Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Malvolio

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Source
  
Role
  
Antagonist

Play
  
Twelfth Night

Malvolio betterlivingthroughbeowulfcomwpcontentuploads

Movies
  
Twelfth Night or What You Will, Twelfth Night

Played by
  
Stephen Fry, Nigel Hawthorne, Vasili Merkuryev, Peter Cummins, Donald Macdonald

Similar
  
Olivia, Duke Orsino, Sir Toby Belch, Viola, Feste

Twelfth night analyzing staging in act 2 malvolio soliloquy


Malvolio is the steward of Olivia's household in William Shakespeare's comedy Twelfth Night, or What You Will. He is often portrayed as the main antagonist.

Contents

Malvolio Twelfth Night Stephanie Cluggish

Explore the character of malvolio in shakespeare s twelfth night


Style

Malvolio Stephen Fry as Malvolio and the three conspirators Colin Hurley as

In the play, Malvolio is defined as a kind of Puritan. He despises all manner of fun and games, and wishes his world to be completely free of human sin, yet he behaves very foolishly against his stoic nature when he believes that Olivia loves him. This leads to major conflicts with characters such as Sir Toby Belch, Sir Andrew Aguecheek, and Maria, mistress of the household.

Malvolio Shakespeare Solved Shakespeare amp Twelfth Night39s Malvolio

Much of the play's humour comes from Maria, Feste, Toby Belch, and Andrew Aguecheek tormenting Malvolio with drinking, joking, and singing. Later in the play, Maria devises a way to have revenge upon Malvolio, and proposes it to Sir Toby, Sir Andrew and Feste. Maria composes a love letter in Olivia's handwriting, and leaves it so Malvolio will find it. Beforehand, Malvolio had been wishing to marry Olivia. The letter convinces Malvolio that Olivia loves him, and leads Malvolio to think that Olivia wishes him to smile, wear yellow stockings and cross garters. Olivia is in mourning for her brother's death, and finds smiling offensive, and yellow is "a colour she abhors, and cross garters a fashion she detests", according to Maria. When Malvolio is imprisoned for being a supposed lunatic after acting out the instructions in the letter, Feste visits him both as himself and in the guise of "Sir Topas the curate", and torments Malvolio by making him swear to heretical texts, for example, Pythagorean precepts. At the end of the play he vows, "I’ll be reveng’d on the whole pack of you" for his public humiliation, and Olivia acknowledges that he has "been most notoriously abused."

Malvolio Shakespeare Solved Shakespeare amp Twelfth Night39s Malvolio

The role was first played by Richard Burbage at the Globe Theatre. John Westland Marston notes that the actors of his time often played the role with "contemptuous superiority"; by contrast his favourite Malvolio, William Ferrin, performed it with "lofty condescension". Other actors famed for their performance of Malvolio include Sir Alec Guinness, Henry Irving, E. H. Sothern, Herbert Beerbohm Tree, Henry Ainley, Sir John Gielgud, Simon Russell Beale, Maurice Evans, Ken Dodd, Richard Briers, Sir Nigel Hawthorne and Sir Derek Jacobi. Richard Wilson took on the role for the Royal Shakespeare Company's 2009 production. In 2012, Stephen Fry assumed the role at Shakespeare's Globe.

Inspiration

Malvolio Twelfth Night Analyzing Staging in Act 2 Malvolio soliloquy

Some Shakespearean scholars hypothesize that the character Malvolio was inspired by Puritan landowner Sir Thomas Posthumous Hoby, who was involved in a well known court case against many of his Yorkshire neighbours in the 1600s. Hoby sued his neighbours when they came uninvited to his house, drank, played cards, mocked his religion, and threatened to rape his wife. Hoby won damages in the case, which may have influenced the scene in Twelfth Night when Malvolio interrupts Sir Toby's late-night reveling.

Famous lines

Malvolio Scene from 39Twelfth Night39 39Malvolio and the Countess3939 Daniel

  • "[S]ome are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon 'em." (Act II, Scene v; although Malvolio says this, he does so while reading from the letter that Maria wrote).
  • "My masters, are you mad?"
  • The lines would later be repeated, with a slight alteration, by Feste in the final scene of the play as he mocks Malvolio, who afterward storms off.

    References

    Malvolio Wikipedia


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