Young Love, first love & an Angel in the Audience
Friday, June 10, 2016
John Barrymore as Mercutio, Leslie Howard, Romeo & Basil Rathbone, Tybalt - Goerge Kukor's 1936 film |
(Ric Cartey - Carole Joyner)9
RIC CARTEY (RCA 47-6751, 1956)
They say for every boy and girl
There's just one love in this whole world
And I-I know that I-I found mine
The heavenly touch of your embrace
Tells me no one could take your place
Ever in my heart
Young love, first love
Filled with true devotion
Young love, our love
We share with deep emotion
Just one kiss from your sweet lips
Will tell me that your love is real
And I-I can feel that it's true
We will vow to one another
There will never be another
Love for you or for me
Young love, first love
Filled with true devotion
Young love, our love
We share with deep emotion
The heavenly touch of your embrace
Tells me no one could take your place
Ever in my heart
We will vow to one another
There will never be another
Love for you or for me
Leslie Howard, Romeo & Norma Shearer, Juliet |
My knowledge of Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet is an
extended state of ignorance that began in the early 50s. My mother took me to
see George Kukor’s 1936 Romeo and
Juliet. My mother loved anything with Leslie Howard. It might have been
then that I too agreed on why she liked Howard and I became a fan. The film was
etched in my memory until I finally saw a stage production at the University of
Texas in 1961. Imagine this with a Texan accent:
“Romeo, Romeo wherefore art thou Romeo?”
If that is not enough try to imagine to that being extra nasal!
In 1965 I fell in love with a beautiful Jewish girl of
Austrian descent in Buenos Aires. I was as madly in love with her as Romeo was
with his Juliet. I took her to see the film (it was showing on the then movie
street of Lavalle, on the same street I had originally seen it with my mother).
I was crushed when Susana told me, “They are much too old. They seem stilted”
In 1968 when I was madly in love with my Rosemary (not
Rosaline) whom I married that year in Mexico City we saw Romeo and Juliet. I
had to point out to her that Olivia Hussey was 17 and that she had been born in
Buenos Aires. Much was written then about Michael York’s Tybalt and John
McEnery’s Mercutio. The former went on to better things and the latter sort of
faded away. As much as I liked Michael York I have always preferred Basil
Rathbone in that 1936 Romeo and Juliet. He was much darker. He was scary.
Christopher & Jennifer Gaze |
By 1970 my Rosemary and I were teaching English at large
American companies in Mexico City. I had a class of 8 women (all executive
assistants, the term used on the day). I decided to teach them (they never
suspected) English with a Texan accent. I taught them to speak through their
noses. During a three month term we ended each class with a 8 minute read of
Shakespeare’s play. My knowledge of the play then is based on those three
months of Texas twang.
My memory tells me that the second stage version of Romeo
and Juliet is the one that my Rosemary and I saw on Friday, June 10. It was a
Bard on the Beach production directed by Kim Collier. Since we have seen many a
production by Collier we expected surprises. There were many but one I did not
foresee was the presence of an angel in the audience.
I watched Bernard Cuffling for the duration of the first act. On his face I saw either smiles or laughter. Here was an actor enjoying his busman’s holiday.
Bernard Cuffling |
Myformer Vancouver Magazine friend, Les Wiseman told me (many times) that
you wrote only that which you knew something about or else you consulted a
person who did. That was my tack. I talked, before the play began with
Shakespeare scholar and UBC Professor Errol Durbach. I asked him about youth in
previous Romeo and Juliet productions. He cited a not-as-well known 1996 film
by Baz Luhrmann with Leonardo di Caprio (then 22) and Claire Danes (17). He
told me that it was a good film but that it lacked gravitas as the actors were
too young. Durbach did not predict that anytime soon we will have a stage
production or a film with a 14-year-old Juliet (the age in Shakespeare’s play).
Bernard Cuffling added to this by saying that the words
that Juliet says in the play would be out of the range (realistically) of any
14-year-old. And he told me, “I think Hailey Gillis (24) is very good. And she
looks so Roman.” I would have added that both Gillis and Basil Rathbone’s
Tybalt have similar Roman noses. When I mentioned to Cuffling (not having yet
read Harold Bloom's chapter on the play later that evening) I asked him if the
first half of the play is a comedy. Perhaps Collier helped by the performances
of Andrew McNee as Mercutio, Ben Elliot’s Benvolio, Jennifer Lines’s Nurse,
Andrew Cownden’s Peter and Scott Bellis as Friar Laurence to add a bit more
comedy. Cuffling looked at me seriously and told me the second act is no
comedy. We both agreed that while the two young actors, Andrew Chown (a most winsome and athletic one) as Romeo
and Hailey Gillis’s Juliet are (as far as this city is concerned) not so well
known the supporting actors are all so good that I wonder how any other good
Vancouver theatre company is going to cope for the summer without them. That
long bench of superb actors turns the whole idea of the usual play around. In
Bard’s Romeo and Juliet the cast is star studded.
