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Theatre review: Romeo and Juliet

The National Theatre's filmed production of is so good, that it is difficult to imagine it would be better as a live performance

April 16, 2021 10:53
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2 min read

When Arthur Laurents, Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim got their hands on Romeo and Juliet, they improved on Shakespeare so much that I have never been able to view the play without wishing I was watching West Side Story.

But not with this new version of the tragedy, filmed by Simon Godwin one of the National Theatre’s star directors. Though he is now based in Washington DC where he runs the Shakespeare Theatre Company (or will when it reopens) Godwin and his cast spent 17 days shooting the play on the National’s Lyttelton stage.

Like many a show there the action starts with the giant, solid curtain separating horizontally, the great rupture revealing a set-less stage of relaxed actors clad in everyday clothes. This might be a rehearsal. When Josh O’Connor, who played Prince Charles in The Crown, smiles at Jessie Buckley, and she smiles back, it is not at all clear if they have begun being Romeo and Juliet.

Yet there is no time to dwell on this, or anything. Over its one and a half hours this production moves at such speed you may wonder what’s missing before quickly realising that everything essential is here. As Juliet and Romeo, Buckley and O’Connor generate a chemistry that dissolves the notion that Shakespeare’s lovers are naive to the point of being a bit thick. On the contrary. These lovers may be impetuous, but they are clever, knowing and savvy to the politics of the place and period in which they live.

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Theatre