"[Thalberg's] production of Romeo and
Juliet in 1935 had a physical beauty, an integrity and
inspiration that places it among the all-time greats. And I doubt
that any picture has had or will ever have such a distinguished
and memorable cast." —Basil Rathbone, In and Out of
Character, p.132
Basil Rathbone plays Tybalt, a member of the Capulet family, in this early
screen version of William Shakespeare's tragedy. An excellent cast, a
lavish set, and a terrific story make this film an enjoyable treat.
In ancient Verona, two powerful families, the Montagues and Capulets
live in bitter enmity. The film opens with the two families meeting in the
square in front of the cathedral. Tybalt is
itching to fight, but Capulet reminds him, "Keep the
peace." The families walk together into church. The servants outside
begin to quarrel. Suddenly all the servants are involved. It turns deadly.
The two families come out of the church and when Benvolio tries to break up
the servants' fighting, Tybalt calls him a coward and challenges him.
Escalus, the Prince of Verona breaks up the melee and warns Capulet
and Montague "If ever you disturb our streets again, your lives shall
be the forfeit of the peace." The two families had been feuding for
years; every public brawl threatened to spill blood.
Capulet: "Keep the peace!"
Tybalt calls Benvolio a coward.
Later, Romeo, only son of Montague, and Juliet, daughter of
Capulet, fall in love at first sight during a great ball given by the Capulets. Tybalt,
Juliet's cousin, recognizes Romeo and feels that Romeo has insulted the family by
crashing the party. Tybalt is ready to start a fight, but Capulet stops
him. Juliet finds out that Romeo is the son of her father's enemy, and
later, on her balcony, ponders the situation. Romeo, at the risk of his life, mounts the walls of the Capulet
castle to bid Juliet good night. She comes out on her balcony and confides
her love to him. They determine to marry.
The next day in the cell of Friar Laurence the rites are performed.
Tybalt has determined to punish Romeo's insolence in
coming to the Capulet Ball. Meeting him in the company of Mercutio, he
insults Romeo, who refuses to take offense. Romeo will not fight him
because he's now married to Juliet, and cannot bring himself to harm a
member of her family. Mercutio, furious at his
friend's seeming cowardice, is killed by Tybalt when Romeo, in an attempt
to halt the fight, gets in his way. Overwhelmed by Mercutio's death,
Romeo rushes after Tybalt and kills him.
Romeo flees and takes refuge in the cell of Friar Laurence, where he
soon learns
that he has forever been banished from Verona. Juliet has meanwhile
been informed of her double tragedy, the death of her cousin and the
banishment of her husband. Romeo comes to comfort her and say good-bye.
They spend the night together and bid each other a tearful farewell as
Romeo leaves for Mantua.
Romeo and Tybalt
Mercutio and Tybalt
In the morning Juliet's father commands her to marry Paris the next
day. She runs to the Friar for help. He gives her a potion which will cause
her to appear dead for 42 hours. He promises to send word to Romeo who
will come to the Capulet tomb, awake her, and carry her off with him to
exile. She consents to the plan, and takes the potion.
The messenger dispatched to take word to Romeo never delivers the
message, since he is quarantined in a plague village. Romeo is told that
Juliet is dead. Frantic, he buys poison, and resolves to kill himself
after seeing Juliet.
He hurries to the tomb, kills Paris, who would prevent his entering,
and finds Juliet. Thinking her dead, he kisses her, takes the poison and
dies. The Friar comes in just as she wakes, and tells her the dreadful
news. She kills herself over Romeo's body with his dagger.
In the final scene Capulet and Montague promise to end their feud.
Watch the trailer for the film:
Shakespeare's classic love story produced with accuracy and lavishness. Norma
Shearer's Juliet is lyrically beautiful. Leslie Howard superb as Romeo. Basil
Rathbone, John Barrymore, Ralph Forbes, Edna May Oliver all add to the
excellence of the outstanding picture of the year. No version has ever surpassed
this one for sheer physical beauty. Not to be missed under any circumstances.