Eroll Durbach |
My Rosemary who usually dislikes most everything had two
very positive comments. “I think that Scott Bellis is superb as usual. And I
really like Jennifer Lines who more and more sounds like Katherine Hepburn.”
In the late evening I read Harold Bloom. This Shakespeare
bible is at my night table during Bard and it is perhaps the only quality I
share with Christopher Gaze, the Artistic Director of Bard on the Beach. If you
check on the right hand side of the photograph here with his wife Jennifer you
will not the heavy tome on his night table.
Bloom mentions several times that Mercutio pretty well
runs away with the play and that Shakespeare had to kill him in order to
continue with the play. The important plot twist is the interference by Romeo
that kills Mercutio who is unaware of Romeo’s marriage to Juliet. Bloom
translates for the ignorant (me!) some of Mercutio’s words. As an example:
I love be blind, love cannot hit the mark.
Now he will sit under a medlar tree
And wish his mistress where that kind of fruit
As maids called medlars when they laugh alone.
O Romeo, that she were, O that she were
An open-arse, and though a poperin pear!
[II.i.33-38]
Bloom explains (who would have known?)
Mercutio’s reference is to Rosaline, Romeo’s beloved
before he falls, at first glance, in love with Juliet, who instantly
reciprocates. The medlar, rotten with ripeness, popularly was believed to have
the likeness of the female genitalia and “to meddle” meant to perform sexual
intercourse. Mercutio happily also cites a popular name for the medlar, the
open-arse, as well as the poperin pear, at once pop-her-in her open arse, and
the slang name for a French pear, the Poperingle (named for a town near Ypres).
This is the antithetical prelude to a scene that famously concludes with
Juliet’s couplet:
Good night, good
night. Parting is such sweet sorrow
That I shall say
good night till it be morrow.
Of Nurse Bloom
writes: The two fatal figures in the play are its two liveliest comics,
Mercutio and the Nurse…Juliet’s Nurse, despite her popularity, is altogether a
much darker figure. Like Mercutio she is inwardly cold, even toward Juliet,
whom she has raised (and we find out that Juliet had a “twin sister” who died
called Susan. But not exactly as Susan
was the Nurse’s daughter who died at birth so the Nurse then became Juliet’s wet-nurse).
Her language captivates us as does Mercutio’s, but Shakespeare gives both of
them hidden natures much at variance with their exuberant personalities.
There were two further surprises. Since Christopher Gaze
always introduces the season and the first performance of a play (like his
buddy, Artistic Director Bill Millerd of the Arts Club Theatre Company) this
time around Director Kim Collier seconded (I am going to introduce all the
performances of R&J, Alex. Kim asked me to do the opening Chorus speech
because I am welcoming the audience and I can just flow into it seamlessly.
Christopher) him to perform (and a fine performance it was!) the prologue to
the play.
The second surprise was one of those famous food trucks.
It was there, before the play began, to left
side of the portable washrooms. Tables had been set aside for the hungry-before
culture fans. I was told by one of the gentlemen in the truck (Mathew) that
they will be there for other opening performances and for special days.
I would like to point out a few more things. Dawn Petten,
who plays Lady Capulet is one of Vancouver’s finest comedy actresses (I am old
fashioned and I am partial to words like actor, dominatrix and aviatrix). Here
she does a really serious role and plays to the hilt the coldness (jealousy of
the Nurse?) of a detached mother to Juliet. And David McCormick, the Fight
Director, has given both Mercutio and Benvolio some fine humorous activities
with their foils. Sound Designer Brian Linds produced what must be the first
ever presence of heavy metal in a Shakespeare play. Plus before the play there
was some fine 20th century modern piano music that I rather enjoyed.
Addendum: During the interval I chatted with formidable actress Colleen Wheeler and her husband (a member, I believe of the Main Street Blues). With them were that handsome couple Alessandro Juliani and partner Meg Roe (blue eyes!). She knows her Shakespeare as she knew of the use of this word in Mercutio's Queen Mab speech:
O, then, I see Queen Mab hath been with you.
She is the fairies' midwife, and she comes
In shape no bigger than an agate-stone
On the fore-finger of an alderman,
Drawn with a team of little atomies
Athwart men's noses as they lie asleep;
The evening was most satisfying and the only other Romeo and Juliet that I can compare it is to one years ago in which I watched Evelyn Hart dance.
The evening was most satisfying and the only other Romeo and Juliet that I can compare it is to one years ago in which I watched Evelyn Hart dance.