home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Date sent: Mon, 08 Apr 1996 16:58:35 -0600 (CST)
-
-
- Comedy in Shakespeare
- Shakespeare wrote many plays during his lifetime. Some of his
- plays have similar comedic characteristics and then other plays
- are the exact opposite of comedy. Shakespeare wrote tragedies,
- romance, history, comedy and problem plays all with great success.
- During the performance of these plays there was no scenery so great
- time was taken when developing the characters and the plot so the
- plays would be entertaining. A Midsummers Night's Dream and Much
- Ado About Nothing are just two of the comedies Shakespeare wrote.
- These two plays have many things in common where as Measure for
- Measure is a problem play with a totally different tone. Comparing
- and contrasting these three plays will help us to understand what
- Shakespeare thought comedy was in the 1600's and to see if our
- views on comedy are the same today.
- A Midsummer Night's Dream is a festive comedy. The play takes
- place in June and this is a bewitched time. In the spring the
- custom is to celebrate the return of fertility to the earth.
- During this time the young people spend the night in the woods to
- celebrate. Shakespeare uses the greenworld pattern in this play.
- The play begins in the city, moves out to the country and then back
- to the city. Being in the country makes things better because
- there is tranquility, freedom and people can become uncivilized
- versus when they are in the city and have to follow customs and
- laws and behave rationally.
- Comedies contain blocking figures and in this play it is
- Egeus. If he was not in the way, Hermia could marry Lysander.
- Since he is causing problems in his daughters life by trying to
- make her marry Demetrius, this begins the journey into the woods.
- Egeus threatened Hermia with death if she were to marry Lysander so
- she thinks the only way they can be together is to run away.
- One strange element is why Egeus was so set on Hermia marrying
- Demetrius. Lysander came from as good a family as Demetrius. Both
- were well possessed with property and money so Egeus's power is
- made to seem senseless.
- The play moves into the woods which is haunted by fairies who
- are there to bless the wedding of Theseus and Hippolyta. The
- quarreling between Oberon and Titania over the changeling boy leads
- to the king wanting to embarrass Titania with the love juice by
- making her fall in love with a monster. The first person she sees
- is Bottom and she falls violently in love with him.
- Oberon is making a spectacle of Titania and Bottom. It is
- ridiculous that she is in love with him because he is from such a
- lower class than her, he is human and she is a fairy, and he has
- the head of an ass. She is also a queen and he is an uneducated
- working man and a match like this would never happen. Bottom has
- such a problem with language. He speaks in malapropisms. He tries
- to say one word but always comes up with the wrong one. He is a
- working man who tries to act more educated that he really is .
- Through Bottom and Titania we see that love is blind. Also, while
- Titania is under the influence of the love juice she releases the
- changeling boy to Oberon so he did accomplish his goal.
- The confusion between Lysander, Hermia, Helena, and Demetrius
- because of the love juice is full of funny occurrences. When
- Lysander wakes up and thinks he is in love with Helena, Hermia is
- ignored and treated badly by Lysander. Then not only was Lysander
- saying he loved Helena, Demetrius was also treating Hermia badly.
- This left poor Hermia so upset but we as the audience know this is
- a prank and soon the spell will be lifted.
- The main characters in the play are all developed to a point
- where the audience can identify with them. We learn things about
- them individually so we can feel happy or sad when things happen in
- their life. I felt sad for Hermia when she was jolted by Lysander
- because their love for each other had seemed so strong and she was
- so confused by his behavior. Even though the audience knows the
- truth it is easy to feel sad for her.
- As the play nears the end, Oberon lifts the spell and everyone
- seems to believe they have had a rare vision and then their lives
- go on just as if none of this had happened.
- The play brings closure to the reader by having the
- traditional ending of a comedy. They usually end in weddings and
- a feast which is exactly what happens in A Midsummer Night's Dream.
- Lysander and Hermia, Helena and Demetrius, and Theseus and
- Hippolyta all get married which signifies a new beginning. The
- working men end the play with a Bergomask dance and the fairies
- join in the dance and bless the marriages.
- A Midsummer Night's Dream contains many elements of a comedy.
- The most important ones to me are that the play ends happily, it is
- funny and it made me laugh.
- Shakespeare wrote Much Ado About Nothing which is also a
- comedy, but it is a different type of comedy than A Midsummer
- Night's Dream. Although these two plays share some common
- elements, they also have differences.
- Much Ado About Nothing is a comedy of intrigue. It involves
- suspense, question and has a detective story element. Within the
- comedy of intrigue, there is social comedy involving Beatrice and
- Benedick. Through this couple and Claudio and Hero, the play
- explores the was people interact with each other.
- Shakespeare shows that love can be very logical but also very
- passionate. Claudio and Hero have a love that is soft, delicate
- and logical. Beatrice and Benedick on the other hand, are very
- passionately in love with each other and show this by quarreling
- constantly.
- Claudio's obsession with Hero is from a distance. He worships
- her and is astonished with her beauty. His love for her is very
- shallow because he does not know her as a person. Claudio is being
- logical about marriage by inquiring about Hero's financial state
- and social standing. After finding out she is an only child, he
- agrees to let Don Pedro woo Hero in his favor so she would be his
- wife.
- When Claudio and Don Pedro put their plan into action at the
- masked ball, Don John appears. He acts as a blocking figure in
- this play and causes many problems. He tells Claudio that Don
- Pedro wants Hero for himself, which is a lie, but Claudio acts like
- "easy come easy go". He is not very upset that he just lost his
- soon to be bride. When the truth comes out, the wedding day is set
- and the planning begins. Don John is once again planning to ruin
- things. He is a jealous, sour and unhappy person. The greenworld
- is also used in this play but not for festive activities. It is
- used for plotting bad things that will hurt people.
