Broadway Reviews Theatre Review by Howard Miller - November 17, 2022 & Juliet. Book by David West Read. Music and lyrics by Max Martin and Friends. Directed by Luke Sheppard. Choreographed by Jennifer Weber. Musical supervision, orchestrations and arrangements by Bill Sherman. Scenic design by Soutra Gilmour. Costume design by Paloma Young. Lighting design by Howard Hudson. Sound design by Gareth Owen. Video and projection design by Andrzej Goulding. Hair, wig, and makeup design by J. Jared Janas. Music director, additional arrangements and orchestrations by Dominic Fallacaro. Music coordinator Michael Aarons.
Probably not hard to guess, but & Juliet, with a book by David West Read and a truckload of songs by Max Martin ("and Friends," as it is credited in the Playbill) is a riff on Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. It asks the question, what if Juliet didn't die down there in the crypt? What would happen to her? After all, as one character puts it, "she's got her whole life ahead of her, and she's only had one boyfriend." Before we go any further, let's talk about the writers for a moment, since neither likely has great name recognition among your typical Broadway theatergoers. David West Read, the show's bookwriter, does have some prior theater credits, including the comedy The Performers that ran for a short time at the Longacre Theatre in 2012. However, he is rather more well known as a writer and as executive producer for two seasons of the popular television series "Schitt's Creek." As for Max Martin, whose songs make up the show's score and who also serves as one of its lead producers, he has churned out dozens of hits, alone or collaboratively for/with such pop stars as Britney Spears, Backstreet Boys, NSYNC, and Taylor Swift, some of the "friends" with whom the generic songwriting credit is shared. Undoubtedly, & Juliet will appeal to fans of these pop stars, as well as to fans of "America's Got Talent," on which the 11 o'clock number, "Roar," a big hit for Katy Perry, was featured in an appearance by the cast ahead of Broadway previews. The performers represent the creative team's commitment to diversity, along with finding the right mix of singers with the ability to sell the power ballads, glam rock, hard rock, disco, boy band, and emo tunes that make up the score. The nine musicians who accompany them are quite excellent, and are rightly brought on stage to take a bow. The arrangements and orchestrations are stadium-ready. And the dancers perform Jennifer Weber's choreography with tireless drill team precision. (A busy person, indeed, Weber is also responsible for choreographing KPOP, another big show that is about to open on Broadway).
After Juliet (Lorna Courtney, who has the appearance of an ingénue and a powerhouse pop star's voice) is revived and learns her Romeo (Ben Jackson Walker, an old-school rocker) wasn't exactly hers alone, she is ready to pack it in and head out to (where else?) Paris. On her journey of self-discovery, Juliet is accompanied not only by April and May, but also by her devoted Nurse, Angélique (Trinidadian singer Melanie La Barrie). In Paris, Juliet makes friends with the shy and sexually ambiguous François (Philippe Arroyo, adorable), whose overbearing father Lance (Paulo Szot, having a ball playing the bullish ex-soldier and Angélique's ex-lover) is pushing him to get married. Oh, and, because Shakespeare can't leave well enough alone, guess whose formerly dead husband shows up, assuming he and Juliet will simply pick up where they left off? Hah! All told, there is plenty of plot to go around, even if it does ask us to suspend a lot of disbelief along the way. In any event, & Juliet is less about the narrative contrivances than it is about the singing and dancing and every bit of staging that director Luke Sheppard has been able to muster. The set design often looks like that gumball machine has exploded all over everything, and the lighting, sound, and video design employ every trick in the trade to grab the audience and surround the performers as they pour out nearly 30 numbers from the "Max Martin and Friends" playbook. Proving yet again that there's no business like show business.
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