usually a never had the chance to play Juliet on romeo and Juliet. in the actual play, a young boy, usually good looking and willing to dress like a young lady usually layed the role of Juliet.
Hi, do you mean who is romeos wife because that would be juliet.-hope it helps
Paris is the man who wants to marry Juliet. He wants to marry Juliet because Juliet was the heir to the Capulet fortune, and in Shakespeare's time, if the only heir was a woman, then the woman's husband would get the inheritance.
he says she is a holy woman. he says she is the most beautiful woman in the room. he falls in love and compares her to an ethiop ear
William Shakespeare was a man.
Lady Capulet is lamenting that there is no other woman in Verona as beautiful as Paris' intended bride, Juliet. She is praising Juliet's beauty and comparing her to the loveliest flower of the summer.
Juliet.
No
"Belle femme" is "beautiful woman" in French.
Beautiful Woman
It probably depends on what you think the mold was. However, if you are thinking of the mold created by Aristotle which suggested that all tragedies ought to resemble Oedipus Rex as closely as possible, Romeo and Juliet certainly does break it by not having a tragic hero.
In Henry VI Part I: Suffolk: She's beautiful and therefore to be woo'd; She is a woman, therefore to be won. In Titus Andronicus: Demetrius: She is a woman, therefore to be woo'd She is a woman, therefore to be won. In Richard III: Richard : Was ever woman in this humour woo'd? Was ever woman in this humour won?
The answer is both, Yes and No. The term 'Nurse' that Shakespeare uses in Romeo and Juliet, does NOT refer to what we, in modern times, call a Nurse (as in a Medical Nurse). Another meaning of 'Nurse' is a Lady in Waiting (a Valet for a woman) or more simply put, a Woman's Personal Servant/Maid. Typically speaking ALL, and usually ONLY, wealthy women had a 'Nurse' or 'Nurse-maid' at that time. But that is not the meaning of Nurse in Romeo and Juliet. This Nurse was Juliet's wet-nurse, which means that Juliet fed as a baby from the breasts of the Nurse rather than from her mother. The nurse remembers in Act 1 Scene 3 that it was eleven years since Juliet was weaned (stopped breastfeeding) because the Nurse put bitter wormwood on her nipple to make it taste bad to Juliet. She has continued as a servant since but is remembered as a Nurse and has a special relationship with Juliet.