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Romeo and Julie

Gary Owens grimy take on Shakespeare’s play
Red Stitch Actors' Theatre
by
ABR Arts 25 July 2024

Romeo and Julie

Gary Owens grimy take on Shakespeare’s play
Red Stitch Actors' Theatre
by
ABR Arts 25 July 2024
Belinda McClory as Barb and Damon Baudin as Romy (photograph by Jodie Hutchinson)
Belinda McClory as Barb and Damon Baudin as Romy (photograph by Jodie Hutchinson)

In the fair town of Splott, not far from the sprawling Cardiff steelworks, where we lay our scene, two teenagers meet cute in a crowded cafeteria. She’s a chirpy high school kid with a big brain who dreams of going to Cambridge to study physics. He’s a dropout and a single father who lives with his alcoholic mum in a shabby bedsit. The brainy kid offers to babysit, and he willingly accepts. Before long, they’re stroking hands and kissing by the book.

This is Welsh playwright Gary Owen’s grease-stained urban adaptation of Shakespeare’s most excellent and lamentable tragedy. True to its source, it depicts the chaos caused by a grand passion that seems to strike its helpless victims like a thunderbolt. It is also a class-conscious reflection on the difficulties of sustaining romantic commitments in a depressed situation where life is a constant struggle. Owen paints a grim vision of life in the terraced houses of Cardiff that contrasts with the intensity of the central romance.

From the New Issue