In the first scenes the market workers skip forward, arms raised joyfully as they prepare for Juliet’s and Paris’s wedding. The Rose is another symbol throughout, looming above the lovers on one page of the book. The three Bridesmaids join the market dancers, high kicking in their dusty rose costumes. Their échappés, look totally classical until you realize they begin on flat feet, again, a sort of optical illusion that heightens the look of post-classicism in Nunes’s choreography.
Maslova’s pliancy in her duets with Molina Soca, from first glance to balcony to bed and to the chapel where Friar Lawrence played by Alexie Borovik—a decades long beloved dancer with the company—takes pity on them and marries them. I was delighted to see him.
Along with Juliet’s variation, the “Dance of the Knights,” is perhaps the most widely recognizable section of the Prokofiev score. In allegro pesante, it’s ponderous even bombastic, as it should be given the inflated sense of themselves the knights project. As the page turns for the Capulet ball, a Bleeding Heart of Jesus entwined in thorns, backgrounds the scene. It echoes the blood red gilets the Montague men wear over white tights as they haughtily crash the party. The full cast seems onstage for the formal dancing that takes on a delightfully playful ambience as the dancers skip forward to the beat, one arm on their hips, the other waving scarves in the air.
Pau Pujol is a rarefied Tybolt, handsome, arrogant, entitled and elegant, he delivers a vainglorious solo, with precision and ease as Nunes gives him some of the most classical looking phrases. His devant jetés and tours derrière gave me goosebumps.
He and his friends, among them Isaac Hollis, soon brandish their swords menacingly. D’Ortenzi/Mercutio alternately cock snooks and mollifies them, before taking up his own sword. He continuously mocks Tybolt, even as their blades graze each other’s in counter-parries, until he is incredulously impaled and staggers about in a clownish, lengthy death. When Romeo sees his corpse, his youth seems to drain away and he picks up Mercutio’s sword to kill Tybalt.
By now Juliet and Romeo have fallen inextricably in love and Maslova and Molina Soca have brought them to life with the innocence of first love, but not lacking in lust.
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