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The range of feeling and mood as well as poetic and formal invention which Berlioz found in Shakespeare [4] had a strong influence on his music, making a direct musical setting of Shakespeare's work only natural. In fact, he had been planning a musical realisation of Romeo and Juliet for a long time before 1838, but other projects intervened. [5]
Romeo & Juliet (soundtrack) Romeo + Juliet (soundtrack) Romeo and Juliet (1968 film soundtrack) Romeo and Juliet (Alec R. Costandinos song) Romeo and Juliet (Dire Straits song) Romeo and Juliet (Prokofiev) Romeo and Juliet (Tchaikovsky) Roméo et Juliette (Berlioz) Rosaline (soundtrack)
Sutherland Edwards, music critic of the St. James's Gazette, wrote the following about the opera following its first London performance in 1867: Gounod's Roméo et Juliette , in which the composer is always pleasing, though seldom impressive, might be described as the powerful drama of Romeo and Juliet reduced to the proportions of an eclogue ...
Queen Mab, illustration by Arthur Rackham (1906). Queen Mab is a fairy referred to in William Shakespeare's play Romeo and Juliet, in which the character Mercutio famously describes her as "the fairies' midwife", a miniature creature who rides her chariot (which is driven by a team of atom-sized creatures) over the bodies of sleeping humans during the nighttime, thus helping them "give birth ...
Austrian Version: Romeo drinks a vial of poison, and similar to Romeo + Juliet, Juliet wakes up just in time to watch him die. She kills herself with Romeo's dagger. Asia Tour Version: Same as the Austrian version. Romeo drinks a vial of poison after singing "Mort de Romeo", with Juliet waking up just in time to see him die. After singing "La ...
The song "Man of the House," while a wonderful showcase of Zegler's dazzling vocal skills, doesn't give much more insight to the developing crisis between Romeo and Juliet that isn’t already ...
Joey Fatone is returning to Broadway for the first time in two decades, joining the company of the jukebox musical “& Juliet.” The revisionist take on Shakespeare’s classic tale of star ...
A rose by any other name would smell as sweet" is a popular adage from William Shakespeare's play Romeo and Juliet, in which Juliet seems to argue that it does not matter that Romeo is from her family's rival house of Montague. The reference is used to state that the names of things do not affect what they really are.