—Photoplay,
December 1936
John Barrymore's performance as Mercutio was very impressive and compelling.
Rather amazing since, according to Rathbone, Barrymore often arrived on the set drunk.
Rathbone wrote:
The first scene was to be a big one, my meeting as Tybalt with Jack as Mercutio, a
scene that would lead to our duel and to Mercutio's death. We waited all
morning, but no Jack. ...at last, about 12 p.m., a studio car containing
Jack...drove onto the lot. ...To Cukor, Jack said in a rasping whisper,
'Sorry, old boy, lost me voice...can't speak a bloody word.' There
were immediate and urgent consultations...and it was decided to jump
the dialogue and do it another day. The scene we would shoot would
be the duel itself. Cameras were set, sound was ready, principals
and extras were in place when Barrymore suddenly drew his sword with
a tremendous flourish and hit Leslie Howard (Romeo) a violent and
accidental blow on the head. In a matter of seconds an enormous
pigeon's egg appeared on Leslie's head and we were all dismissed for
the day!
—In and Out of Character, pp. 133-134
I was surprised that Rathbone received an Academy Award nomination (Best Supporting Actor) for his performance as
Tybalt. His performance was excellent, as usual, but the part seemed rather small, mainly consisting of three fencing duels:
a brief one with Benvolio, stopped by the prince of Verona; one with Mercutio, in which he kills Mercutio; and one with Romeo, in which Romeo kills him. And that's the end of Tybalt's part in this film. When I think of some of Rathbone's other
outstanding performances which received no recognition at all by the Academy (The Dawn Patrol, The Hound of the Baskervilles, The Adventures of Robin Hood...), I wonder what was so special about this particular performance. I can imagine, though, that Rathbone was pleased that his skill in interpreting Shakespeare was noticed. It probably meant more to him than recognition in a
non-Shakespearian play or film.
In addition to Rathbone's Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor, nominations also went to Norma Shearer for Best Actress, to Cedric Gibbons, Frederic Hope and Edwin B. Willis for Best Art Direction, and to the
film for Best Picture. None of these won. Rathbone lost to Walter Brennan (for "Come and Get It").
"Romeo and Juliet" was the last film Irving Thalberg produced
before his death in September 1936.
Rathbone worked with fencing instructor Fred Cavens for six weeks
to learn the difficult dueling routines with Barrymore and Howard. In
addition to Rathbone, Cavens also instructed Howard, Barrymore, Ralph
Forbes and other players in the use of the sword and shield, rapier and
dagger dueling. The duels are wonderfully choreographed. According to Movie Classics
magazine, Basil Rathbone and John Barrymore were the best fencers in films
at that time.
Here's a clip of Rathbone dueling with Reginald Denny:
Cavens and Rathbone
In Shakespeare's play, Romeo and Juliet were star-crossed teenage lovers.
Norma Shearer was 34 when this film was made and Leslie Howard was 46. Although
Shearer and Howard were excellent actors, and did a good job with their
respective parts, they were too mature to be convincing as teenagers. Rathbone was only 44—they might as well have cast him as Romeo (a role he had played many times on the stage, and
also his favorite role)! To this issue of casting older actors to play
teenagers, director George Cukor explained:
So far as casting was concerned; remember that
Juliet has never been played by a girl lovely enough or young
enough to give the impression of being sixteen. At first the heroine
was played by young boys because there were no actresses in that day.
Later middle-aged plumpish women and heavy men with fallen arches
simpered through the passionate, tender lines of the balcony scene.
...
Miss Shearer, here, is the first really beautiful Juliet.
Leslie Howard isn't a slip of a boy by any means, but I think the public
would have howled if we had given them authentically adolescent players who had
neither the maturity nor the understanding of life to read the lines as they
should be read.
