Dr
Neil Béchervaise
NB
Consulting (Australasia) Pty Ltd
William
Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet
dir. Baz
Luhrmann
Teaching
resources developed by Neil Béchervaise with Emma Heyde and
Dennis Robinson
PLOT
Verona Beach is an American town torn apart by gang warfare
between the rich Capulet and Montague families. While Benvolio and
Tybalt lead the gangs, the sensitive Romeo Montague laments the
violence, falls in love with Juliet Capulet and confides in his
cross-dressing friend, Mercutio. Forced to conceal their forbidden
love, Romeo and Juliet are secretly married against a background
of violence and Verona's decaying corporate identity. A misplaced
message spells impending disaster and in a tragedy of mistaken appearances,
Romeo and Juliet suicide rather than live without each other in
a familiar story which is faithful to Shakespeare's speech in a
violently updated and compelling setting.
THEMES AND
ISSUES
love - teenage,
father/daughter, nurse/child, and self, and friendship
growing
up - love, marriage, parents, gangs, drugs
friendship
and loyalty
youth suicide
arranged
marriage
extended
family feuds
wisdom and
youth
adult interference
in teenage affairs
LANGUAGE
AND STRUCTURE
- The text of Shakespeare in the context of television
- The news as entertainment.
o Visual imagery - the hoardings using quotes as advertising.
- Film treatment of classic literature - updating, change. of
visual connections to create changed interpretation.
- Metaphor generated by changing contexts.
- Song and dance as linking devices
- Use of reflection - the water fountain and the fish pond
- Use of colour, light
and shade, lighting to create atmosphere.
- Violence and corruption counterpointed with opulence and sophistication
- Use of canonical text as a vehicle for contemporary issues
EXTENDED
RESOURCES
Play: Romeo
and Juliet by Shakespeare, Romanoff and Juliet
Wide reading:
Only the Heart by Brian Caswell & David Phu An Chiem, Fireflies
by Jonathan Harlen, Daz 4 Zoe by Robert Swindells
Film: Zeffirelli's
Romeo and Juliet, West Side Story, Strictly Ballroom, Kiss or Kil,
Romper Stomper.
Music: Dire
Straits, Prokofiev's Romeo and Juliet Suite
Current
Affairs: Serbia/Croatia, Northern Ireland, multicultural relations
in Canada & America, internet ÔromanceÕ of English 12 year old and
American marine
STUDENT
ACTIVITIES
1. Working
in small groups, brainstorm a list of groups within Canadian society
who would be upset if their sons and daughters fell in love with
each other. What reasons would these groups give for their disapproval
of each other.
2. Powerful
music often tracks the emotions of people with extreme feelings
- like love and hate. Make a list of some of the feelings you get
from listening to, or playing, music. Write the names of the musical
pieces beside each feeling and compare your reactions with others
in your group. Are there some pieces of music which create the same
feelings for a number of people?
3. The story
of Romeo and Juliet is very familiar whenever families disagree
with each other. Luckily, the results are not often so tragic. Work
in small groups to discuss ways of overcoming family prejudices.
4. Using
the cast list, divide the cast into Montagues, Capulets and Others.
Describe the relationship between members of each family and then
add the names of other characters who are important to that person.
5. Using
the stage instructions included in the text of the play, develop
a list of personal properties needed by each of the characters in
Act 1: Scene 1 and in the final scene. Suggest how the difference
in the props from start to finish shows the way the play developed.
6. Romeo
is shown to be a dreamer, a drug-taker and a romantic but he can
be a man of action when there is no alternative. Use examples from
the film to show Romeo as a 'man of action'.
7. The relationship
between Juliet and the nurse seems to be a comic relief but it is
this comedy that creates the tragedy. Do you agree? Work in small
groups to create a response to this statement in words or action.
8. Available
film versions of the play are set in different countries. If you
were a film maker working in Vancouver, describe the locations you
would use for the opening scene, for the street scenes and for the
balcony scene. Photograph some of these scenes and draw or make
a set model to illustrate one of your choices.
9. Suggest
how the balcony scene could be staged as a comedy sequence. Rewrite
the scene with stage directions to support your interpretation.
10. Luhrmann
takes Juliet off the balcony to the swimming pool and Romeo falls
in several times. Evaluate the impact of this apparent clumsiness
in relation to Romeo's drug-taking and his image as a romantic hero.
11. Films
use music to enhance the emotion of the story line. Make a selection
of current popular music for a Canadian production of the play.
Describe where, in the play, you would use three of the pieces you
have selected.
12. Select
a sequence of about one minute from the playtext which includes
at least two characters. Decide on the mood of the scene. Collect
props and music to support your decision. Rehearse the scene and
present it to the whole group.
13 Rewrite
a sequence from the playtext into modern Canadian English to be
staged without music or costume. The sequence should establish the
mood at that point in the play, involve at least two characters
and last more than one minute. Rehearse and stage the sequence for
the whole group.
14. Some
people find Romeo and Juliet very upsetting. Others say that the
teenaged lovers over-reacted. Discuss your feelings about the deaths
of the 'star-cross'd lovers'.
15. It is
too easy for people who do not understand the circumstances to say
that things should be done differently. Identify some of the points
in the film where a different action may have led to a different
ending. Use your understanding of the relationships in Romeo and
Juliet to discuss reasons why these actions were not taken.
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