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Welcome back. Verona is split by a feud. Romeo Montague and Juliet Capulet fall in love, marry in secret, and attempt to outrun a culture trained for violence.
Then comes the turning point: Tybalt confronts Romeo, Mercutio fights, Mercutio falls, Romeo kills Tybalt, and Romeo is banished. Juliet faces a forced marriage to Paris. A desperate plan depends on a message. The message fails. Tragedy follows.
Tonight we interview three figures who did not cause the feud—but who, in different ways, accelerate the catastrophe:
Mercutio: wit as weapon
The Nurse: love under pressure
Friar Laurence: good intentions, bad architecture
George (announcer tone):
A civic bulletin from Verona:
The Prince has threatened death for further public brawls.
Citizens pretend this will work because threats are easy to announce.
But the feud continues, because feuds are not ended by decrees.
They are ended by changed habits—
and habits are slower than anger.
Meanwhile, young men patrol their reputations like soldiers.
Servants learn violence as a dialect.
And in this atmosphere, a private love story becomes a public emergency.
Back to our guests.
George
I’m going to ask each of you the same guiding question:
Which moment did you tell yourself you were helping—when you were actually making it worse?
We’ll take you one at a time, and then—because this is theatre—we’ll let you answer each other.
Mercutio. You first.
“I thought I was keeping Romeo alive”
George
Mercutio, you’re not a Montague by blood. Not a Capulet.
And yet you are at the center of the storm. Why?
Support the show
Thank you for experiencing Celebrate Creativity.
By George Bartley4.8
55 ratings
Send us a text
Welcome back. Verona is split by a feud. Romeo Montague and Juliet Capulet fall in love, marry in secret, and attempt to outrun a culture trained for violence.
Then comes the turning point: Tybalt confronts Romeo, Mercutio fights, Mercutio falls, Romeo kills Tybalt, and Romeo is banished. Juliet faces a forced marriage to Paris. A desperate plan depends on a message. The message fails. Tragedy follows.
Tonight we interview three figures who did not cause the feud—but who, in different ways, accelerate the catastrophe:
Mercutio: wit as weapon
The Nurse: love under pressure
Friar Laurence: good intentions, bad architecture
George (announcer tone):
A civic bulletin from Verona:
The Prince has threatened death for further public brawls.
Citizens pretend this will work because threats are easy to announce.
But the feud continues, because feuds are not ended by decrees.
They are ended by changed habits—
and habits are slower than anger.
Meanwhile, young men patrol their reputations like soldiers.
Servants learn violence as a dialect.
And in this atmosphere, a private love story becomes a public emergency.
Back to our guests.
George
I’m going to ask each of you the same guiding question:
Which moment did you tell yourself you were helping—when you were actually making it worse?
We’ll take you one at a time, and then—because this is theatre—we’ll let you answer each other.
Mercutio. You first.
“I thought I was keeping Romeo alive”
George
Mercutio, you’re not a Montague by blood. Not a Capulet.
And yet you are at the center of the storm. Why?
Support the show
Thank you for experiencing Celebrate Creativity.