Romeo & Juliet, Regent's Park Open Air Theatre review ★★★★★

Director Kimberley Sykes delivers a pacy take on Romeo & Juliet in the leafy confines of Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre

Isabel Adomakoh Young and Joel MacCormack as Romeo and Juliet at Regent's Park Open Air Theatre. Photo Jane Hobson
If one classic play is later remembered for dominating London’s recovering theatre scene in 2021, it will likely be the Bard’s story of feuding Veronese gentry, star-crossed lovers and an elaborate pseudocide gone horribly wrong. Sandwiched between the National Theatre via Sky Arts’ production and Ola Ince’s take at Shakespeare’s Globe is director Kimberley Sykes’ Romeo & Juliet, which recreates the story in the leafy confines of Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre.

At 110 minutes straight through, the production feels a little like watching the familiar story play out on Speed. At best, it feels fitting for the whirlwind velocity and shaky ground on which the lovers build and accelerate their relationship. But on the flip side, it quashes the story's emotional appeal.


Isabel Adomakoh Young as Juliet in Romeo and Juliet at Regent's Park Open Air Theatre. Photo Jane Hobson

Designer Naomi Dawson sets the action on a building site which hovers dramatically atop a giant crack in the ground. Each time a member of either faction dies, a low rumble sounds – a reminder that each life taken cuts deeper into the divide between the families. A cross bearing a set of weighing scales further emphasises the eye-for-an-eye governance at play here, while two swords, each encased in glass, hang ominously above the stage in a suggestion that a battle could break out at any moment.

Dawson has the warring households brandish their differences by dressing in opposing colours – the Montagues in black, the Capulets in white – while wide-leg jeans, glittery slip dresses and rave music plant the age-old story in present day.


Joel MacCormack as Romeo in Romeo and Juliet at Regent's Park Open Air Theatre. Photo Jane Hobson

In amplifying the lovers’ open-hearted naivety, Sykes presents us with a likeable Romeo who’s easy to sympathise with. Channeled through a soft, transparent and charming performance by Joel MacCormack, we’re fully on his side and can believe he was forced into killing Tybalt (a ruthless, quick-footed Michelle Fox). This dangerous youthfulness is even more stark in Isabel Adomakoh Young’s wide-eyed Juliet, and unusually, pushes a portion of the blame for the whole affair into the unlikely hands of Peter Hamilton Dyer’s dispassionate Friar Lawrence.


Sarah Hoare, Priyank Morjaria, Cavan Clarke and Michelle Fox as Gregora, Sampson, Mercutio and Tybalt. Photo Jane Hobson

A mention must also go to Richard Leeming’s goofy, buffoonish Paris, who exudes the wickedly watchable awkwardness of a certain disgraced former Health Secretary, and Cavan Clarke’s bullish Mercutio, who is a driving force of the show and electrifying to watch.

The sheer speed of this Romeo & Juliet leaves little room for sentiment, either in the face of the lovers’ union or their tragic deaths, and this robs the production of emotional impact. But strong performances, powerfully symbolic design and a contemporary essence will keep audiences of all ages enwrapped.


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What Romeo & Juliet, Regent's Park Open Air Theatre review
Where Open Air Theatre, Regent's Park, Inner Cir, Westminster, London, NW1 4NU | MAP
Nearest tube Regent's Park (underground)
When 17 Jun 21 – 24 Jul 21, 7:45 PM – 9:30 PM
Price £25+
Website Click here for more information and tickets




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