a cobbler
There are five scenes in Romeo and Juliet which are scene 1.
It is one of the movies that you watch (like the one at the beginning where Mario & Friends ride on the boat).
It is an ode that the chorus sings at the conclusion of scene 1 in "Oedipus Rex" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, plays follow set rules in ancient Greece. One such rules pertains to structure. An ode separates each scene in the play. It therefore signifies the ending of one scene and the beginning of the next.
Nobody, actually. Paris only approaches Capulet about marrying Juliet in scene 2, which is halfway through Act One.
Act One, Scene One serves to establish the setting, tone, and central conflict of the play. It introduces key characters and their relationships, providing crucial context for the subsequent plot development. This scene often sets the mood and foreshadows themes that will be explored throughout the narrative. Additionally, it engages the audience, drawing them into the world of the story from the very beginning.
If he/she is a minor one, presence of parents during police questioning is a must. Otherwise,the school principal ought to be present in the scene.
There is one scene at the beginning of the film where Christian is seen drinking Absinthe just before he goes to the Moulin Rouge for the first time.
you are crazy be ask questioning this
In his soliloquy at the beginning of scene 7, Macbeth is feeling conflicted and uncertain. He is torn between his ambition to become king and his sense of morality, as he contemplates the consequences of murdering King Duncan. Macbeth wrestles with his inner demons as he grapples with the decision ahead of him.
No one who is named dies in the first scene.
Sorry, line numbers mean nothing; they are different from edition to edition of the play and they start again at one at the beginning of every scene. Without knowing what edition or scene you are talking about, it is like asking what is five miles away without saying from what. You are better off to quote the beginning of the first line, which will enable the answerer to find the passage you refer to.
the person who said this was, I believe, in fact Hamlet himself at the beginning. If I am wrong forgive me, but to my educated knowledge I do believe dearly this is true. I hope this is at least some use to you - but yes, HAMLET SAID "To be, or not be - that is the question."