Difference between revisions of "Romeo"
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== Plot == | == Plot == | ||
− | When [[Milhouse]] and [[Samantha]] broke up, Milhouse | + | When [[Milhouse]] and [[Samantha]] broke up, Milhouse told [[Bart]] that they started out like Romeo and [[Juliet]] but it ended in tragedy.<ref>"[[Bart's Friend Falls in Love]]"</ref> |
− | Romeo was in love with [[Juliet]] but he was forced to | + | Romeo was in love with [[Juliet]], but he was forced to marry someone else. Juliet faked her death so that she wouldn't have to marry and could get back to Romeo. When Romeo found out that Juliet was dead, he visited her and broke up with her. Juliet woke up and then scolded him; she had hoped that Romeo would drink poison when he found out she was dead, and when Juliet later woke up, she would find out that he was dead and push a sword into her own heart. Later, he dated [[Cordelia]], and she also faked her death for him, so he told [[King Lear]] that Cordelia had faked her death.<ref>''[[Bard Boiled]]''</ref> |
== Behind the Laughter == | == Behind the Laughter == |
Latest revision as of 12:44, November 21, 2024
- "How could this have happened? We started out like Romeo and Juliet, but instead it ended in tragedy."
- ―Milhouse[src]
Romeo
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Character Information
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Romeo was a man who was in love with a girl, Juliet, but she was engaged to another against her will. He also dated Cordelia. He appears in a school play at Springfield Elementary about William Shakespeare.
Plot[edit]
When Milhouse and Samantha broke up, Milhouse told Bart that they started out like Romeo and Juliet but it ended in tragedy.[1]
Romeo was in love with Juliet, but he was forced to marry someone else. Juliet faked her death so that she wouldn't have to marry and could get back to Romeo. When Romeo found out that Juliet was dead, he visited her and broke up with her. Juliet woke up and then scolded him; she had hoped that Romeo would drink poison when he found out she was dead, and when Juliet later woke up, she would find out that he was dead and push a sword into her own heart. Later, he dated Cordelia, and she also faked her death for him, so he told King Lear that Cordelia had faked her death.[2]
Behind the Laughter[edit]
The story is based on the story of Romeo and Juliet and King Lear.
Appearances[edit]
- Episode – "The Way We Was" (mentioned)
- Episode – "Bart's Friend Falls in Love" (mentioned)
- Episode – "Guess Who's Coming to Criticize Dinner?" (mentioned)
- Episode – "Special Edna" (mentioned)
- Episode – "Love, Springfieldian Style" (mentioned)
- Episode – "Moonshine River"
- Comic story – Bard Boiled
References[edit]
External links[edit]