least interesting unless we are talking about the work it spawned by Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim who turned it into West Side Story, for many the greatest musical ever created.

But this is a Romeo and Juliet like you have never seen. In two uninterrupted hours the plot spirals to its end with the pace of a thriller.

On its way the foot soldiers of Verona’s two warring families pull knives on each other like gangs on British streets.

It all kicks off when Jack Riddiford’s showboating Mercutio takes on Jyuddah Jaymes’s coiled Tybalt.

Frecknall has taken a leaf out of the musical the play inspired with dance sequences. They may not quite be Jerome Robbins but tightly drilled as they are they do a similar job in conveying the energy of a generation who fight for their work.

They move across the shadowy stage in unison, bound by a herd instinct. However, there is no safety in numbers in a city where knives are drawn over a diss or the wrong look.

As always with this tragedy, the director’s vision depends on the alchemy of the actors in the title roles. And here Ted Lasso’s immensely likeable Toheeb Jimoh and fellow rising star Isis Hainsworth convey the in-the-moment impulse of being a teenager driven by passion.

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Theatre