ophelia
Ophelia
Lavinia, in Titus Andronicus.
ethel
Ethel
Imogen in Cymbeline is a wonderful heroine who is betrayed by her husband like Desdemona, has to fight off an oafish suitor like Sylvia and disguises herself like Portia and Rosalind.
Yes, but she does not come from the play Romeo and Juliet. She's in another play called As You Like It. Romeo's former girlfriend in Romeo and Juliet is Rosaline, not Rosalind. (There's a Rosaline in Shakespeare's play Love's Labour's Lost too)
The male form of heroine is - hero.
You say "lily is a super heroine"
Shakespeare did not write a play called Fidele. However, in his play Cymbeline, written around 1611, the heroine Imogen, after disguising herself as a boy, renames herself Fidele. Anthony Munday wrote a play called Fidele and Fortunio in 1584 and Beethoven wrote an opera called Fidelio, but neither of these are Shakespeare.
heroine
Oh, yes and they were burned, drowned, and killed all the time in his time. Anyone who was a little different, a red head, or disabled were considered witches.
The masculine form of heroine is hero. Heroine is just a woman superhero.