Prokofiev's Romeo and Juliet

Some Consequences of the "Happy Ending"

Authors

  • Nona Monahin Mount Holyoke College

Abstract

This essay discusses some of the musico-dramaturgical implications of Prokofiev's ballet score for choreographic adaptations of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. Prokofiev's original score itself alters Shakespeare's tragedy by giving it a "happy ending," and the popular, better-known "tragic" versions of the ballet are based on a score that represents a later, somewhat problematic, set of compromises. Adapting Shakespeare's plotline to the dancing stage is thus subject to multiple, often conflicting allegiances, as choreographers make choices with regard to how to integrate Prokofiev's already variously adapted musical score into their own vision of the ballet. Reversing the ending of a musico-dramatic work does not automatically alter the affective quality of the entire work, yet any traces of the non-tragic vision in Prokofiev's score would presumably be at odds with Shakespeare, the reinstatement of the tragic ending notwithstanding. I identify several such possible remnants of Prokofiev's original vision (in the overture, Romeo's first entrance, and the first fight scene) and examine choreographic responses to them by Leonid Lavrovsky, Rudolf Nureyev, Angelin Preljocaj, and Mark Morris.

Author Biography

Nona Monahin, Mount Holyoke College

Nona Monahin teaches Renaissance and Baroque dance in the Five College Early Music Program at Mount Holyoke College. She has taught historical dance in Australia, Europe, and North America and has choreographed for many Shakespeare productions. Nona holds a Ph.D. in Musicology from Monash University, Australia. She has presented papers and workshops for the Shakespeare Association of America, the International Shakespeare Association, the Society of Dance History Scholars, the American Musicological Society and the International Musicological Society, and has a chapter in the forthcoming Oxford Handbook of Shakespeare and Dance (expected 2017).

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Published

2017-05-01