In Shakespeare's time yes, all roles were played by men.
Which Romeo and Juliet are you talking about? Romeus and Juliet the poem by Arthur Brooke? Romeo and Juliet the play by William Shakespeare? Romeo and Juliet the Symphonic Poem by Tchaikovsky? Romeo and Juliet the ballet by Prokofieff? Romeo and Juliet the song by Dire Straits? All of them are original works even though they are all about the same story.
That would be Romeo and Juliet. Mr. Montague also loved Miss Capulet.
Nothing about Romeo and Juliet is real. It's a play. It's all make-believe.
The Romeo and Juliet you have heard about isn't any category of poem at all. It's a play.
Romeo and Juliet's funeral is not depicted within the play at all. The story ends with their deaths.
All of the parts contained in Shakespeare's play of that name are of course "original" to that play. You might want to look at the second quarto edition of the play which can be found at the attached link, to see exactly what the play looked like in the original.
Romeo, and Juliet.
If you read the play or watch it being performed, the answer to this will seem obvious. Against all odds, Romeo and Juliet fall in love with each other. That fact leads to everything that happens in the play after Act 1.
In the play Romeo and Juliet, Romeo does not have a sister.
Shakespeare certainly wrote the play Romeo and Juliet, unless you subscribe to the theory that someone else wrote all of his plays under his name. Shakespeare did not invent the plot of Romeo and Juliet, but then Shakespeare did not invent any of his plots.
i have no ideaaa ..i dontt get itt at all!
originally all characters were male