setting
setting, including time, place, and any relevant details to help orient the reader. This description serves to ground the reader in the story's context and provide a visual frame of reference for the ensuing action. It helps set the tone, establish the mood, and convey important information about where and when the scene takes place.
setting.
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Yes, they need to have songs in each scenes or it isn't considered as a scene.
If you've never written a novel, you probably should start with an outline. List each scene you know you want to write, and put them into some sort of logical order. Put down a brief description of each scene, with the characters involved and what basically happens -- this way, you won't forget what you've already written and make a mistake. If you want to do the classical "pyramid" of plot, write out what scenes are going to show the reader about the characters and setting, what scenes will build up action, what will be the climax scene, and what scene or scenes will end the story.
Each scene tells a story, And every story adds up to a WHOLE STORY.
Almost all of the scenes of Romeo and Juliet are important to the dramatic experience in some way, but the story could be told in much abbreviated form using the following scenes: Act 1 Scene V The party scene. Romeo meets Juliet. Act 2 Scene II The balcony scene. They declare their love for each other. Act 2 Scene VI The wedding scene. They are married. Act 3 Scene I Romeo kills Tybalt and is banished. Act 4 Scene I Juliet goes to Friar Lawrence with her problem. Act 5 Scene III They die and the play ends.
Type your answer here... Multiple versions of each scene are shot
There have been a number of different movies of Romeo and Juliet, with memorable scenes in each.
It depends on what time period you are talking about, and what your definition of "scene" is. To the French, a scene starts and ends when any character leaves or enters the stage, whereas to the English, a scene starts and ends when the stage is emptied and there is a change of location or time or both. Obviously most plays contain many more French scenes than English ones. Also, Elizabethan plays generally were divided into five acts, each act having between one and eight English scenes, so a play might have sixteen or more scenes. More modern plays have fewer acts and fewer scenes, often three acts which contain one or two scenes each.
Continuity Secretary