Popular Culture Review Vol. 20, No. 2, Summer 2009 | Page 65

Romeo and Juliet: A Postmodern Play? 61 scene after scene, after scene, with a tragic ending (Snyder 56-70, Smidt 2744). While I will not attempt a scene-by-scene description here, close examination reveals that, aside from the Prologue (which may or may not have been presented in Shakespeare’s time), 12 out of 24 scenes in Romeo and Juliet are almost wholly comedic, and 11 out of the remaining 12 scenes contain substantial comedic sections. In other words, the play presents comedic action about ninety-six percent of the time (Forse 93). K. Cartwright (43-87) muses that despite the Prologue “the camivalesque of Romeo and Juliet will never quite go away,” thus coming back to the notion that the play is a flawed tragedy. Suppose, however, instead of looking through the eyeholes of the mask of tragedy we try on the mask of comedy, and see if, perhaps, rather than a flawed tragedy, Romeo and Juliet is instead a flawed comedy? One of the most notable traits of comedic theory, derived from Aristophanic comedy, usually is referred to as the “Happy Idea,” a la the sex-strike Aristophanes used in Lysystrata. Since the men of Sparta and Athens cannot seem to find a solution to end this dreadful war nobody wants, perhaps the women can proffer a simple solution. Now the “Happy Idea” is clearly expressed in Romeo and Juliet too. It is evident in the first scene that the citizens of Verona, and even the heads of the rival families, are tired of the feud, but unable to find any solution to it. But the marriage of the sole heirs of the respective feuding families seems to offer a way to cut this Gordian Knot. The famous balcony scene proposes that love can overcome the outdated family rivalry. Friar Lawrence implies the marriage of Romeo and Juliet is the “Happy Idea” to end the feud. In Act 2, scene 3 (lines 91-2), when Romeo tells him of his love for Juliet, Friar Lawrence replies: “For this alliance may so happy prove/To turn your households cancor to pure love.” Romeo’s lovesick infatuation with Rosaline in Act 1, scene 1 even seems to foreshadow the “Happy Idea.” Rosaline is, after all, described as Juliet’s cousin, another member of the rival Capulet family. At least as early as Roman comedy, the clever servant, or underling, who is privy to knowledge unknown to the master, and who often thwarts the master’s plans, has been a popular device in comedy, particularly in smoothing the path to true romance for young lovers thwarted by parents or other older figures of authority. Commedia. dell*Arte is replete with clever servant figures. Romeo and Juliet, in effect, has at least two clever servants: the Nurse, and Friar Lawrence. The Nurse effects the meeti ng of the lovers for marriage and their wedding night—all unbeknownst to the Capulets and Montagues. Friar Lawrence effects their marriage, Romeo’s escape to Padua, and the solution to Juliet’s dilemma lest she commit bigamy—all unbeknownst to Capulets, Montagues, and the Prince. Indeed, at every point in the play when complications to their romance arise, either the Nurse, or Friar Lawrence, or sometimes both, solve those complications right under the noses of the authority figures. In fact, it is not until Friar Lawrence’s long explication at the end of the play that the Capulets, the Montagues, the Prince, and the citizens of Verona are made aware of the convoluted series of events that have taken place right under their noses.