In the Twelfth Night play there are many important characters to choose from, but I believe Viola is the most important. She survived a shipwreck that separated her from her twin brother, Sebastian. Ever since then she had to start a new life in a new place doing whatever she can to live a happy life. She decides to disguise herself as a man to hide her identity to gain time and knowledge on figuring out what she could do on her own. Viola shows strong character, leadership skills, and bravery throughout this play, that is why I chose to write about this noble character. After arriving on a shore in Illyria from the shipwreck Viola decided to reinvent herself by posing as a male instead of her actual gender which is female. She …show more content…
Its simple. Without Viola the play wouldn 't have the meaning and depth it has. Viola acts as the hero and protagonist of the play. Her actions and thoughts produce all of the momentum within the play. Everything revolves around her. The play starts out on how she came to Illyria and quickly turn to her love for the Duke and their love triangle with Olivia. Veolia is often caught between Duke Orsino’s extreme melancholy and Olivia aggressive emotions, yet she represents the normally way of behavior. Due to all the criticism people give her, she is a very practical and resourceful person. She is a bright person who knows a thing or two about how to get along on her own. She never befor had to worry about being alone until the shipwreck happened but she easily came up with a smart solution to her problem. Viola also has a native intelligence and a great amount of charm to her. This is how Olivia fall in love with Cesario so easily. The charm Viola has is one of the main reasons why charters are so drawn to her. Another reason seems to be that Viola was not a bad looking man or woman. With both the Duke and Olivia commenting on the beauty of both Viola and Cesario. When Olivia said “ O, what a deal of Scorn looks Beautiful in the contempt and anger of his lips!” This just shows how big of a role Viola played in the …show more content…
For some odd reason people in the early 1600’s thought it was hilarious for a women to dress up and pretend to be a man, and they thought it was even funnier for a male actor to play a woman pretending to be a man. Now her character was not as much as a jokester than some of the other characters like Sir Toby and Feste, the clown, but the thought of her character just made it funny to the people of Shakespearean Time.
All of this is just some key points and examples on why Viola is such a key character in the Twelfth Night play. She makes up the background of the whole story and sets the rhythm on how the play pans out. She is a strong personality that gave this play the necessary amount of comedy and drama. In the end she finally ends up marrying the Duke and living happily ever after with him. Thou’st ending the Twelfth
The movie She's the Man shows much of the general idea of the original Shakespearean book, the twelfth night. It also, illustrates the change in feminine roles in the community and society at large, the main theme of the movie being feminism. In Shakespearean era and time, the important, recognizable and powerful positions in the society were taken by men and therefore Viola in the twelfth night disguises herself as a eunuch in order to get close to the Olivia, the countess and the
...ce Viola is believed to be a male for most of the play, it may be more convincing to the audience if she is being played by a male. If I wished for my stage adaptation of the play to be less realistic and more entertaining, I would cast the play with a mixture of cross-gender characters.
Viola and Beatrice both take on men's roles, Viola that of a manservant and Beatrice that of the perpetual bachelor and the clown: "I was born to speak all mirth and no matter," she says to Don Pedro [II.i.343-4]. They appear to be actors and manipulators, much more so than their female predecessors, who are mostly reactive and manipulated, such as Hermia, Helena, Titania, and Gertrude. None of these women seemed in charge of her own destiny, but tricked by the schemes of men and later scorned or humiliated as a result of male machinations. Viola and Beatrice, although they both seem fiercely independent and comfortable in a man's world, reveal themselves to have only the trappings of manhood, and not its full capacity for action. They are undone by unrequited love, made desperately unhappy by their inability to woo the man of their choosing. In the end, it is only coincidence and the plotting of other characters that bring the true nature of their affections into the open and thus force the plays to their respective matrimonial conclusions.
Although Viola might be able to relate to Olivia's grief at first, her love for Orsino is so great that she cannot understand why Olivia would deny him. When Olivia expresses affectio...
Viola is a very pragmatic, shrewd woman. She does not deceive her self in the way Orsino does. After the Captain tells her that her brother may be alive, she rewards him with gold, and then goes on to question the Captain about the land she is in. She realises that she must do something to survive, and instead of morning about the death of her brother, she takes practical steps.
Secondly, Lady Macbeth in “Macbeth” who was a powerful character behind the scenes where she convinces her husbands temptation to murder a man. Juliet in “Romeo and Juliet” where Juliet, like Desdemona, didn 't listen to her father 's wants, instead she took control of her own love life to love Romeo. Lastly, Cordelia in “King Lear”, although, Cordelia is a typical woman in the renaissance, she still shows character of loyalty and she stands her ground even when she should not. He shined a light on the future of what values a woman will hold and their hopes of being an equal member of society. Yet, one of Shakespeare’s strongest and finest examples of a free woman was
The character of Viola (played by Gwyneth Paltrow) is first seen at The Curtain Theatre where she is captivated by the performance of Shakespeare’s "The Two Gentlemen of Verona," while the rest of the audience seems bored. She is currently being urged to marry Lord Wessex, but wants to marry for love. She wants to have real love, "love as there has never been in a play." She is inspired, however by the theatre and especially by the works of Shakespeare.
