Just as
memories of two ill-fated revivals of Shakespeare’s tragedy of young love—one on
Broadway and one Off—have begun to fade, along comes yet another earnest but similarly unsuccessful
attempt to bring this beautiful play to life. Unlike its predecessors, each of
which featured a movie star—Orlando Bloom on Broadway, Elizabeth Olsen Off—the
current version, given by a company dubbed Shakespeare in the Square, employs a
cast entirely made up of unknown young actors who started their ambitious
venture as a club when they were students at NYU; they're now in their fifth season, although this is my first encounter with them. The Square in their name, of course, would be Washington Square Park, just across the street from
their present venue in the Judson Gym, where they’ll open an outdoors staging
of their next shot at the Bard, MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING (another play with a surfeit of local stagings), in April.
Elise Kibler, Taylor Myers. Photo: Erik Choquette. |
Taylor Myers, Constantine Malahias. Photo: Erik Choquette. |
From left: Jack De Sanz, Chris Dooley, Elise Kibler. Photo: Erik Choquette. |
Taylor Myers, Elise Kibler. Photo: Erik Choquette. |
There’s no
attempt to speak the lines for their poetic values, the emphasis being on
sounding as colloquial and everyday as possible. This often helps make the
lines more comprehensible, but too many lines are muffled. Most difficult to hear (confirmed
by my guest, a young high school English teacher) was Ms. Kibler, whose weak projection isn’t helped much by
the pace at which she gabbles. Hopefully, she ’ll raise the bar when she makes her Broadway debut this spring in the revival of THE HEIDI CHRONICLES.
Shakespeare
in the Square as a company (38 members are listed in the program) appears to be chock-full of energy, spirit, ambition, and determination. There’s a sweet and
upbeat vibe when you enter their space. It's their intention to make this into a “rowdy,” immersive event, with lots of audience participation, in order to recreate the atmosphere of an Elizabethan production. The cast sings to musical accompaniment in a sort of pre-show mini-concert, and there's more of the same during the intermission.
A small number of audience members are recruited to stand around (looking uncomfortable) during the ballroom scene when Romeo first meets Juliet, and there's also the occasional pointing to people in the audience as a way of underlining something mentioned in the dialogue. But I doubt you'd find the atmosphere rowdy. Perhaps this kind of thing works better and more consistently out of doors than it does in Judson Gym, and perhaps the company will succeed not only in being rowdy but also in being more theatrically effective their next time out.
A small number of audience members are recruited to stand around (looking uncomfortable) during the ballroom scene when Romeo first meets Juliet, and there's also the occasional pointing to people in the audience as a way of underlining something mentioned in the dialogue. But I doubt you'd find the atmosphere rowdy. Perhaps this kind of thing works better and more consistently out of doors than it does in Judson Gym, and perhaps the company will succeed not only in being rowdy but also in being more theatrically effective their next time out.
Gym at Judson
55 Washington Square
South, NYC
Through February 8