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- Date sent: Sun, 28 Apr 1996 22:16:30 -0400
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- An Examination of "Ensemble Scenes" in Shakespearean Comedy
-
- In Shakespearean comedies it is conventional for the main
- characters to suffer indignities, misdirections, and various
- humiliations that often arise from miscommunications or outright
- deception. In most cases all the various crises that develop are
- resolved by the play's end, often in what are known as "ensemble
- scenes". The ensemble scenes involve all the main characters and
- resolve multiple problems in one fell swoop. It was the
- convention in Shakespeare's time that a comedy play end with a
- marriage or the expectation of a marriage. Much Ado About
- Nothing, A Midsummer Night's Dream, and Love's Labour Lost are
- true to this convention. Shakespeare uses the ensemble scene in
- each play to resolve the conflicts that plague the protagonists
- until the ensemble scene. Another common element in this type of
- scene is a ruler exerting his authority on his subjects. This
- essay will examine the various conflicts that arise in the three
- plays and how each play's ensemble scene neatly puts these
- conflicts to rest.
- In Much Ado About Nothing the marriage of Claudio and Hero
- is poisoned by Don John. Don John, through a complex deception
- is able to convince Claudio that Hero's virtue is questionable,
- at best. Shakespeare makes use of two ensemble scenes; one to
- bring the primary conflict to the fore and a second scene to
- resolve that conflict.
- The wedding between Claudio and Hero in Act IV, scene 1, is
- brought to an abrupt halt as Claudio confronts Hero and Leonato
- about Hero's unfaithfulness. In a speech filled with venom,
- Claudio refers to Hero as a "rotten orange who knows the heat of
- a luxurious bed". Claudio's anger is entirely unjustified, his
- supposed evidence of Hero's sin a result of Don John's deception.
- Hero's reaction to Claudio's attack serves to further
- Shakespeare's plans for the next ensemble scene. Hero's fainting
- and Beatrice's statement of "Dead, my Lord" allows the plays main
- characters to wilfully deceive themselves in the next ensemble
- scene.
- This willful deception is one in which the main characters
- allow themselves to believe that Hero is dead, a victim of
- Claudio's withering anger. There takes place a funeral for Hero,
- attended by all of the primary players. Claudio and the others
- stand as mourners at Hero's grave while Claudio recites a poem
- which reads like a public apology for his hard-hearted
- denunciation of her at their wedding.
- Act V, scene IV brings the conflict to its intended
- conclusion as Claudio allows himself to be duped into marrying a
- stranger. The stranger is, of course, Hero, who joins the scene
- in a mask and only reveals her identity after Claudio has vowed
- to marry her.
- The dominant force that moves the plot in Much Ado About
- Nothing is deception. Claudio is deceived by Don John and
- because of this deception, ruins Hero's life and reputation. In
- a comedic sub-plot, two characters who proclaim that they will
- never marry are tricked into falling in love, or recognizing
- their feelings for one another. Each deception was brought to
- light during an ensemble scene. If these deceptions were not
- revealed, clearly the play would grind to a halt and in a manner
- unsatisfactory to the conventions of a Shakespearean comedy. The
- romance of Claudio and Hero is the central issue of Much Ado
- About Nothing. Shakespeare sets up the deception which sours
- Claudio's affection and then makes use of two ensemble scenes to
- reveal the deception and ultimately correct it.
- The central conflicts in Love's Labour's Lost involve the
- King and his attendant Lords and their struggles. Each man takes
- a vow to avoid the romantic company of women for a period of
- three years. Almost immediately after the oath is sworn, the
- four men find their vow difficult to uphold. The Princess of
- France and, conveniently, three Ladies in Waiting arrive at court
- to meet the King. Each man finds himself immediately love-struck
- by one of the visiting Ladies and this results in the first
- conflict.
- In the first movement of the play, the King and Lords find
- themselves in desperate search of a way to woo the ladies without
- being forsworn. The second movement of the play comes after the
- men have found a loophole in their oath that will allow them to
- commence wooing. The next problem that they face is the ladies
- themselves. The Princess and her Ladies are not quick to return
- the devotions of undying love that the King and Lords profess.
- The women seem determined to make it difficult for the men to be
- successful in their efforts.
- The first ensemble scene, Act II, scene I, shows each man
- expressing an interest in one of the Princess's Ladies. The
- Princess is also informed by Boyet, her attendant, that the King
- is 'affected' with her. This sets up the plays primary conflict.
- Now that the King and his Lords are in love, to court the women
- would make them forsworn and dishonourable. This first conflict
- is resolved when Berowne convinces the others that studying
- knowledge without knowing beauty makes knowledge a hollow thing,
- indeed.
- This argument of Berowne's brings the conflict begun in the
- first ensemble scene to a close. With this conflict's
- resolution, Love's Labour's Lost begins its second movement. The
- King and his Lords have discovered a means by which they can
- pursue their romantic ends and still feel that their honour is
- intact. The difficulty that they now face is the reluctance of
- the Princess and her Ladies to return their affections.
