Program - Romeo & Juliet
Romeo and Juliet Fantasy Overture (1869-70, rev. 1880) by Tchaikovsky (1840-1893).
Selections from Romeo and Juliet, Suites Nos. 1, 2, and 3 (1935-1936) by Prokofiev (1891-1953).
The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey, Brian B. Crowe, artistic director.
Romeo & Juliet are to the right of Zhang (left in photo). Brian Crowe to her left.
I consider myself fairly familiar with the musical forms of Romeo and Juliet. That would include opera (by Gounod) and ballet (Prokofiev); and I have listened to Tchaikovsky's Fantasy Overture a few times over the years. So I didn't bother with the Program Notes before the concert, which was fine as the Program Notes do not add a lot more to my understanding of the two pieces. But I was surprised at how much I enjoyed the concert, even though my initial reaction was at best neutral.
Given the number of times I have heard Tchaikovsky's Fantasy Overture, I didn't expect how unfamiliar it sounded at the beginning. Of course there were passages and themes I remembered well, perhaps simply because they are so hummable. The complaint about the precision of the musicians is withdrawn for this performance, they did admirably on that count. The dynamic range, however, still could have been wider. It was a satisfying performance, nonetheless. The "love theme" is of course the most popular. The Program Notes describes it as consisting of two segments, one for Romeo, and one for Juliet. I had always heard it as one unified theme, and tonight was no exception. Need to study more.
After performing the Tchaikovsky Fantasy Overture. The sets used for the Prokofiev piece were already set up on stage.
Prokofiev's ballet Romeo and Juliet is quite popular, and it's 2 1/2 hours long. To pique people' interest, and to create an audience demand for the full ballet, Prokofiev pulled some movements together (with modifications), and made them into Suites for the Orchestra. Why he ended up with three suites? I don't know. The movements in the Suites do not follow exactly the flow of the story. A prominent example would be the Suite movement "Montagues and Capulets," which is an amalgam of two different movements (the two families were introduced at different points in the ballet). To make things even more unnecessarily complicated, many conductors decide to pull movements from different Suites to make up a performance. For this series, the movements are "Montagues and Capulets," "Minuet/Arrival of the Guests," "Masks," "Madrigal," "Death of Tybalt," "Romeo and Juliet Before Parting," "Romeo at Juliet's Grave," and "Death of Juliet."
There is mention of characters in the play in today's Program. I naturally assumed ballet dancers would perform to the movements selected for this evening. So when those characters began speaking, I realized that I got it wrong: it would be spoken dialog and acting - against simplified props. My first thought was "this isn't going to work." And I was wrong. It worked quite well. Most of the time the music was played in between scenes where the actors had dialogs, a notable exception being the fight scene (if I remember correctly). Shakespeare English is difficult for me, but the story is familiar enough that I was readily drawn into the emotions of the moment. After all, I can sit through hours-long German operas without English surtitles. In the dialog we also heard well-known quote from the play such as "a rose by any other name ..." and "parting is such sweet sorrow."
Kudos to the Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey. And to this renovative adaptation of two famous works (the music and the play).
Orchestra at conclusion of Prokofiev. The actors would come out later.
Attendance was okay, and the applause was great for a typical NJ Symphony audience. The artists meant to come out for a second curtain call, but decided to withdrew as the applause didn't quite sustain the appreciative atmosphere for them to do so.
As I left the theater I found myself humming a tune, and it was the love theme from the earlier piece.
This area is hit with a prolonged cold snap (perhaps 3 weeks by the time it is done), and it was around 10F when we left the theater. There was no wind, so it was quite okay with our heavier coats on.
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