Isn't this a rather devious way of asking what the climax of the play is? In the Freytag Pyramid sense, the climax falls in Act 3 Scene 1 with the deaths of Mercutio and Tybalt. The death of Tybalt is, in particular, the event which sends the plot spiralling into tragedy. And the important event immediately following it is the trial of Romeo in absentia for the crime of street brawling causing death. Of course, another view of what a climax is all about (the resolution of the plot conflicts) would make the climax the deaths of Romeo and Juliet, and the event which follows is the reconciliation of their families.
Act III, Scene 1 is the climax because there is no turning back for Romeo after he kills Tybalt.
The climax of "Romeo and Juliet" is the deaths of the two titular characters, Romeo and Juliet, in the final act. After their deaths, their families, the Montagues and Capulets, are finally brought together in grief, recognizing the tragedy of their feud. This leads to the complication of the families reconciling and making peace with each other, realizing the cost of their enmity.
it leaves them feeling sad and frustrated at the lovers deaths but feeling hopeful about the feud ending and the family reconciling.try stretch that out to 4 pages
Romeo. The other one is Juliet, as if you didn't know.
If you mean by the climax the denouement or moment of truth, then it should be the last scene where Romeo and Juliet both die and the friar fails to prevent it. Even after Romeo's death the audience might have some hope that Juliet might survive, if they came in after the Prologue. But if you are using the word climax in the technical sense created by Freytag, the climax is the turning point of the action from good to bad, which he found occurs in Act 3 of Shakespeare's plays. And sure enough we find in Act 3 Scene 1 that Romeo kills Tybalt, call himself fortune's fool, and gets banished which means he isn't around to help Juliet escape from the planned marriage to Paris.
"Romeo and Juliet" would come second in a card catalog. The title "Romeo and Juliet" follows the alphabetic order of "Raven, The" as "R" comes after "J" in the English alphabet.
Juliet reveals her private thoughts that she would not have told romeo to his face
write a monlogue about juliet
The two most important characters in "Romeo and Juliet" are, as the title suggests, Romeo and Juliet themselves. Their tragic love story is central to the plot of the play and drives the events that unfold.
he is important because he banishes romeo this is then in the end a "mistake" from himif romeo wouldn't have been banished he would have known that Juliet was asleep and not dead, he wouldn't have killed himself, and then Juliet wouldn't have killed herself.
Romeo and Juliet (2000) (V) Played by Fran de Leon Romeo + Juliet (1996) Played by Claire Danes Roméo et Juliette (2002) (TV) Played by Angela Gheorghiu Romeo & Juliet: Sealed with a Kiss (2006) Played by Tricia Trippett Romeo and Juliet (1995) (TV) Played by Alessandra Ferri Romeo & Juliet (1993) (TV) Played by Megan Follows Romeo & Juliet (1994) (TV) Played by Geraldine Somerville Also go to this website for more: http://www.imdb.com/character/ch0000496/
what important information does the nurse bring to juliet