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So what's the conflict really? How is it resolved? What loose ends are tied? How did they stage the curtain call? This is related to which play by the Reduced Shakespeare Company?

a. Romeo and Juliet
b. Macbeth
c. The Complete Works of William Shakespeare Abridged
d. Hamlet

User Efosa
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1 Answer

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Final answer:

The conflict in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet is the forbidden love between the protagonists from feuding families, resolved by their tragic deaths leading to the families' reconciliation.

Step-by-step explanation:

The conflict in William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet revolves around the prohibited love between two young individuals from feuding families. The resolution occurs tragically as both protagonists die, which finally unites the two families in their grief and leads to reconciliation. Any production of Romeo and Juliet is unique in how it interprets this play, with variations in acting, directing, and staging, including variations for time constraint adaptations, such as those for school matinees. The play typically ends with the moral that hate leads to tragedy, as delivered by the Friar's closing words.

User Daniel Benamy
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