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Chapter Twenty-Seven - Romeu e Julieta (reprise)

Grupo Galpão at the Globe, again

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2014

Susan Bennett
Affiliation:
University of Calgary
Christie Carson
Affiliation:
Royal Holloway, University of London
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Summary

This chapter is a reflection on my personal experience of attending Romeu e Julieta at the Globe on two occasions separated by a dozen years. I am an advocate of this production, and therefore its critic. Objectivity is sometimes thought necessary in criticism, but my responding motivation for this particular production arises precisely from an experience of powerful involvement in it. And any insight I have to offer derives from that same involvement. When I first saw Romeu e Julieta at the 2000 Globe to Globe Festival, I was a member of staff at the Globe. I remember sobbing uncontrollably at more than one point during that performance, and the wry smiles on the faces of favourite former colleagues I spotted in the same audience twelve years later told me that others remembered this too. Indeed, the return to the Globe of Romeu e Julieta in 2012 was for me a real reprise, a return to a beloved space, a pilgrimage to the scene of a cherished memory. And Romeu e Julieta is a production which understands and trades openly on the theatrical value of such feelings of nostalgia; it is a remarkable production in dialogue with the ghosts of its own past.

Grupo Galpão's work on Romeu e Julieta began in 1991. David S. George, who saw this production at the 1993 Festival de Curitiba in southern Brazil, praised the way the production ‘resurrected Shakespeare's play from the dust of accumulated romantic clichés to the delight and fascination of audiences and critics alike’. The same show has been in and out of production for nearly twenty years since that review, and with the 2012 World Shakespeare Festival/Globe to Globe season production coinciding with Grupo Galpão's thirtieth anniversary as a company, I wondered whether the UK press would this time hail Galpão as global theatre veterans, or dismiss them as yesterday's news. Maddy Costa's generally positive review for the Guardian had a single reservation: ‘There is much to admire in this production, but it is let down by a fundamental flaw.

Type
Chapter
Information
Shakespeare beyond English
A Global Experiment
, pp. 212 - 220
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2013

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References

George, David S., Flash and Crash Days: Brazilian Theater in the Postdictatorship Period, Latin American Studies, vol. xix (New York and London: Garland, 2000), p. 129Google Scholar
Costa, Maddy, ‘Romeu e Julieta – Review, Guardian, 22 May 2012
Billington, Michael, ‘Romeu e Julieta – Review’, Guardian, 15 July 2000
Bogart, Anne and Landau, Tina, The Viewpoints Book: A Practical Guide to Viewpoints and Composition (New York: Theatre Communications Group, 2005)Google Scholar
Worthen, W.B., Shakespeare and the Force of Modern Performance (Cambridge University Press, 2003), p. 166CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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