Questo sito non supporta completamente il tuo browser. Ti consigliamo di utilizzare Edge, Chrome, Safari o Firefox.

Family Feud

Shakespearean purists, leave your expectations at the door. With his rendition of Sergei Prokofiev’s “Romeo and Juliet,” first staged in 2009 to mark the 10th anniversary of K-Ballet Tokyo, Tetsuya Kumakawa plays freely with details from Shakespeare’s tragedy to create a psychological, theatrical study of doomed love. The streamlined, physical storytelling resonates until the last devastating scene.

 

Performance

K-Ballet Tokyo: “Romeo and Juliet” by Tetsuya Kumakawa

Place

Bunkamura Orchard Hall, Tokyo, Japan, March 8, 2026

Words

Kris Kosaka

Shoya Ishibashi and Sena Hidaka in “Romeo and Juliet” by Tetsuya Kumakawa. Photograph courtesy of K-Ballet Tokyo

Kumakawa excels at dramatic characterization. Our hero is not a love-sick depressant, mooning over the unattainable, convent-bound Rosaline. Danced with youthful aplomb by Shoya Ishibashi, the opening scene establishes Romeo as a creative free-spirit. Ishibashi touts a mandolin and flirts with pretty Capulet girls—led by his favorite, the saucy, independent Rosaline, Saya Okubo. It’s a festive choreographic reveal, the quick, coquettish footwork of the Capulet girls a perfect foil to Ishibashi’s sportive response. 

Scenes in the town square are also full of verve and excitement—one early dance highlight was Ishibashi’s pas de trois with Benvolio (Aoba Kubota) and Mercutio (Ibuki Okaniwa). A powerful male variation, it demanded skillful execution along with dramatic energy. Quirky, physical tells—like a madcap shrug to end Okaniwa’s leaps or spins—characterize Mercutio, while Kubota adopts a compelling steadiness.

When the violent brawl of the Montagues and Capulets finally erupts, it’s the Capulet women who start the fight. Led by Okubo as Rosaline—a love interest not only for Romeo but Tybalt, too—the women are strong and stroppy, their tension with the Montague girls realistic. It’s no surprise when the clash ratchets up when Tybalt, Masaya Yamamoto, arrives.

Sena Hidaka and Yuko Arai in “Romeo and Juliet” by Tetsuya Kumakawa. Photograph courtesy of K-Ballet Tokyo

Sena Hidaka and Yuko Arai in “Romeo and Juliet” by Tetsuya Kumakawa. Photograph courtesy of K-Ballet Tokyo

One masterstroke of Kumakawa’s choreography comes in the sword-fighting, here and repeatedly throughout the ballet. The men spar with an athletic violence manifested in quick leaps and sweeping arms, a clash of torsos that morph to dazzling spins away, only to circle each other again in mirrored antagonistic steps. 

The spirited characterization continues with Juliet, danced by Sena Hidaka. Her first short solo establishes an effervescent, playful tone in a flurry of brisk leaps and impish footwork. When shown a portrait of Paris as her potential spouse, she outright refuses her parents without a glimmer of the typical ingénue we expect in Shakespeare’s telling. 

Other dance highlights in Act One include the famous meet-cute at the ball. The young lovers see each other as Romeo observes from the second floor when Juliet dutifully dances with Paris (Daichi Tanaka). Although separated by the crowd, Ishibashi and Hidaka echo each other’s steps in perfect symmetry. Later, the balcony pas de deux offers up a physical allegory of violent passion, from Ishibashi’s jubilant turning jetes to Hidaka’s mad leaps into his arms, catapulting up into a reverse lift. It’s seven minutes of boldly tumultuous emotion. 

 

Aoba Kubota, Shoya Ishibashi, and Ibuki Okaniwa in “Romeo and Juliet” by Tetsuya Kumakawa. Photograph courtesy of K-Ballet Tokyo

Aoba Kubota, Shoya Ishibashi, and Ibuki Okaniwa in “Romeo and Juliet” by Tetsuya Kumakawa. Photograph courtesy of K-Ballet Tokyo

Act Two requires more acting than dance, although there are several standout performances, such as Benvolio/Kubota’s exciting solo in the town square before a surly, drunk Tybalt/Yamamoto enters for the tragic showdown with Mercutio/Okaniwa.  

Juliet’s poignant solo with the sleeping drug was also impressive. The discordant scattering of notes in Prokofiev’s score aligns with Hidaka’s stumbling grace, the delicate balances manifesting her uncertainty and fear until an image of Romeo gives her strength.  

The rest is a relentless charge towards their star-crossed fate. No last entrance by Friar Lawrence, no reconciliation of the two families, it is an undistilled lover’s tragedy. Fittingly, the curtain call only included the main dancers, a somber, pared down approach that matched the stark devastation of the final scene. 

This season also sees the launch of a new initiative in the  company, “Global Season Principal,” opening up roles to interested international dancers, formalizing K-Ballet Tokyo as a creative global hub to bring dancers together and enrich the company moving forward. Later in the production run, Juliet will be danced by Ukrainian superstar, Anastasia Matvienko and Elizaveta Kokoreva, the Bolshoi Ballet’s young prima ballerina. With Yolanda Sonnebend’s gorgeous set and costume design, the staging pleases the eye even as it stabs the heart with repeated pain. 

Kris Kosaka


Kris Kosaka is a writer and educator based in Kamakura, Japan. A lifelong ballet fan and studio rat in her youth, she's been contributing to the Japan Times since 2009. She writes across culture, but especially in dance, opera and literature. 

subscribe to the latest in dance


“Uncommonly intelligent, substantial coverage.”

Your weekly source for world-class dance reviews, interviews, articles, and more.

Already a paid subscriber? Login

comments

Ricorda che i commenti devono essere approvati prima di essere pubblicati

Featured

A Grand Swan Lake
REVIEWS | Steve Sucato

A Grand Swan Lake

Like most new adaptations of existing story ballet classics, the world premiere of artistic director James Sofranko’s “Swan Lake” for Grand Rapids Ballet retained the bones of the original it was based on.

Continua a leggere
Family Feud
REVIEWS | Kris Kosaka

Family Feud

Shakespearean purists, leave your expectations at the door. With his rendition of Sergei Prokofiev’s “Romeo and Juliet,” first staged in 2009 to mark the 10th anniversary of K-Ballet Tokyo, Tetsuya Kumakawa plays freely with details from Shakespeare’s tragedy to create a psychological, theatrical study of doomed love.

Continua a leggere
Moments Musicaux
REVIEWS | Kris Kosaka

Moments Musicaux

From charming stagings for children to edgy dance theater, Un Yamada Company, a creative collective based in Tokyo, has built a reputation for consistently innovative productions.

Continua a leggere
Good Subscription Agency