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    • Friar Laurence's cell

      • The wedding of Romeo and Juliet takes place in Friar Laurence's cell. It is not part of the action on stage, though as Act II comes to an end, we witness the young couple, having again declared their mutual love, preparing to take their vows in front of the friar.
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  2. The Friar sends Romeo to Juliet, and they consummate their marriage, but Romeo has to leave in haste the next morning. Juliet is shocked when her father brings news that he has arranged her marriage with Count Paris .

  3. Summary. We meet Father Laurence in a conservatory surrounded by altar boys, tending to his plants. He delivers a monologue saluting the alternately poisonous and medicinal powers of plants and herbs. Romeo arrives and beseeches Father Laurence to consent to marry him and Juliet later that day.

    • Baz Luhrmann
  4. Father Laurence nurses Romeo’s wounds and assures him that he will help Romeo and Juliet return to Verona and make peace with their respective family members. Juliet’s Nurse arrives and informs Romeo that his wife is waiting for him. Romeo and Juliet are reunited, and they consummate their marriage.

    • Baz Luhrmann
  5. ' The marriage of Romeo and Juliet ') is a 2005 Brazilian film directed by Bruno Barreto and starring Luana Piovani and Marco Ricca. [1] The film is loosely based on the William Shakespeare play, Romeo and Juliet, set in São Paulo amid two feuding soccer clubs, Palmeiras and Corinthians. [2] [3]

  6. The wedding of Romeo and Juliet takes place in Friar Laurence's cell. It is not part of the action on stage, though as Act II comes to an end, we witness the young couple, having again...

  7. Romeo passes the word on via Juliet's nurse, and they soon get married. Tybalt encounters Mercutio and Romeo at the beach. Romeo attempts to make peace, but Tybalt assaults him. Mercutio intervenes and batters Tybalt, and is about to kill him when Romeo stops him.

  8. For Romeo and Juliet it disregards Shakespeare's use of the tradition of the religion of love and its doctrine of the lovers' paradise. If it seems strange that dramatic use of this tradition was accepted by the Christian Elizabethans, it should be remembered that it originated in the Christian Middle Ages.