Below is some information that you may want to use to update your info on Leonard Whiting. He is not living with a male flatmate, and he is not gay. I don't know how the person who sent you the People information on your page ever got that impression from the earlier People article, as that's not what it implied at all.
SATURDAY REVIEW. "By playing his new production of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet against settings in Tuscany and Umbria that have changed but little in the past 500 years, but peopling them with teen-agers of today, director Franco Zeffirelli has succeeded in making this venerable work immediate, without recourse to West Side Story extremes...To a generation brought up on Katharine Cornell Juliet's and Leslie Howard Romeo's, this version may seem wanted the soaring poetry and aural splendors to which we have become accustomed; indeed, John McEnery's rendition of the 'Queen Mab' speech is literally grating to the ear, while neither Leonard Whiting, as Romeo, nor Olivia Hussey, as Juliet, ever manage to do more than merely deliver their lines, never to plumb them. And yet, such is the difference between stage and screen that, except for the purest purist, this matter precious little. Because these kids are authentic teen-agers, just as Shakespeare had envisaged them, they take on a vitality and poignance that no middle-aged actor could project. This Romeo and Juliet, sumptuously mounted, excitingly imagined, lives on the truth of its characters rather than on simply the splendor of its lines. Somehow, I think Shakespeare would have preferred it that way."
"Romeo and Juliet - 1968 - Paramount Pictures - By Douglas Brodie"
NEW YORK. "In Romeo and Juliet, France Zeffirelli has captured the very texture of time and place, creating a 15-century Verona white with the heat of a blazing sun, aglow with rich and courtly costuming, ablaze with personal passions. For once we feel the lusty brawling feud of the two families fed by both temperature and temperament; the vigor, fury and violence of the initial marketplace brawl and the ultimate near-gangfight dueling in which Mercutio and Tybalt are slain have certainly never been matched by any other stage or screen production of the play. And yet, in contrast, his teenage lovers - 17 year-old Leonard Whiting and 15-year-old Olivia Hussey -never quite explode beyond their lines; Miss Hussey is a bit stolid and Whiting veers toward the epicene (although he cuts quite a figure in the nude, a state in which he's frankly shown while Juliet's hair maintains her modesty in their bridal bed). But admittedly the mechanics of their story, literalized by the camera, would provide a challenge for even more seasoned players and it is as well that Mr. Zeffirelli caters primarily to the eye. Friar Laurence's cell assumed cathedral-like proportions; Juliet's balcony becomes a seemingly endless balustrated terrace (of the Palazzo Borghese, in point of fact); the Capulet crypt is packed with corpses…The English actors (and Italian extras) suit the scene, albeit with a variety of stage accents. Milo O'Shea is a remarkably find Friar Laurence, Michael York a brilliantly fierce Tybalt, Natasha Parry an intriguingly discontented Lady Capulet and Pat Heywood a refreshingly young and vulgar nurse. John McEnery's Mercutio is initially fascinating, his Queen Mab speech subtle and sensitive; ultimately he is excessive and irritatingly precious. They all lend character to the richly figured tapestry Zeffirelli has woven in brilliant color."
This has also been written about the tragedy
ROMEO AND JULIET (1968 2h32)
Franco Zefferelli
Zefferelli took a great risk in casting two unknowns as the star-crossed lovers, especially as his
Taming of the Shrew the previous year had not been a huge success. The gamble paid off, and
although Olivia Hussey and Leonard Whiting achieved no subsequent successes, their Juliet and
Romeo are very impressive. Hussey was fifteen, and as such was the closest to the age of Juliet that
any actress has ever come. Filmed in Tuscany before that region became popular with filmmakers
and British tourists, Zefferelli produces an extremely beautiful film, with stirring crowd scenes,
action-packed fights and some surprisingly romantic moments. Michael York is excellent as the
dashing Tybalt, and Laurence Olivier provides a suitably stirring narration. This is most definitely a
film for romantics, and although everyone knows (or thinks they know) the story, it seems new and
original in this version, right to the tragic, tear-jerking ending. (VNC)
[The
Cast of R + J 1968][Merchandise][Pictures][Links][Articles/Reviews][The
Music of Romeo and Juliet 1968][The
Lyrics of Romeo and Juliet 1968][Compare
68 to 96][A
Freshman's Guide to R+J][Home]Did you know?
Site created and counter added: December 29, 1998
Last Updated: April 10, 1999