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Die Another Day

In defiance of the stars overhead, and destiny foretold, Joseph Caley’s Romeo falls, and utterly so, for Grace Carroll’s Juliet, on the opening night of the Australian Ballet’s Melbourne season of John Cranko’s “Romeo and Juliet.” Though I know the outcome of the star-cross’d lovers, still, or rather, because of my attachment to the universal tale, I arrive willing to be swept off my feet, like Juliet herself, such is the lure of the Shakespearean tragedy.

Performance

The Australian Ballet: “Romeo & Juliet” by John Cranko

Place

The Regent Theatre, Melbourne, Australia, June 6, 2026

Words

Gracia Haby

Grace Caroll and Joseph Caley in “Romeo and Juliet” by John Cranko. Photograph by Daniel Boud

Whether you identify with the lovers unwavering resolve, committing suicide in each other’s embrace, or their struggle for freedom, or, widening the frame, the tragedy of social justice or poetic justice, “Romeo and Juliet” will outlive us all.[1] And in Cranko’s hands, staged by Yseult Lendvai and Mark Kay, what a glorious ‘outliving’ it shall prove, as Stephen Baynes’s Friar Laurence, memento mori in hand, communes with a skull, before offering forth, what transpires, a perilous stratagem. Questions of mortality and duality abound in all good tellings of this beloved tale, and Cranko’s version offers this in spades. There must be symbols of duration and decay, as the characters gallop to their known catastrophic ending. Death is a small price to pay for such a love. 

Cranko’s choreography conveys the urgency of the story in the steps that repeat as Sergei Prokofiev’s ground-breaking, then, heartbreaking, still, score also repeats, though, as you can never step on the same crack twice, in every repeat, a new layer is woven. From Juliet’s initial youthful steps, to budding love, rapture, and finally, totality within the dark folds of the family crypt, the progression is such that each dancer in the role can, like Juliet herself does, take matters into their own hands. As Carroll’s Juliet looks for the first and last time at the sunrise, the future appears momentarily open and undecided.[2] As she asserts her freedom, soloist Carroll ingrains her Juliet’s self-determination with a knowing that belies both her and her character’s years. Together with Caley, their youthful refusal to regard mortality draws me in.

Serena Graham and Jarryd Madden in “Romeo and Juliet” by John Cranko. Photograph by Daniel Boud

Serena Graham and Jarryd Madden in “Romeo and Juliet” by John Cranko. Photograph by Daniel Boud

With set and costume design by Jürgen Rose, I find myself once more in the Marketplace of Verona, thanks to Rose’s attention to detail and humility.[3] Delivering the needed two-sides-of-one-coin, Rose and Cranko together ensure that one moment I can be happily watching a tumble of elastic and colourful acrobats before the carnival setting gives way to fatal conflict. Nothing is fixed, though tradition and societal rules would have it otherwise. Everything, life, especially, is fleeting. Jarryd Madden’s elegantly reserved and menacing Tybalt is in beautiful contrast to Drew Hedditch’s Mercutio. To Madden’s measured, stalking presence, Hedditch ripples his arms as if he, too, is a rubber-limbed, harvest-time acrobat. Bobbing his head in playful jest, death is imminent. Joined by Benvolio’s Cameron Holmes, to good luck, misfortune awaits on the flipside.

Grace Caroll and Joseph Caley in “Romeo and Juliet” by John Cranko. Photograph by Daniel Boud

Grace Caroll and Joseph Caley in “Romeo and Juliet” by John Cranko. Photograph by Daniel Boud

To light there is dark. To revelry askew there is formality. To progressive love there is feudal tradition.[4] That high spirits collide with melancholy at the intersection of opposing aspects, to me, is at the heart of “Romeo and Juliet.” Orchestra Victoria, under conductor Jessica Gethin, ensure Prokofiev’s score pulls at the strings, as Caley and Carroll prove in possession of the light. Though chiefly seen together by moonlight, at Juliet’s balcony or earlier at the Capulet’s ball, Caley and Carroll, through each other, find their respective freedoms and stake their lives upon it. 

When conducting the balcony pas de deux, as conductor Jonathan Lo explains, “there’s such a heartbeat to it. You have to have that sense of hesitation—and then a commitment. But that’s what’s so rewarding about conducting this score, and working with multiple couples, is that everyone falls in love differently.”[5] And with that I look forward to returning to the Regent Theatre to catch Callum Linnane’s last performance with the Australian Ballet before he returns to his new role as Principal Artist with Hamburg Ballet.[6] I look forward to seeing how young love rests and shapes anew Sharni Spencer and Linnane, Juliet and her Romeo, one more time. To live, love, and die another day.

 

Gracia Haby


Using an armoury of play and poetry as a lure, Gracia Haby is an artist besotted with paper. Her limited edition artists’ books, and other works hard to pin down, are often made collaboratively with fellow artist, Louise Jennison. Their work is in the collections of the National Gallery of Australia and state libraries throughout Australia to the Tate (UK). Gracia Haby is known to collage with words as well as paper.

footnotes


  1. Paul A. Kottman, “Defying the Stars: Tragic Love as the Struggle for Freedom in ‘Romeo and Juliet’” Shakespeare Quarterly, vol. 63, no. 1, 2012, pp. 1–38. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/41350167, accessed June 7, 2026.
  2. Robert Metcalf Smith, “Three Interpretations of ‘Romeo and Juliet’,” The Shakespeare Association Bulletin, vol. 23, no. 2, 1948, pp. 59–77. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/23675399, accessed June 7, 2026.
  3.  Jürgen Rose: “One has to be humble and bring a sense of respect when dealing with the singers, actors or dancers. That is most important. You are not allowed to put yourself into the limelight. It is the performers. It is all in the service of the theatre piece one is working on. The costumes and the décor are there to help the performers perfect their roles… That should be part of your DNA. When the curtain rises you are not on stage. It makes no difference if it is sung, danced or spoken on the stage, we are there to serve the work as a whole.” Annette Bopp, “I see the whole picture before me,” tanznetz, August 25, 2022, https://www.tanznetz.de/de/article/2022/i-see-whole-picture-me, accessed June 6, 2026.
  4.  “Sergei Radlov, who commissioned [Prokofiev’s] work, made his perspective on Shakespeare’s play explicit: he described the ballet as ‘a struggle for the right to love by young, strong and progressive people battling against feudal traditions, and feudal outlooks on marriage and family’.” Rose Mulready, “The Right to Love,” The Australian Ballet “Romeo and Juliet” 2026 program, p.22.
  5.  Rose Mulready, “The Right to Love,” The Australian Ballet “Romeo and Juliet” 2026 program, p.26.
  6.  Heather Bloom, “Bright Star: Principal Artist Callum Linnane’s next step,” Behind Ballet, April 14, 2026, Heath https://australianballet.com.au/blog/bright-star, accessed June 4, 2026.

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