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Romeo Revealed

Rudolf Nureyev’s “Romeo and Juliet” is built with a finely calibrated balance of choreographic structure, theatrical intelligence, and historical awareness. The marvel is that, for all its formal control and compositional rigour, emotion still breaks through with extraordinary force. Sergei Prokofiev’s score, with its succession of instantly recognisable musical episodes, is matched by a vividly articulated stage world shaped by cinematic imagination. Ezio Frigerio’s sumptuous Renaissance Verona, whose shifting architecture seems to possess a life and language of its own, is populated by a richly characterised human world that lends the drama social depth and expressive force, ensuring that it never collapses into psychological simplification or overstated realism.

Performance

Paris Opera Balllet: “Romeo and Juliet” by Rudolf Nureyev

Place

Ópera Bastille, Paris, April 2, 2026

Words

Elsa Giovanna Simonetti

Paul Marque and Sae Eun Park in “Romeo and Juliet” by Rudolf Nureyev. Photograph by Julien Benhamou

Shortly after the funeral procession of a plague victim has set a tone of impending doom, Romeo enters for his solo, and it becomes clear that we are in Rudolf Nureyev’s universe, where male protagonists are revealed through intimate, soul-stirring monologues rendered in dance. Paul Marque is, in many ways, an ideal Romeo for this vision: technically impeccable, apparently restrained in his emotional expression, yet deeply moving precisely because feeling emerges unexpectedly from within formal precision. Sae Eun Park, as Juliet, is so profoundly engaged, and dances with such wholehearted commitment, that she becomes the work’s essential emotional counterweight. Together, they form a deeply attuned couple, completing the alchemy of a production created for the Paris Opera Ballet in 1984, one that still fills the vast auditorium and leaves us, by the end, wiping away tears.

In the opening market scene, the two factions burst onto the stage in strikingly contrasting colours and confront one another with exuberant energy. Camillo Petochi, a recent addition to the company and already one to watch, stands out in emerald green as a vividly drawn and fiery servant of the Montecchi faction, set against the bloody red of the Capuleti. Within this charged atmosphere, a compelling confrontation unfolds between Jérémy Loup Quer’s sharply characterised Tybalt and Jack Gasztowtt’s more restrained yet elegant Benvolio. Rosaline, the object of Romeo’s first infatuation in Shakespeare, is given a distinct stage presence in Nureyev’s version, portrayed with crystalline grace by Sylvia Saint-Martin and attended by an exquisite pas de cinq that creates a delicate courtly frame around her. Nicola Di Vico, who had stood out on other evenings as Tybalt, appears here in the cortège and still manages to draw the eye.

Sae Eun Park in “Romeo and Juliet” by Rudolf Nureyev. Photograph by Julien Benhamou

Sae Eun Park in “Romeo and Juliet” by Rudolf Nureyev. Photograph by Julien Benhamou

Another of Nureyev’s finely judged touches is his nuanced depiction of Juliet’s awakening to desire, sparked by a furtive glimpse of her nurse (Laure Adélaïde Boucaud) in a moment of sensuality. Juliet’s six friends, moving around her like a flock of doves, reflect her purity and grace while also suggesting her precocious maturity. An equally exquisite choice comes in the famous ball scene, when the ensemble is arranged in the background like figures in a vast banquet scene by Andrea Mantegna. With their backs turned to the audience, this tableau-like grouping creates an intimate, hidden space for Romeo’s lyrical and deeply poetic solo, before he and Juliet come together in a tender pas de deux that ends with an unexpected kiss. The balcony scene brings the first act to a close in a mesmerising and unmistakably Nureyevian sequence, full of shifting accents, contractions and releases, and athletic passages, with emotion once again emerging through formal precision.