- The women each receive a token of some sort from each of their
- suitors. In order to confuse the men, the women stage a masque,
- but exchange tokens amongst themselves so that each suitor will
- be courting the wrong woman at the ball. After the women's
- identities are revealed, the women are hardly any kinder. Each
- woman mocks and taunts her particular man, but the men, unfazed,
- still profess undying love and devotion to them.
- The final ensemble scene resolves this second conflict of
- the play. Conventionally, a comedy play would end in a marriage
- but Love's Labour's Lost leaves the audience with the expectation
- of marriage, not the actual ceremony. In Act V, scene II the
- reluctance of the women seems to have been overcome. The King
- proposes to the Princess of France and she accepts, on the
- condition that he spend the next year away from his kingdom
- living as a hermit. Lord Berowne is told by Rosaline, after his
- proposal, that he must spend the next year using his wit to bring
- comfort to the sick and infirm in a hospital. Longaville and
- Dumaine are instructed by their respective ladies to undergo
- similar, undisclosed trials for a year's time. They vow to take
- up the tests the ladies have put before them and so Love's
- labour's Lost still ends in a manner true to comedic convention.
- Marriage is the central theme in A Midsummer Night's Dream.
- The conflicts that surround marriage and romantic desire provide
- the play with virtually all of its action and plot development.
- In Act I, scene I Theseus is asked by Egeus to enforce Athenian
- law and force his daughter, Hermia to marry Demetrius, or put her
- to death. Theseus is not as harsh as Egeus would like him to be
- and adds the third choice of her being cloistered in a nunnery.
- Hermia seems to have no good option, considering she loves
- Lysander, not Demetrius, to whom she is to be wed.
- This conflict between love and law is the central issue in the
- play and is not to be resolved until the second ensemble
- scene.
- To avoid death, Demetrius, or a nun's habit, Hermia chooses
- to elope with Lysander. The couple escapes from Athens into the
- woods outside of the city. Once there, the marriage of Hermia
- and Lysander is made to seem less likely because of Puck's
- application of the love potion to Lysander's eyes. Lysander
- then falls in love with Helena and remains so until Oberon lifts
- the spell.
- This central conflict is abruptly resolved in Act IV, scene
- I when the lovers are caught in the woods by Theseus and Egeus.
- Egeus demands that Lysander be put to death for his crime. In
- what would seem to be a complete about face from his position in
- Act I, scene I, Theseus simply overrules Egeus and Athenian Law
- and grants his consent for Lysander and Hermia to wed.
- This is only a seeming reversal because the seeds of
- Theseus's shift in opinion were sown in his speech in Act I Scene
- I. He begins by stating in a harsh and caustic manner that
- Hermia should regard her father as a God and should carry out his
- will. He states that the law is the law and there is nothing
- that he can do. But, as the scene progresses, Theseus' tone
- softens and he introduces the possibility of Hermia going to a
- nunnery, directly contradicting his previous statement. In that
- same scene, Theseus takes on a manner most conciliatory, almost
- cajoling Hermia to consider the possibility of marrying
- Demetrius.
- In A Midsummer Night's Dream the primary conflict originates
- in an ensemble scene and is resolved in an ensemble scene. This
- scene is more typical of Shakespeare's use of the ensemble scene
- in romantic comedy. This scene often involves a ruler exerting
- his power over his followers. Theseus fulfils this convention
- when he overrules Egeus' demands fro Lysander's head. Ensemble
- scenes often involve a ceremony of some sort. The first ensemble
- scene takes place as Theseus is presiding over his court and
- announcing his intention to marry Hippolyta. The concluding
- ensemble scene occurs as Theseus and his train of courtiers are
- travelling to the temple to be wed. In these regards, it is
- clear that A Midsummer Night's Dream most accurately satisfies
- the conventions of a romantic comedy.
- The majority of Shakespearean romantic comedies are driven
- by conflict. The conflict is usually a result of some sort of a
- misunderstanding or by some force that strives to keep lovers
- apart. Shakespeare's use of ensemble scenes which involve the
- majority of the main characters is almost guaranteed in his
- comedies. These ensemble scenes fulfil two functions and two
- such scenes can be found in each play. The first ensemble scene
- creates and introduces the conflict and is usually found near the
- beginning of the play. The next ensemble scene brings the
- conflict to a satisfactory conclusion. This trend is clearly
- demonstrated in each of the plays discussed in this essay. In
- Much Ado About Nothing, the conflict is revealed in Claudio and
- Hero's wedding ceremony (Act IV scene I) and resolved immediately
- after Hero's funeral. A Midsummer Night's Dream's conflict
- begins when Theseus upholds Egeus' wedding plans for Hermia (Act
- I Scene I). This same trend can be observed in Love's Labour's
- Lost when the King and his Lords become smitten with the Princess
- and her Ladies (Act II Scene I), creating the first conflict and
- in Act IV scene ii when the men propose and resolve the second
- conflict.
- Each of these plays may appear very different on the surface
- but when the reader observes more closely, certain patterns and
- trends become apparent. All three comedies examined in this
- essay are driven by romantic entanglements that arise in, and are
- brought to a conclusion through Shakespeare's us of ensemble
- scenes.
-