The target audience for Romeo and Juliet had to all generations of age above 10 because everyone would be engaged by this extream love story and would me interested to know what happens next but only if they are old enough to understand this love plot :) Thanks LIKE IT PLEASE
Athenian theater goers familiar with the legends and stories of ancient Greece is the audience for whom "Oedipus Rex" was written by Sophocles
(495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).
Specifically, Sophocles was born in Colonus, the place of Theban King Oedipus' death. Colonus and Thebes were both near Athens, where Sophocles spent his adult life and established his reputation as a leading dramatist of ancient Greece. Athenians enjoyed the theater and tended to be well informed about local stories and legends. As a competitive and well educated dramatist, Sophocles knew how to put his talents and Athenian proclivities to effective, lucrative use on Athens' local stages.
It depends which film. The 1936 and 1954 films were aimed at an adult audience. The 1968 film also aimed at an adult audience, but because it used teenaged actors, it caught the fancy of a number of people in the teen agegroup. The 1996 film is primarily aimed at people in their teens and twenties but is also attractive to older people.
It's not exactly a highbrow play, and clearly was not aimed at the feminist market. So, lowbrow males were the target.
Anybody, you most likely have to read it sometime in Middle or High School, but if you want a good love, tragedy story, pick up No Fear Shakepeare Romeo and Juliet so anyone can understand it
middle school to adults
There is no Benjamin in Romeo and Juliet ... unless he is in the audience.
No records exist of contemporary performances of Romeo and Juliet.
dramatic
Because in Romeo and Juliet at heightened points of emotion the meter is interrupted and the sentences tend to be long. But as the sentence is interrupted it suggests to the audience that something shocking has been said or that Juliet is overwhelmed with emotions. Caesura helps suggest Juliet's emotions to the audience, it is a creative technique.
they prepare for the bad scenes
There is no Benjamin in Romeo and Juliet ... unless he is in the audience.
its because romeo and Juliet are dead at the end of the play.
No records exist of contemporary performances of Romeo and Juliet.
dramatic
The audience knows that Romeo is not dead when Juliet finds him in the tomb, but Juliet believes he is actually deceased. This dramatic irony creates tension and suspense as the audience watches the tragic events play out.
The audience cried at the death scene of Romeo and Juliet on stage.
The tone of "Romeo and Juliet" is tragic, intense, and romantic. The play explores themes of love, fate, and conflict and evokes strong emotions from its audience.
Because in Romeo and Juliet at heightened points of emotion the meter is interrupted and the sentences tend to be long. But as the sentence is interrupted it suggests to the audience that something shocking has been said or that Juliet is overwhelmed with emotions. Caesura helps suggest Juliet's emotions to the audience, it is a creative technique.
because its AWESOME ( not )
they prepare for the bad scenes
Dramatic irony is used in the prologue of Romeo and Juliet presents facts to the audience that will be unknown the characters in the play. It is a means of creatingsuspense making the audience member anxious or excited about the upcoming plot.
Because the nurse is taking too long to respond/return with romeos answer.