Romeo und Julia
The whole story is based on a dispute between two  families, so deeply embedded that its cause has lost all meaning. Despite this  feud, the families’ only children fall for each other. Romeo and Juliet meet at  a party and it is love at first sight. Their parents’ quarrel can’t change  their decision to be together: They get married in secret. This could be a  reason for both parties to reconcile. But their promise to each other is put to  another test: Juliet is told that she must marry another man, Romeo is pushed  into a fight with her cousin and becomes his murderer. Banishment follows. Very  difficult circumstances. But nothing can discourage the lovers from wanting to  be together. They are ready to cross the final frontier and make the most  radical and irrevocable decision to be united forever. 
The young couple’s stubborn insistence on being together no matter what has always been considered as extreme. During all ages, objections have been raised: that a single meeting is not a stable foundation for lifelong commitment. Or that society’s disapproval can amount to a never-ending stress test. Both objections are still valid. But especially the latter has become less prevalent in our liberal Western society. There are no longer any rules for marriage. In general, relationships are based on mutual attraction rather than on strategy.
The freedom to choose your partner has never been greater. And it has become an obstacle in itself. Or at least some of its manifestations have. Because quick and often digital matches are noncommittal and tend to end abruptly. The huge range of options makes it easy to compare. And so the other person is put under a microscope, examined as an object rather than as enchanting in their uniqueness. It is exactly this comparability that makes people exchangeable. And therefore this kind of love is relative. In this form, it creates the diametrical opposite to the love between Romeo and Juliet. They posit their love for each other as absolute. There is no room for anything else.
We live in a time where romantic love as a universal longing may still fill the cinemas but is often met with cynicism in real life. So what is it about Shakespeare’s most famous lovers that continues to enthral us? In all their radical self-abandonment, are Romeo and Juliet a progressive alternative concept for today?
Director Pia Richter will re-examine this classic play for Schauspiel Leipzig. Following “Ein Berg, viele” and “Hotel Pink Lulu”, this is her third production at the theatre. Pia Richter studied theatre and literature at LMU Munich before transferring to the directing course at Otto Falckenberg Schule. Her productions have taken her to theatres including Theater Regensburg, Landestheater Schwaben, Landestheater Tübingen and Theater Koblenz.
				
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                    The young couple’s stubborn insistence on being together no matter what has always been considered as extreme. During all ages, objections have been raised: that a single meeting is not a stable foundation for lifelong commitment. Or that society’s disapproval can amount to a never-ending stress test. Both objections are still valid. But especially the latter has become less prevalent in our liberal Western society. There are no longer any rules for marriage. In general, relationships are based on mutual attraction rather than on strategy.
The freedom to choose your partner has never been greater. And it has become an obstacle in itself. Or at least some of its manifestations have. Because quick and often digital matches are noncommittal and tend to end abruptly. The huge range of options makes it easy to compare. And so the other person is put under a microscope, examined as an object rather than as enchanting in their uniqueness. It is exactly this comparability that makes people exchangeable. And therefore this kind of love is relative. In this form, it creates the diametrical opposite to the love between Romeo and Juliet. They posit their love for each other as absolute. There is no room for anything else.
We live in a time where romantic love as a universal longing may still fill the cinemas but is often met with cynicism in real life. So what is it about Shakespeare’s most famous lovers that continues to enthral us? In all their radical self-abandonment, are Romeo and Juliet a progressive alternative concept for today?
Director Pia Richter will re-examine this classic play for Schauspiel Leipzig. Following “Ein Berg, viele” and “Hotel Pink Lulu”, this is her third production at the theatre. Pia Richter studied theatre and literature at LMU Munich before transferring to the directing course at Otto Falckenberg Schule. Her productions have taken her to theatres including Theater Regensburg, Landestheater Schwaben, Landestheater Tübingen and Theater Koblenz.
                            Premiere on 15.10.2022
Große Bühne
                        
                        
                        
                                                Große Bühne
Duration
ca. 1:45, no breakStrobe lighting is used in this production.
Cast
Paulina Bittner, Thomas Braungardt, Anne Cathrin Buhtz, Roman Kanonik, Dirk Lange, Teresa Schergaut, Niklas Wetzel, Adrian Djokić 
                                Team
Director: Pia Richter
                                    Stage Design & Costume: Julia Nussbaumer
                                    Music: Friederike Bernhardt, Johannes Cotta
                                    Dramaturgy: Marleen Ilg
                                    Light: Ralf Riechert
                                    audio description: Beatrix Hermens, Ina Klose, Renate Lehmann, Maila Giesder-Pempelforth
                                    Sign language interpreters: Julia Cramer, Christina Müller
                                    Theatre pedagogy: Amelie Gohla
                                Extended Team
Sound: Nico Teichmann
                                    Stage Manager: Ute Neas
                                    Prompter: Ditte Trischan
                                    Assistant to the Director: Emily Huber, Jule Franzen
                                    Assistant Stage Design: Stella Vollmer, Lena Bohnet
                                    Assistant Costume Design: Carolin Schmelz, Helene Subklew
                                    Make-Up: Kerstin Wirrmann, Cordula Kreuter, Julia Markow, Barbara Zepnick
                                    Props: André Sproete
                                    Stage Master: Patrick Ernst
                                    Intern Stage Design: Luisa Achhammer
                                    Intern Costume Design: Linda Mustafa
                                
















 
                            
