I don't know what you mean by 'will' (as in future tense), but at the end of the script, Juliet pretends to be dead, her husband, Romeo thinks she is dead and kills himself, and then Juliet wakes up, sees her dead husband, and kills herself. I would then say 'and they lived happily ever after' but unfortunatly, this Shakespeare play has a sad ending.
Presumably we are talking about the vial containing Friar Lawrence's 42-hour-knockout-drops. The initial effect of this potion will be to make Juliet appear dead. Almost all of the succeeding events of the play will be affected at least in part by this effect. In a sense, then, one might say that the effects of the contents of the vial are most of the rest of the play: the sadness of the Capulets, the cancellation of the wedding with Paris, Balthazar's message to Romeo, Romeo's decision to buy poison and go to Verona, Paris's decision to mourn at Juliet's tomb, Romeo's suicide and consequently Juliet's suicide are all predicated on Juliet appearing to be dead, the result of taking the potion.
Romeo and Juliet (1935), Romeo & Juliet (1968) and Romeo+Juliet (1996).
Romeo and Juliet
Romeo and Juliet
Juliet Capulet is one of the leads in "Romeo & Juliet"
It means that whats meant to happen will
no
Romeo and Juliet show more contrast towards what is going to happen to them
They both die.
When Romeo killed Tybalt after Tybalt killed Mercutio
I don't know whose Romeo and Juliet you are talking about, but that does not happen in the play of that name by Shakespeare. In Shakespeare's play, Juliet does not reveal her identity to Romeo. It is the nurse who tells him who she is. And he is not angry, only perplexed.
Romeo and Juliet (1935), Romeo & Juliet (1968) and Romeo+Juliet (1996).
Romeo and Juliet
Romeo and Juliet
Juliette dies and then romeo kills himself too,the end
juliet
After Romeo and Juliet married Romeo owned Juliet and everything she owed as well.
He would get murdered.