SYNOPSIS The theatre Romeo and Juliet written by William Shakespeare is about a pair of young bride who fell in love, but are hampered by both their families against each other. Romeo, Rosaline love-sick, comforted by her friend Benvolio. Capulet tells Paris that he should marry his daughter Juliet until she was older. Romeo and his friends learned of a party held by the Capulets, and decided to go to him as Masquers. At the party, Tybalt sees Romeo, but prevented from fighting him by Capulet. Romeo Juliet meet, and they immediately fall in love. After leaving the party, Romeo eludes his friends, returned a Juliet, and they exchange vows of love. Friar Laurence tells Romeo what had happened and she agreed …show more content…
Other, that a particular subject or issue that is discussed often or repeatedly. The particular subject or idea on which the style of something (such as a party or room) is based. In Romeo and Juliet theatre, there is a theme in the theater is love. Romeo and Juliet is the most famous love story in the tradition of English literature. Love is naturally dominant theme and the most important in this theater. This narrative is focused on romantic love, especially strong spirit that grows in love at first sight between Romeo and Juliet. In the theater Romeo and Juliet, love is one, love is joy, love is power too violent to replace all the values, loyalty, and emotional. In the course of the game, the young lovers are encouraged to challenge their entire social world: family ("Deny thy father and refuse thy name," she said, "Or if thou wilt not, be but sworn my love, / And I: There is no longer a Capulet "); Partners (Mercutio and Benvolio in Romeo left after the feast to go to the park Juliet). Love is the overriding theme of the play, but the reader must remember that Shakespeare was not interested in portraying a prettied-up, short dainty emotion, the kind that poets write about the bad, and the bad poem reads Romeo while pining for Rosaline. Love in theater Romeo and Juliet is cruel, powerful emotions that capture individual and catapults them to their world, and at times, against themselves. Nature of tough love can be seen in the way he described, or more precisely, how about so consistently failed to capture a whole. At times the love that is expressed in terms of religion, as in the fourteenth row when Romeo and Juliet first met. In others it described as a form of magic: "Similar bewitched by the charm of appearance" (2.Prologue.6). Juliet, perhaps, the most perfectly describes her love for Romeo and refused to describe it: "But my true love is