—"Filming the World's Greatest Love Story," Photoplay,
September 1936
Did Director Cukor really mean to say that Norma Shearer was the first
beautiful Juliet? While Norma Shearer was undeniably beautiful, such a comment is insulting to the actresses who played the part before! In "Juliets
I Have Known," Basil Rathbone wrote about several actresses who played
Juliet to his Romeo. He described two of them as "lovely" and one as
"beautiful."
With regard to Norma Shearer, Basil wrote:
At her first entrance I was abruptly arrested by a
pathos in the simplicity and tenderness of her approach that soon
developed into an emotional reaction from me that was most surely
Shakespeare's intention as to audience reaction. I am, at most times,
analytical to a fault. But here I found no desire to analyze, merely a
deep and sincere gratitude for a glimpse into the heart and soul of
Shakespeare's truest heroine, Juliet.
—"Juliets
I Have Known," Hollywood, May 1936
.
In his review of Romeo and Juliet, Frank Nugent of The New York Times
wrote, "All that remains then, before we credit the film with being one of the
screen's finest accomplishments, is to add a few words about the players.
If we must disclose our favorites, they would be John Barrymore's Mercutio
and Basil Rathbone's Tybalt. Both were magnificent." (Frank S. Nugent,
The New York Times, August 30, 1936)
Watch Rathbone's duel with John Barrymore (Mercutio):
.
Reviews of Romeo and Juliet were overwhelmingly positive. In the following review, Hollywood magazine reported that Basil
Rathbone is
"as brilliant as a black diamond."
A special showing of the $2,000,000 Romeo and
Juliet to the press convinced those who have watched this film in
the making that it tops all previous efforts of the industry in
acting, photography, sets, costumes, music and all the allied talents
of the picture business. For Norma Shearer it cannot help but bring
the academy award, and all the huzzahs and honors an appreciative
public may devise. Shakespeare gave Juliet all the best lines.
Miss Shearer has read them beautifully. Romeo still dies beside her in
the tomb, and Juliet still sheathes his dagger in her lovely breast,
and the tragedy of these lovers still bring tears as it did when first
presented in London in 1596. Incredible care went into the production.
The balcony scene alone required five weeks to film, a month went into
the making of the dueling scenes. While no ordinary mortal could have
been considered perfect for everyone's notion of a Romeo, Leslie
Howard does well by the role. Basil Rathbone, himself a noted Romeo of
the stage, is as brilliant as a black diamond in the part of Tybalt,
John Barrymore is a mad scapegrace of a Mercutio, while Edna Mae
Oliver and all the others made of this play a grand and noble thing of
beauty.
—Hollywood, September
1936
.
The Film Daily praises the film, but doesn't say anything about
Rathbone's performance in particular:
Superb and important achievement skillfully
handled with a strong name cast giving the Shakespeare classic
extensive box-office value aided by widespread support that will be
accorded it by proponents of better films.
New heights in cinema
artistry have been achieved in the picturization of Shakespeare's
immortal love story. It is one of the most important contributions to
the screen since the inception of talking pictures--a glorious triumph
for Producer Irving G. Thalberg, Director George Cukor, the starring
combination of Norma Shearer and Leslie Howard, and all others
concerned in the making of the picture. The Universal appeal of its
tragic romance and the unusual marquee strength of its cast are
assurances that the picture will interest maximum patronage, and from
the standpoint of enlisting the attention and support of
constructively influential public elements and raising the screen in
everybody's esteem, it will prove one of the most effective releases
in years. the spirit of the classic has been captured with fine skill.
Some of the settings are breath-taking in their beauty. The screenplay
by Talbot Jennings; the dances of the period, as directed by Agnes
deMille; the settings, designed by Cedric Gibbons and Oliver Messel,
and the photography by William Daniels all are worthy of highest
praise. Miss Shearer rises to new stature and importance through the
qualities she brings to the role of Juliet. Howard's reading of the
famous lines in his Romeo role is inspiring. In addition to the
splendid work of these two stars, the picture is loaded with
outstanding performances, particularly the work of John Barrymore,
Edna May Oliver, and Andy Devine in the lighter moments. Cukor's
direction is most praiseworthy for his guidance of the tender love
scenes, and highlights of the picture include Mercutio's death scene.
