Showing 9 of 9 scenes
A Midsummer Night's Dream
by William Shakespeare
Helena laments the fickle nature of love and her unrequited feelings for Demetrius, who has fallen for her friend Hermia. She decides to betray Hermia's secret flight to Demetrius in a desperate attempt to win his attention, even if it only brings her more pain.
Cyrano de Bergerac
by Edmond Rostand
Cyrano mockingly educates a young viscount on how to properly insult his large nose. He delivers a virtuosic display of wit, listing various creative ways to describe his prominent feature before insulting the viscount's own lack of intelligence.
Othello
Othello stands over the sleeping Desdemona, grappling with his internal conflict before he murders her. He contemplates her beauty and the finality of death, convincing himself that her execution is a necessary act of justice.
Romeo and Juliet
In one of the most iconic scenes in Western literature, Romeo and Juliet profess their love for one another across a balcony. Despite the danger of their feuding families, they exchange vows and plan to marry in secret.
Juliet impatiently awaits the arrival of her new husband, Romeo, for their wedding night. She delivers a poetic soliloquy invoking the night to come quickly and hide their tryst before being interrupted by the Nurse.
Hermia and Lysander lament the difficulties of their forbidden love before Lysander proposes a plan to flee Athens and marry in secret at his aunt's house. They exchange vows of loyalty and agree to meet in the woods the following night.
In the most iconic scene in Western literature, Romeo lingers in the Capulet garden and discovers Juliet at her window. They exchange vows of love and contemplate the burden of their family names in a secret, late-night encounter.
As You Like It
Jaques delivers a cynical yet profound meditation on the seven stages of human life, from infancy to old age and eventual death. He compares the world to a theater where every individual is merely an actor playing a sequence of roles.
Dancing at Lughnasa
by Brian Friel
Michael, as an adult narrator, reflects on the summer of 1936 in Donegal. He describes a haunting, dreamlike memory of his family dancing, suggesting that movement expressed what language could no longer capture.
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