Romeo and Juliet: Act 4, Scene 3

Zero hour is rapidly approaching. Let's see how Juliet deals with this...

Confession: I kind of love Juliet's speech where she freaks out about all the things that could go wrong upon taking the Friar's potion. She goes from "death" to "waking up and being all alone in a tomb" to "being driven mad and playing with the corpses of her family" to "bashing her brains out with a bone".  

And then she goes and takes the potion anyways. That's badass.

Top Ten Shakespearean Stage Corpses

So, last month one of my Tumblr followers posed the following question:

jmujaneway asked:

Hiya! Someone at lunch said there's a debate as to which Shakespeare character spends the most time dead on stage. I figured you'd know! Please help?

I offered up my best guesses (Caesar and Desdemona) and then Tumblr took over, with nellololol going to far as to do some in-depth research and provide us with some line counts. This was far too fun to leave alone, though, so I've done my own line-counting and here are the results!

Now, Bassianus and Humphrey are somewhat debatable, as they can conceivably spend part of their "dead" time hidden in a pit or behind bed curtains respectively. However, I have seen both languish on stage in person, so they are included. Conversely, I don't think I've ever seen a Romeo and Juliet production that actually included the "real live body" of Tybalt in the final scene, but I have heard of those that have, and that have similarly had a "real live body" of Caesar in the funeral scene. 

If we go by the has-to-be-on-stage-dead-the-entire-time-no-chance-of-being-swapped-out-for-a-dummy matrix, however, the winner is Desdemona. Take a bow Desd-- oh wait, you can't. You're dead.

Romeo and Juliet: Act 3, Scene 4

It's generally believed that Romeo and Juliet could easily be a comedy IF ONLY Mercutio and Tybalt hadn't died, and that their duel is what turns the entire play from a comedy into a tragedy. However, it can effectively be argued that this is the scene that really removes any hope of a happy ending. And it's ALL CAPULET'S FAULT.

Side note: People today take months, even YEARS to plan a wedding, but the Capulets are just like... "three days, it's all good, let's do this". Granted, this is partially because they don't want to have a big lavish celebration in the wake of Tybalt's death, but still. THREE DAYS.