Romeo's first meeting with Juliet, their balcony scene, their marriage
and the night before their doom. The story is about the love affair of
the offspring of rival families, with Juliet as a Capulet and Romeo as
a Montague. They fall in love at first sight. To avenge Mercutio's
(Barrymore) death in a duel with Tybalt, played by Basil Rathbone,
Romeo slays Tybalt and as a result is banished from Verona. Friar
Laurence (Henry Kolker), knowing the Capulets insist that Juliet marry
Paris (Ralph Forbes), gives her a potion that will make her appear
dead. The Friar dispatches a note to Romeo to come to the cemetery,
where Juliet will be revived, but the message never reaches Romeo.
Believing Juliet dead, he drinks poison, and when Juliet awakens to
find him dead at her side she joins Romeo by stabbing herself to
death.
—The Film Daily, July
16, 1936
.
Praise for Basil Rathbone:
"And I must single out Basil Rathbone for an interpretation that haunts
with its true nobility. He is like a black raven of destiny . . . spelling
death in the film." (Elza Shallert, NBC)
"My humble laurel wreath rests upon the darkling brow of Basil Rathbone,
the tempestuous Tybalt, proud of mein, intolerant in bearing, hot-blooded,
itching fingers ever ready to seize rapier or dagger to avenge real or
fancied slight upon his house. A colorful character, to be sure, and one
that fairly blazes from the screen under Rathbone's skilled
interpretation." (Regina Crewe, New York American)
" . . . and Basil Rathbone, a perfect devil of a Tybalt, fiery and
quick to draw and an insolent flinger of challenges. No possible fault
there." (Frank S. Nugent, New York Times)
"Basil Rathbone, as Tybalt, is Hollywood's ultimate image of the
Shakespearean villain—very lank, very
dark, and (in the immortal words of Daisy Ashford) 'very sneery.' But by
M-G-M standards he is an entirely adequate foil to Howard and Barrymore."
(David J. DeLaura, Film Notes of Wisconsin Film Society)
"Rathbone brings vast Shakespearean experience to films, although
Barrymore, probably because of his Richard III and Hamlet, in modern
dress, is credited with more 'tradition.'" (Dorothy Spensley, "Movies Capture Romeo and Juliet,"
Motion
Picture)
"Outstanding for an interpretation that haunts with its character of
great nobility is Basil Rathbone's Tybalt." (Picture Play)
Basil Rathbone's proud, ruthless Tybalt is a sound, dramatically
powerful characterization. (Motion Picture Herald)
* * * * *
Another review full of praise is from Picture Play:
With pomp, ceremony and distinction, Shakespeare's
classic of romance is brought to life on the screen. Several previous
attempts at transcribing the bard are overshadowed by this, at least
on the human and the dramatic side.
The picture unquestionable is a milestone. And without effort such
words as "gorgeous," "lavish" and even "magnificent" may justifiably
be used to describe the picture, which, of course, represents the
utmost that a great studio can expend in money, time and effort.
From the first impression of a medieval tapestry, whose figures
come to life and assume the roles of the characters of the play, until
the closing scene, where the characters once again blend into the
tapestry design, the mood, the spirit and the quality of an
exceptionally fine production are established and sustained.
The poetic tragedy of "Romeo and Juliet" who loved with such a
consuming passion, who lived an eternity in four brief days, is told
thrillingly in the impressive and beautiful language of the screen and
in the stirring stanzas of Shakespeare. Certain deletions of the
poetic line may be noted, but these are slight in the compensations of
spirit and glowing beauty of the film in its entirety.
Norma Shearer as "Juliet" is breathtakingly lovely in her
impression of the young girl who lived and died in the first fires of
love, and she rises to compelling heights as an actress in the potion
scene, and again in the final scene of her death. It is a fine
contribution to screen art and scores a second triumph for her since
her "Elizabeth Barrett Browning."