- After Claudio is led to believe Hero was cheating on him, he
- becomes malicious and wants revenge. Claudio disgraces Hero at the
- wedding. He refuses to marry her in front of all the guests and
- accuses her of already having sex with someone else.
- This serious act of revenge causes the audience to feel sorry
- for not only Hero, but her family as well because we know that was
- not her kissing Borachio. The audience may have felt worse for
- Hero if her character had been more fully developed but she hardly
- ever spoke even when agreeing to marry Claudio. We can feel sorry
- for her but not really identify with her because we do not know her
- very well. Hero is made a spectacle of for no truthful reason and
- disgraces her family.
- After Hero faints at the wedding, Beatrice is furious. She
- wants revenge against Claudio. Finally she and Benedick declare
- their love for each other which was made possible by being under
- tension and emotional stress and she was finally able to let down
- her guard. She feels out of control because she needs a man to
- kill Claudio. She is usually able to take care of things herself
- but not this time. Thankfully Benedick will not kill Claudio and
- the truth comes out because of Dogberry and Verges.
- When the night watchmen overhear Borachio talking about the
- scheme Dogberry and Verges bring him and his comrade to their
- superior. It is funny this watchmen could catch anyone doing
- anything wrong. The watchmen are like Bottom and are comical.
- They have the same problem as Bottom and have great difficulty
- communicating.
- After the truth is out that Claudio was fooled into thinking
- that Hero was cheating on him, he is full of grief because he
- believes Hero is dead. He agrees to marry Leonato's niece, who is
- supposed to look just like Hero, to make up his terrible mistake to
- he family. After he marries the masked bride, he is happy to see
- it is Hero. This certainly is a marriage of convenience. He did
- not know Hero anyway so it would not have mattered if he knew the
- bride to be. In a sense, Hero was resurrected from the dead and
- Claudio ends up being a very lucky guy.
- Most of the characters are fully developed, except Hero, so we
- can identify with their grief and then their joy. As the play
- comes to an end everything is wrapped in a neat package. Don John
- is captured and brought back to be punished, Claudio and Hero, and
- Beatrice and Benedick are married and the dance and the feast
- begin.
- Measure for Measure is a play that is very different from A
- Midsummer Night's Dream. The comedy in this play is very raw. The
- atmosphere of the two plays are different but they both deal with
- the same issue of sexuality.
- After the Duke has left the city in Angelo's hands, he wants
- to show his power by condemning Claudio to death because he got
- Juliet pregnant. Angelo is not being reasonable because he has let
- the power go to his head. Angelo has also had sex out of wedlock,
- he just did not get Mariana pregnant. In this play sex is
- portrayed as much more dangerous than it has been in the other two
- plays.
- After Claudio is jailed, he makes a plea to his sister,
- Isabella , to help him obtain a pardon for his offense. Isabella
- had not yet taken her vows to become a nun so she agrees to help
- him. Isabella and Angelo are parallel characters. Both live with
- great restraint.
- After Isabella pleads with Angelo to pardon her brother, he
- comes up with the idea of an exchange for Claudio's freedom. He
- wants Isabella to sleep with him so he could have her virginity and
- then he would pardon Claudio.
- Angelo is a very cold person with no feelings and has
- restrained himself tremendously throughout his life. He has a
- problem with women and he is tempted more by a virtuous woman than
- a frivolous one. In a soliloquy, he talks to himself and tries to
- understand his lust for Isabella. He has a violent image of sex
- with her because he wants to destroy her virtue.
- Angelo is very cruel. He is going to torture and kill Claudio
- and he is getting pleasure by controlling Isabella. this play is
- dealing with power and who has the most.
- After the Duke, disguised as the Friar, over hears Isabella
- telling Claudio she will not sleep with Angelo, he comes up with a
- plan. Isabella would agree to meet Angelo at midnight and they
- would send Mariana instead because the two of them were supposed to
- have been married before but her dowry was lost at sea and Angelo
- had backed out on the marriage.
- The plan works but Angelo goes back on his word and orders
- Claudio's head delivered to him at once. The Friar helps keep
- Claudio in hiding so everyone would think he was dead. The Friar
- then returns as the Duke and Angelo's world begins to unravel. He
- is publicly exposed so everyone will know what king of a person he
- is. He has been tricked into marriage and is now a very miserable
- person. Although he had the ultimate power for a brief time, heabused it and now has to suffer the consequences for a lifetime.
- After Claudio is produces and allowed to marry Juliet, the
- Duke asks for Isabella's hand in marriage.
- The satire in this play looks at the two extremes and the
- audience tries to believe something in the middle. The language
- used in this play is crude when they are discussing sex. The men
- in the city talk about sex in a nasty ways discussing how many
- diseases they have gotten from the hoars. Sex is portrayed as a
- vile and nasty thing.
- Measure for Measure is visually unlike other plays. There is
- insistence on laws that are very extreme. People are being
- measured in judgement. It shows that you should be reasonable and
- weigh things out before actions are taken.
- These three plays all have different messages which are told
- in various ways. As a writer, Shakespeare was so talented he could
- write different types of stories with such grace. These three
- plays are just a few examples of the different extremes he was
- capable of. Writing and defining comedy can be very difficult.
- Many elements of comedy are in his plays and this makes they very
- enjoyable reading. Comedy helps me to identify with stories since
- I like happy endings much better than tragic endings. After
- finishing a book, I like to have a feeling of closure and in these
- comedies my need is fulfilled.
-