Two Gentlemen Verona Comedies Books : The Two Gentlemen of Verona (The New Cambridge Shakespeare)

The Two Gentlemen of Verona (The New Cambridge Shakespeare)

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One of Shakespeare s earliest comedies, and unjustly neglected in the past, The Two Gentlemen of Verona has deserved its growing critical reputation over recent years. The play dramatises the entangled relations between the two gentlemen of the play s title, Valentine and Proteus. Valentine leaves Verona for Milan to seek his fortune, while Proteus stays to be near his love, Julia. Spurned by Julia, Proteus heads for Milan, where he finds himself a rival of Valentine for the hand of Silvia, the Duke s daughter. Julia then reappears, disguised in boy s clothes as Proteus page. As in many of Shakespeare s later comedies, the lovers flee to the forest, where confusion and conflict is finally resolved, and the two gentlemen are reunited not only with their correct lovers, but also with each other. The play is particularly interesting for its dramatisation of the intense friendship between Valentine and Proteus, which it often characterises as more intimate and meaningful than relations with women. Proteus complains that Julia hast metamorphosed me into something he cannot understand, and the play suggests that social and sexual relations between men are often more satisfying than the dangerous instability involved in wooing women. --Jerry Brotton

The Archetype of Later Romantic Comedies - Although few would claim that Two Gentlemen of Verona is one of Shakespeare s greatest plays, it is well worth reading in order to serve as a reference for the best of his romantic comedies. In essence, Two Gentlemen of Verona gives you a measuring stick to see the brilliance in the best works.The play has the first of Shakespeare s many brave, resourceful and cross-dressing heroines, Julia.Shakespeare always used his fools and clowns well to make serious statements about life and love, and to expose the folly of the nobles. Two Gentlemen of Verona has two very fine comic scenes featuring Launce. In one, he lists the qualities of a milk maid he has fallen in love with and helps us to see that love is blind and relative. In another, he describes the difficulties he has delivering a pet dog to Silvia on his master, Proteus , behalf in a way that will keep you merry on many a cold winter s evening.The story also has one of the fastest plot resolutions you will ever find in a play. Blink, and the play is over. This nifty sleight of hand is Shakespeare s way of showing that when you get noble emotions and character flowing together, things go smoothly and naturally.The overall theme of the play develops around the relative conflicts that lust, love, friendship, and forgiveness can create and overcome. Proteus is a man who seems literally crazed by his attraction to Silvia so that he loses all of his finer qualities. Yet even he can be redeemed, after almost doing a most foul act. The play is very optimistic in that way.I particularly enjoy the plot device of having Proteus and Julia (pretending to be a page) playing in the roles of false suitors for others to serve their own interests. Fans of Othello will enjoy these foreshadowings of Iago.The words themselves can be a bit bare at times, requiring good direction and acting to bring out the full conflict and story. For that reason, I strongly urge you to see the play performed first. If that is not possible, do listen to an audio recording as you read along. That will help round out the full atmosphere that Shakespeare was developing here.After you finish Two Gentlemen of Verona, think about where you would honor friendship above love, where equal to love, and where below love. Is friendship less important than love? Or is friendship merely less intense? Can you experience both with the same person?Enjoy close ties of mutual commitment . . . with all those you feel close to!

funny and mostly believable - My favourite play of his yet(I am slowly reading them all). There is superb dialogue between Speed and his Master (Valentine) in the first act and it stays good throughout. The best lines though have to come at the end between Julia and Proteus and had me laughing out load.The play is not only a comedy it is a story of friendship, betrayal and love (Sounds like an intro to a final fantasy game) and Shakey handles this mixture of themes like the master he is.The only problem is at the begining of the fourth act( I think) with the outlaws. It is way too far fetched and mars the overall effect of the play.Still compared to the others I ve read (R&J, Macbeth, tempest, and Dream) it is the best and I think it will easily outclass the merry wives of Windsor which is my next stop.




The Two Gentlemen of Verona (The New Cambridge Shakespeare)