Romeo & Juliet On Motifs of Shakespeare

A Happy Ending, No Balcony—Wherefore Art Thou, Romeo?

John Heginbotham as Friar Lawrence wraps things up in Mark Morris’ <i>Romeo & Juliet, On Motifs of Shakespeare</i>.
Gene Schiavone
John Heginbotham as Friar Lawrence wraps things up in Mark Morris’ Romeo & Juliet, On Motifs of Shakespeare.

What do we expect from something called Romeo and Juliet—or, as in the case of Mark Morris’ new version, Romeo & Juliet, On Motifs of Shakespeare? We’ve all read it, seen it, heard the operas, watched the movies, enjoyed (or not) West Side Story. And then, of course, there are all the dance versions: Lavrovsky, MacMillan, Cranko and, if we’re lucky enough to have seen them, Ashton and Tudor. It’s embedded in our minds—and in ballet. The two roles almost all young ballerinas most eagerly hope to dance are Giselle and … Juliet.

Why? The scintillating verse of the young Shakespeare doesn’t explain this story’s grip on the world’s—or the dancer’s—imagination.  read more »