The majority of the plot lines depend on the disguise. Without it, the world would be a disaster. main theme of the play would be the gulling of Malvolio. In a play where most of The characters fall in love with each other, blind to the gender and true identity of the objects of their desires, a disguise like Viola's becomes the center of the action, and causes almost all the of the important aspects of the play. I will be there.
Viola as Cesario faced the most challenges in the play. It almost seems that fate never leaves her alone, as her difficulties start as soon as we are introduced to her, washed up upon the shores of illyria having barely survived a shipwreck. Alone in a foreign land with her only kin, her twin brother Sebastian believed to be dead, she is left to fend for herself for, or so it seemed, the remainder of her days.
Twelfth Night shows a woman's value is based on her position in society and does so
According to Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary, love is defined as “strong affection for another arising out of kinship or personal ties; attraction based on sexual desire; affection and tenderness felt by lovers; affection based on admiration, benevolence, or common interest; or an assurance of love.” In William Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night, three different types of love are experienced: friendship love, true love, and self love. Each character experiences a different type of love, and in some cases it is not what they originally expected. The twisted, yet intriguing love story allows the reader to get lost in each characters emotions and development throughout the play. Many instances of love in the play are overwhelmed with a feeling of desire, which leads some characters to fall blind to their true love. Viola, Cesario, Orsino, Olivia, Sebastian and Malvolio, all experience love in a variety of different ways, which adds depth to Shakespeare’s comical play.
Viola's situation is precarious due to the liminality she has experienced throughout the play . She could live freely away from the society's authority behind her transformation, but the liminality she faced caused her troubles in expressing her true feelings. She is in between her femininity and her twin brother adopted masculinity. But soon as her disguised is discarded, she returns to her proper situation voluntarily accepting the role that the society imposes on her: the role of a wife.
Twelfth Night consists of a large number of love triangles, however many characters are too indulged in love that they are blind to the untrue, and the weakness of their relationship, they are deceived by themselves and many people around them ( ex. Malvolio is tricked by Sir Andrew, Feste ,Sir Toby and Maria),but there are certain incidents where the love is true and two characters feel very strongly about one another. In the play, Viola and Orsino have the most significant relationship. The way they interact with each other causes the complexity on which the play is all about, their relationship turns from strangers to friends then lovers .In the First Act Viola is not honest with Orsino because she disguises herself as a male servant named Cesario in order to get closer to the duke. Orsino. Orsino quickly trusts Cesario and sends him to Olivia to declare Orsinos Love for her, the girl he most dearly loves. This quick bond is the fast example of their relationship. At the beginning of the play, Viola thinks her brother (Sebastian) is dead (after they’re deadly boat crash, where they get separated) when actually he is alive and thinks she is dead, Viola always seems to have a part missing from her which shows her bond with Sebastian is strong, and a part of her but in a brotherly/sisterly way rather than a proper relationship like viola and orsino, At the end of the play they meet and both fall in love , Viola with Orsino and Sebastian with Olivia.
Viola/Ceasario's disguise hides most of her past: the shipwreck, her lost brother, and the fact that she is a woman. Her identity now as a man, is to move on in life and get a job. Her love for Orsino is hidden with her original identity, as though she works for him as his servant. She is a very strong character in the play. "I prithee (and I’ll pay thee bounteously)/ Conceal me what I am, and be my aid/ For such disguise as haply shall become/ The form of my intent. I’ll serve this duke." (1.2.52-55). After the shipwreck and the loss of her brother, Viola decides to move on using a disguise as her shield. Viola’s secret love for Orsino is different than the way Olivia loves Ceasario. Olivia is in lo...
Throughout Twelfth Night, disguise and mistaken identity works as a catalyst for confusion and disorder which consistently contributes towards the dramatic comic genre of the play. Many characters in Twelfth Night assume disguises, beginning with Viola, who disguises herself as a man in order to serve Orsino, the Duke. By dressing his protagonist in male garments, Shakespeare creates ongoing sexual confusion with characters, which include Olivia, Viola and Orsino, who create a ‘love triangle’ between them. Implicitly, there is homoerotic subtext here: Olivia is in love with a woman, despite believing her to be a man, and Orsino often comments on Cesario’s beauty, which implies that he is attracted to Viola even before her male disguise is removed. However, even subsequent to the revealing of Viola’s true identity, Orsino’s declares his love to Viola implying that he enjoys lengthening the pretence of Vio...