Because,Romeo and Juliet both are dead.
There would be a chance that Romeo & Juliet will come to life.
I'm not so sure.It wouldn't be happen.Or,i guess there'll be something with Tybalt may be.
But it'll not be very popular because the story already ended.
15 suicides total in the tragedies. Romeo and Juliet - 2 (Romeo and Juliet) Julius Caesar - 3 (Brutus, Cassius, Titinius) Othello - 1 (Othello) Hamlet - 1 (Ophelia, although this is debatable) Macbeth - 1 (Lady Macbeth, also debatable) Antony and Cleopatra - 5 (Antony, Cleopatra, Eros, Charmian, and possibly Iras) King Lear - 1 (Goneril) Timon of Athens - 1 (Timon) Coriolanus - 0
2006 (Open Season), 2008 (Open Season 2), and 2010 (Open Season 3).
you cant
usually obese sometimes, scratch that, always eating. cant walk, cant talk, cant pee, doesnt know what 2 +2 is... bacically girl x0x0 :*
you cant go lower 6 can be divided by 2 and 3 but seven cant so you cant.
Romeo and Juliet get married.
In my opinion I think the Balcony Scene. Act 2 scene 2 because basicly he (romeo) is talking and Juliet cant really hear him and he describes how beautiful she is and that's kind of what we the kings are saying...
It's all about arranging Romeo and Juliet's marriage.
In Act 2, Scene 2 of Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet," it is Romeo who knocks on Juliet's door as he arrives at her house after the Capulet's party.
Most famously, Romeo and Juliet discuss their love in Juliet's backyard. Juliet is in her window and Romeo is in the bushes down below. It's in Act 2 Scene 2 of the play.
There are six scenes in Act 2 of Romeo and Juliet.
These lines are spoken by Juliet in Act 2, Scene 2 of "Romeo and Juliet." Juliet is expressing her love for Romeo and her desire for him to stay with her even though she knows it is dangerous for them to be together.
Tybalt
In Act 2 of Romeo and Juliet, Romeo and Juliet profess their love for one another and agree to be married, Friar Laurence agrees to marry them in secret, and Tybalt challenges Romeo to a duel.
David Garrick
Romeo sees Juliet at the window in Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet." They are professing their love for each other in the famous balcony scene, which is Act 2, Scene 2.
In Act 2, Scene 2 of Romeo and Juliet (the balcony scene), Juliet recognizes Romeo by his voice. "My ears have not yet drunk a hundred words of thy tongue's uttering, yet I know the sound."