AC+Sam

Student Self Evaluation 1. The ones that went well were the cues, the lines, and the acting itself. But sometimes the props were hard to use especially the hats. 2. I was the only one that brought all the props, annotations on the script (unfinished particuarly due to Andy forgetting his script and unable to write his part down) and putting some thought into the lines and acting how Romeo would have acted. 3. I knew my lines well, brought my own props and clothes that were historically accurate (according to the movies) 4. I could have made the props more usable (EX. Romeo's hat) and if Andy maybe could have dressed in rags or a cloak of some kind, it would be more imaginative what a Friar looks like. 5. This better helped me understand Romeo and Juliet's bond between them. It seems to be so strong that them being, apart couldn't be able to bear as it is shown evidently in the text to the point they would rather kill themselves then be saparated forever.

Character Report (Romeo) Character's objective: To be with juliet or Die Character's motivation: To reunite with Juliet no matter what obstacles: The banishment of Romeo, the death of Tybalt (when misunderstood) distinct elements in characters way of speaking: When Friar tells that banishment is better then death, he replies that Verona is his world, so basically banishment of is banishment out of the world, so technically, it is death. He also in this section especially dislikes the word banishment, for it is torturing to him without Juliet, claiming, wherever Juliet is, it is heaven. Character's subtext: He is meaning what he is actually saaying

Scene Analysis

Basically Friar Lawerence and Romeo are talking about how Romeo got banished from Verona.

The reason this scene is important, is because, this scene addresses the fact that Romeo is banished from Verona, and this could become a wedge in the relationship between Romeo and Juliet.

I was very surprised at the reaction of Romoe's banishment. This has made to the point where he wants to kill himself. Although I understand his passion, for Juliet, I would call this infatuation.