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The show must go on: Students put a spin on ‘Romeo & Juliet’

WESTWOOD, Mass. - “Parting is such sweet sorrow” — especially for a theatre troupe hoping to stage a live performance of “Romeo & Juliet” in the middle of a pandemic that has closed schools and required social distancing.

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While wearing protective masks due to the COVID-19 outbreak, Jim Howard, a drama teacher at Westwood, Mass., High School, center, poses with his student actors outside the school’s auditorium after working on their virtual performance of Shakespeare’s “Romeo and Juliet,” Monday, Nov. 16, 2020, in Westwood. The production, which would usually be presented onstage, shifted to a virtual audience due to the pandemic. From left are Ryan Kaplan, who portrays the friar, Lucy Vitali, who portrays Juliet, Howard, Cassidy Hall, who portrays the nurse, and Alex Mansour, who portrays Romeo.


WESTWOOD, Mass. - “Parting is such sweet sorrow” — especially for a theatre troupe hoping to stage a live performance of “Romeo & Juliet” in the middle of a pandemic that has closed schools and required social distancing.

The solution, at least for high school students in the Boston suburb of Westwood? Make a movie version instead.

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