The second act is dazzling, a jewel of Nureyev’s scenic instinct and dramatic intelligence. The camaraderie between Romeo and his friends, together with the Nurse’s playful handling of Juliet’s message, introduces lighter comic notes, yet the tone remains far removed from the buffoonery found in other versions, such as Rudi van Dantzig’s. This atmosphere of anticipation leads into the secret marriage, which carries deep liturgical solemnity: the geometric grouping of the two lovers and Friar Laurence forms a sculptural, hieratic living frieze that recalls the iconic poses of Nijinsky’s “Jeux.” The drama reaches one of its peaks in Mercutio’s death. One of the ballet’s most memorable characters, excellently embodied here by Francesco Mura, Mercutio dies in a theatrical masterstroke: having first feigned injury in jest, when he is truly struck down, neither the stage nor the audience is ready to believe it. A particularly human touch lies in Romeo’s reluctance to take revenge, as he has to be spurred on by his friends before attacking Tybalt. With Tybalt’s death, Nureyev introduces a compelling twist: it is Juliet who enters in despair. While the image of her beating her chest in rage and grief over his body to the thunderous music recalls Kenneth MacMillan’s Lady Capulet, usually the dominant figure in such a scene, Juliet’s central place here gives full voice to her grief and outrage. As the lights fade on her despair, we realise that this grief will leave a lasting mark on her bearing and soul.

Paul Marque and Sae Eun Park in “Romeo and Juliet” by Rudolf Nureyev. Photograph by Julien Benhamou

Paul Marque and Sae Eun Park in “Romeo and Juliet” by Rudolf Nureyev. Photograph by Julien Benhamou

From this moment on, the atmosphere darkens considerably and never lifts again: even the most sparkling passages are haunted by a profound sense of fatality. As the curtain rises on the third act, Juliet wakes beside the eerily seductive figure of Death, clad in a gown and silver undergarments. The bedroom pas de deux bears the indelible mark of the recent deaths in the duels, and yet love still holds its ground against mortality. This sequence is far removed from more conventionally sensual interpretations: it begins in bitterness and grows into a desperate tenderness as the lovers cling to one another in a state of total abandonment. Nureyev then uses a kind of split-screen effect to externalise Juliet’s decision to take the potion, her double materialising her fears and the imagined agony of its effects, thereby elevating the scene into a harrowing exploration of her mental state. Equally chilling is the appearance of the ghosts of Tybalt and Mercutio, who, in a highly cinematic effect, move with haunting fluidity while Juliet remains motionless. The pizzicato of the “Morning Serenade” accompanies the courtesan scene with delightful brilliance, while Andrea Sarri’s Paris is rendered with elegant refinement. The narrative then shifts towards its tragic conclusion with the male pas de deux between Romeo and Benvolio, in which Romeo learns of Juliet’s death: a demanding choreographic dialogue that gives outward form to his shattering heartbreak through expansive, despairing lines. The final scene in the tomb is heavy with marble and darkness; the lovers’ last moments are stripped of any romanticised touch. The choreography of their deaths is visceral, leaving the audience with a stark image of wasted youth.

Nureyev achieves a masterpiece here through a highly distinctive aesthetic code, founded on unforgettable stage imagery and finely nuanced character relationships, all centred on the dialectic of Eros and Thanatos: Juliet learns above all through love and desire, whereas Romeo’s path to understanding is paved with violence and death, his fate marked by relentless misfortune, his tragic dimension making him the story’s centre of gravity. While other choreographers linger over Juliet’s development from girl to woman, Nureyev presents her as passionate and resolute from the outset. It is Romeo who truly changes and develops, guided by Juliet’s emotional force, in a relationship that seems to some extent to echo Nureyev’s own biography and his special bond with Margot Fonteyn. Ultimately, the ballet’s success also lies in how much of his own life and immense theatrical knowledge Nureyev was able to invest in it, as well as in his fidelity to Prokofiev, which mirrors Prokofiev’s own fidelity to Shakespeare, making this one of the most deeply revealing versions of the drama, one that comes closer to the inner truth of its characters than the spoken text itself.

Elsa Giovanna Simonetti


Elsa Giovanna Simonetti is a Paris-based philosopher researching ancient thought, divination, and practices of salvation at the École Pratique des Hautes Études. With over a decade of ballet training, she studied History of Dance as part of her Philosophy and Aesthetics degree at the University of Bologna. Alongside her academic work, she writes about dance.

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