Leslie Howard, as "Romeo," is more restrained than fiery, but gives
the role tenderness and grace. John Barrymore as "Mercutio," whose
death by the sword of "Tybalt" precipitates the tragedy of the
Capulets and Montagues, is a as lusty a character as could be
imagined. It is a fantastic interpretation in many ways, but
fascinating. Edna May Oliver as the nurse is a good counterpart for
Mr. Barrymore, giving her characterization much of the same vigorous
spirit. Henry Kolker, C. Aubrey Smith, Reginald Denny, Ralph Forbes,
Robert Warwick, Violet Kemble Cooper, all impress. But outstanding for
an interpretation that haunts with its character of great nobility is
Basil Rathbone's "Tybalt." He spells destiny in the story, and
fulfills it with distinction and power. Excerpts from Tschaikowsky's
"Romeo and Juliet" add much to the stunning fabric.
—Picture Play, October
1936
Two More Reviews:
Photoplay (September 1936)
Motion Picture Herald (1936)
and two complete articles (PDF files) about the making of the film:
Here is the final duel of the film, the one between Romeo and Tybalt, in
which Tybalt is killed:
.
In an article printed in Silver Screen magazine, Basil Rathbone is
quoted as saying:
Romeo and Juliet could 'happen' today only after youth is gone.
Great love comes now with years and not with hours or days. Romeo and
Juliet today would be people in their middle years. For only after years
of companionship, only after roots had struck jointly and deep would death
be preferable to life—alone. After the close-together years, after the
marriage of habit, which is the only true and tested marriage, only
then would it be unendurable for one to face life without the other. Then
and only then, I think, could dying for love be conceivable—or probable.
If either of the lovers could live today, it would be Juliet. There
are, possibly, girls who would be Juliets if they were given any
encouragement. It is Romeo who is dead . . . When I was playing Romeo to
Katharine Cornell's Juliet, for instance, a crowd of young college boys
came back stage to see me one night. They wanted to talk to me about
Romeo. They said 'But wasn't he sort of sappy?' And I said to them
'My lads, the age of the he-man is gone! In Verona, in those days,
the men were painted and powdered and exquisite—true.
But they were walking with death every hour of the day, with swords
unsheathed—to kill. Today what
do we have? The football hero, helmeted, protected, the victim of a
few broken bones, perhaps. No . . . Romeo is dead and for want of
him Juliet, too, has perished from the earth . . . not until the
middle years can such love flower and die for its own sake.
—"Is Dying for Love a Thing of the Past?" Silver
Screen, August 1936
. .
See Page Two for screenshots from the
film. See Page Three for pictures of posters,
lobby cards and promo photos.
.
Cast
Norma Shearer ...
Juliet
Leslie Howard ...
Romeo
John Barrymore
...
Mercutio
Basil Rathbone
...
Tybalt
Edna May Oliver
...
Juliet's Nurse
C. Aubrey Smith ...
Lord Capulet
Andy Devine
...
Peter (Servant)
Conway Tearle
...
Escalus
Ralph Forbes
...
Paris
Henry Kolker
...
Friar Laurence
Robert Warwick
...
Lord Montague
Virginia Hammond
...
Lady Montague
Reginald Denny
...
Benvolio
Violet Kemble Cooper
...
Lady Capulet
Credits
Production
Company ...
MGM
Producer
...
Irving Thalberg
Director ...
George Cukor
Screenplay ...
Talbot Jennings
Cinematographer
...
William Daniels
Film Editing
...
Margaret Booth
Original Music
...
Herbert Stothart, Edward Ward
Non-original music
...
"Romeo and Juliet: Fantasy-Overture" by
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
Recording Director
...
Douglas Shearer
Art Director
...
Cedric Gibbons
Settings
...
Cedric Gibbons, Fredric Hope, Edwin B. Willis, Oliver Messel