Mistaken Identity William Shakespeare‚ in his well-known comedy Twelfth Night‚ creates a plot that revolves around mistaken identity and deception. Mistaken identity‚ along with disguises‚ rules the play and affects the lives of several of the characters. Shakespeare’s techniques involve mistaken identity to bring humor‚ mystery‚ and complication to the play. Many characters in Twelfth Night assume disguises‚ beginning with Viola who is disguised as a eunuch‚ Maria who writes a letter to Malvolio
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Twelfth Night or What You Will ------------------------------------------------- Discuss the role of the explicitly comic characters – Sir Toby‚ Sir Andrew‚ Feste‚ and Maria. What function do they serve in the play? How is each one different from the others? What effect does it have on your appreciation for their role in the play? Twelfth Night‚ by William Shakespeare‚ explores themes of love and mistaken identity through a witty and comedic story. Some supporting characters – Sir Toby Belch
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Twelfth Night: Theme of Love In the play "Twelfth Night‚" Shakespeare explores and illustrates the emotion of love with precise detail. According to "Webster’s New World Dictionary‚" love is defined as "a strong affection or liking for someone." Throughout the play Shakespeare examines three different types of love: true love‚ self love and friendship. "Twelfth Night" consists of many love triangles‚ however many of the characters who are tangled up in the web of love are blind to see that their
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their love‚ things turn sour. In the Elizabethan romantic comedy Twelfth Night‚ William Shakespeare uses the motif of love as a catalyst for madness to show how love can take even the most level headed and prudish person and put them into a lunacy driven haze for requite‚ which‚ if not found‚ often leads to bitterness. No man can escape the thorny tendrils of love. Malvolio seems very unsentimental at the beginning of Twelfth Night‚ described by Maria as “a kind of puritan” (II. iii. 139). Often
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Several of the characters in Twelfth Night display egotism throughout the play. Three characters that demonstrate self-absorption are Malvolio‚ Olivia‚ and Duke Orsino. In the play‚ when Malvolio finds the letter in the garden‚ he quickly jumps to the conclusion that the letter is for him because of what is says inside. Malvolio said "if this fall into thy hand‚ revolve. In my stars I am above thee‚ but be not afraid of greatness (Shakespeare‚ 84)." In other words‚ the letter stated many good characteristics
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The uncertainty of identity and disguising of characters throughout Twelfth Night presents a theme with a lot of confusion but also great comedic implications. Mistaken identity is shown when twins Viola and Sebastian are misidentified for one another‚ enhancing the comic confusion amongst the characters. This is more apparent in Act 5 Scene 1; however Shakespeare contributes to this comedy through disguise to develop a sense of dramatic irony in a homoerotic subtext where Olivia falls in love with
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The comedies Twelfth Night and Some Like It Hot both use deception through appearance as a comedic device. Through this theme of deceit the film Some Like It Hot directed by Billy Wilder is shown to be a natural descendant to Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night. In both works deception through appearance is shown multiple ways in both the main stories and the subplots. The most obvious case of deception through appearance is the cross dressing that happens in both stories. Vilola dresses up as a man in
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In Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night‚ Shakespeare plays with the idea of being and not being‚ specifically during the interaction between Feste the Fool and Olivia during Act 1‚ Scene 5. Although a comical character‚ Feste often inserts genuine wit and cunning into his role‚ which would not immediately be associated with a fool; he is a foolish wit. Feste’s dual intelligence and humor are established as he is first introduced to Olivia. Immediately after Olivia enters the scene and orders Feste’s removal
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Feste in Twelfth Night The Elusive and Mystical Fool in Shakespeare’s Festive Comedy © Jem Bloomfield Sep 2‚ 2007 Feste in Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night‚ is an fascinating character: a fool who seems to know more than most of the people around him. Feste‚ the Fool in Twelfth Night‚ is a very different character from the Fools in other comedies such as Two Gentlemen of Verona and The Merchant of Venice. Launce and Speed (from Two Gentlemen) and Launcelot Gobbo (from The Merchant of Venice)
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The Reasons of Love in Twelfth Night William Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night is a well-known romantic comedy in which many characters fall in love due to their own personal reasons. Viola shows that true love should be caused by genuine reasons‚ but Orsino and Malvolio demonstrate that people can pursue others for their own selfish purposes. However‚ these three characters all reveal that the reasons that make them fall in love are based on their own personalities. Orsino is depicted as a fickle character
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