Its dramatic irony. Lady Capulet thinks one thing and we know the truth.
In Shakespeare's play Romeo and Juliet, when Lady Capulet mentions the death of Tybalt, Capulet responds with anger and tells his wife to stop talking about Tybalt's death. He also declares that Romeo and Juliet will be married on Thursday as planned.
I gather you are not talking about William Shakespeare the playwright who died in 1616. You should probably specify which William Shakespeare you are talking about if you are not talking about the obvious one.
If you are talking about the Shakespeare tragedy, "Romeo and Juliet" I can help you. First of all, Juliet wasn't spelled with an extra te at the end. It was just Juliet. And her last name was Capulet. Juliet Capulet. Romeo's last name was Montague. Romeo Montague and Juliet Capulet. Hope this helps!
Which William Shakespeare are you talking about? Because if you are talking about the playwright, we have no indication that he explored anything.
Lord Capulet when Juliet says she will not marry Paris.
They are talking to a servant about hiring twenty new cooks. They seem to be confident that they can bring Juliet around to their way of thinking.
Dark Lady
They are talking to a servant about hiring twenty new cooks. They seem to be confident that they can bring Juliet around to their way of thinking.
It depends on what production you saw. There is no specific song included in Shakespeare's script.
They are totally different for each production. Unless you say which production you are talking about, this cannot be answered. Shakespeare didn't say much about what the actors were supposed to wear, except that some of them wore masks. (Not all--Capulet says he last wore a mask years before)
Hanging around the Capulet's house, talking to Juliet and talking to Friar Lawrence.
In the prologue to Henry V, Shakespeare talks about a "wooden O". But that was not the Globe Theatre he was talking about. Henry V was written before the Globe was built. He was probably talking about The Curtain Playhouse.