• A scene of Romeo killing Paris (played by
Roberto Bisacco) was filmed for
Franco Zeffirelli's
Romeo and Juliet, but it was cut from the final print as Zeffirelli felt it unnecessarily made Romeo less sympathetic. Paris is not seen in the film after Juliet's first funeral, that could suggest he is alive. However, at the end of the film, Prince Escalus mentions he lost two relatives due to the feud between Montagues and Capulets, referring to Mercutio and Paris. Therefore, due to the cut scene of the fight between Romeo and Paris, it is implied that Paris may had died in mourn due to Juliet's death. • A mock-
Victorian revisionist version of
Romeo and Juliets final scene forms part of the 1980 stage-play
The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby. This version has a happy ending: Romeo, Juliet, Mercutio and Paris are restored to life, and Benvolio reveals he is Paris' love, Benvolia, in disguise. • In
Baz Luhrmann's
Romeo + Juliet, the character is named "Dave Paris" and is played by
Paul Rudd. His familial relationship with Escalus (called "Captain
Escalus Prince") is removed entirely from the film, and Dave Paris is not characterised as a
nobleman; he is, rather, a wealthy
business magnate and a governor's son. However, whilst neither the death of this incarnation of Paris nor his kinship with Captain Prince is ever made explicit, the latter yet laments at the close of the film that he has "lost a brace of kinsmen". • In the 2011 film
Gnomeo & Juliet, there is a Red Gnome named Paris who is arranged to court Juliet by her father Lord Redbrick, though she does not love him and is instead in love with a Blue Gnome named Gnomeo. Juliet distracts him with her frog sprinkler friend Nanette who is in love with Paris and the two later start a relationship. The character reappears in the film's 2018 sequel
Sherlock Gnomes. He is voiced by
Stephen Merchant. • In the 2017 TV series
Still Star-Crossed, Paris survives. • In
Tromeo and Juliet Paris appears Played by Steve Gibbons, reinterpreted as wealthy meat tycoon London Arbuckle. Arbuckle meets his end when he jumps out of a window after seeing Juliet transformed into a hideous cow monster by Friar Laurence’s potion. == References ==