Romeo and Juliet
Dec. 29th, 2006 11:16 amI have wanted to do this play for a while, but have hesitated because there are so few juicy roles for women--the Nurse and Juliet, and that's pretty much it. (Another reason is that you need a SET for R&J, you really can't do it outside.) I always thought, if Holla Holla did do it, I would cast Mercutio as a woman, perhaps in love with Romeo which would shed some light on Mercutio's later actions. But looking through the character list, I might be able to convert some other roles:
Prince Escalus: Prince of Verona--could easily be a Princess.
Benvolio: Cousin of Romeo--I can't remember much about what he does, but could this be cast as a woman?
The Chorus--definitely.
I don't want to mix it up too much, because with R&J I feel there's a lot of testosterone in it--that the feud is so senselessly murderous that on some level it's a dick-measuring contest. So I don't want to cross-cast Tybalt or Paris or the servants who mix it up at the beginning.
Prince Escalus: Prince of Verona--could easily be a Princess.
Benvolio: Cousin of Romeo--I can't remember much about what he does, but could this be cast as a woman?
The Chorus--definitely.
I don't want to mix it up too much, because with R&J I feel there's a lot of testosterone in it--that the feud is so senselessly murderous that on some level it's a dick-measuring contest. So I don't want to cross-cast Tybalt or Paris or the servants who mix it up at the beginning.
Re: Tell us how you really feel...
Date: 2006-12-29 06:53 pm (UTC)In the play I saw, Romeo and Juliet are only ever offstage characters. The only people we see are the Friar and the Nurse, and the only time a word of Shakespeare is spoken is when the Friar gets word (from offstage, of course) that his letter to Romeo never arrived. My friend (Ben, actually) said that the whole theme of the play seemed to be "Easy come, easy go," as in "Oh, well, they're dead, easy come, easy go. Now let's talk about me leaving the clergy and us getting married."
Bah.