This article discusses Youri Vámos’s 1997 modern-dance adaptation of William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. It examines the shift from Renaissance Verona to the 20th century; his choreographic architecture within physical and spatial ‘partitions’, and his contemporary-dance vocabulary, which fuses classical technique with modern gestures and movements. The lovers are interpreted by the youngest, least experienced dancers in the ensemble, while the dramatisation shifts between irony and tragedy, following a succession of intersemiotic translations of the text and stylistic reworkings. The article concludes with a study of the lovers’ pas de deux, comparing their first encounter and the ballet’s tragic conclusion
Through the centuries, theatrical dance has been labeled an erotic art, the adjective erotic being a...
The long established traditional interpretation of William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet depicts a ...
This article explores the links between modernity and presentism in the work of Shakespeare and of s...
Bringing together current intermedial discourses on Shakespeare, music, and dance with the affective...
International audienceThis article examines the importance of dance in William Shakespeare’s Love’s ...
This article examines the intertextuality concerning the ball scene in Romeo and Juliet’s Italian a...
This article engages with three contemporary dance works, each representing a different Shakespearea...
William Shakespeare\u27s works are most well-known on the stage in the form of a play. When the word...
The article analyses the use of dance in Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream and then takes into...
(Nancy Isenberg) The plentifulness of Shakespeare ballets performed in our times around the globe ...
This article analyses the structure of Prokofiev's ballet score 'Romeo and Juliet' as an intersemiot...
Shakespeare’s works remain a reference when artists — either playwrights or stage professionals — ai...
This paper derives from a shared interest in Baz Luhrmann’s film William Shakespeare’s Romeo + Julie...
The article suggests a re-thinking of how adaptation should be discussed, using the example of Gottf...
Drawing from the decolonial perspective (Quijano 2007; Mignolo 2012; Mignolo, Walsh 2018) and the bi...
Through the centuries, theatrical dance has been labeled an erotic art, the adjective erotic being a...
The long established traditional interpretation of William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet depicts a ...
This article explores the links between modernity and presentism in the work of Shakespeare and of s...
Bringing together current intermedial discourses on Shakespeare, music, and dance with the affective...
International audienceThis article examines the importance of dance in William Shakespeare’s Love’s ...
This article examines the intertextuality concerning the ball scene in Romeo and Juliet’s Italian a...
This article engages with three contemporary dance works, each representing a different Shakespearea...
William Shakespeare\u27s works are most well-known on the stage in the form of a play. When the word...
The article analyses the use of dance in Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream and then takes into...
(Nancy Isenberg) The plentifulness of Shakespeare ballets performed in our times around the globe ...
This article analyses the structure of Prokofiev's ballet score 'Romeo and Juliet' as an intersemiot...
Shakespeare’s works remain a reference when artists — either playwrights or stage professionals — ai...
This paper derives from a shared interest in Baz Luhrmann’s film William Shakespeare’s Romeo + Julie...
The article suggests a re-thinking of how adaptation should be discussed, using the example of Gottf...
Drawing from the decolonial perspective (Quijano 2007; Mignolo 2012; Mignolo, Walsh 2018) and the bi...
Through the centuries, theatrical dance has been labeled an erotic art, the adjective erotic being a...
The long established traditional interpretation of William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet depicts a ...
This article explores the links between modernity and presentism in the work of Shakespeare and of s...