Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Margarita (Master and Margarita)

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Full name
  
Margarita Nikolaevna

Gender
  
Female

Nationality
  
Russian

Significant other
  
The Master

Species
  
Human

Occupation
  
Housewife, Witch

Created by
  
Margarita (Master and Margarita) 1000 images about The Master and Margarita on Pinterest Theatre

Movies and TV shows
  
The Master and Margarita, The Master and Margaret

Played by
  
Anna Kovalchuk, Anastasiya Vertinskaya, Anna Dymna, Mimsy Farmer

Similar
  
The Master, Woland, Yeshua Ha‑Notsri, Koroviev, Azazello

Margarita Nikolaevna (Russian: Маргар́ита Никола́евна) is a fictional character from the novel The Master and Margarita by the Russian writer Mikhail Bulgakov.

Contents

Description

Margarita (Master and Margarita) Master and Margarita by MadLittleClown on DeviantArt

In the novel, Margarita Nikolaevna is 30 years old. She is a very pretty Muscovite, strong and resolute. She is a housewife, residing in downtown Moscow and married to a rich, famous military engineer she doesn't love and with whom she has no children. She lives in a large apartment and has a servant (Natasha, who later becomes a witch). She falls in love with a writer who she called Master (an honorary rather than domination nickname), who is kidnapped one night without her knowledge, leaving her confused and melancholy. She is invited to join Woland's entourage, performing the role of Queen by hosting Satan's Ball at Woland's request.

Margarita (Master and Margarita) 1000 ideas about The Master And Margarita on Pinterest Book cover

Most Bulgakov scholars believe that the main prototype for Margarita was Elena Bulgakova, the third and last wife of the writer, whom he called "my Margarita. The love between the two main characters is described in the novel as follows: "Love leaped out in front of us like a murderer in an alley leaping out of nowhere, and struck us both at once. As lightning strikes, as a Finnish knife strikes! She, by the way, insisted afterwards that it wasn't so, that we had, of course, loved each other for a long, long time, without knowing each other...".

Personality

Margarita (Master and Margarita) Illustrations for The Master and Margarita novel by Bulgakov 3

While depressed and sullen when we first meet her, Margarita quickly proves herself to be ready for anything-- far removed from the timidity of many other love-story heroines. She is also intelligent and perceptive. When she first meets the hideous Azazello at Alexandrovsky Garden, she is direct with him almost to the point of rudeness, and begins to walk away in a huff when he stops her by mysteriously quoting from the Master's unpublished manuscript. Margarita expresses only passing, minimal surprise at this, and ultimately accepts both Azazello's cream and his invitation to meet "the foreigner," Woland-- but not before letting Azazello know that she hasn't been fooled:

Margarita (Master and Margarita) MIRACLE FILM MASTER AND MARGARITA

"Understood. This thing is pure gold, you can tell by the weight. So, then, I understand perfectly well that I'm being bribed and drawn into some shady story for which I'm going to pay dearly...I know what I'm getting into. But I'm getting into it on account of him, because I have no more hope for anything in this world. But I want to tell you that if you're going to ruin me, you'll be ashamed! Yes, ashamed! I'm perishing on account of love!"

Margarita (Master and Margarita) The Master and Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov Reviews Discussion

Margarita's bold, direct, don't-look-back attitude is on full display after she uses Azazello's cream and before she leaves for Woland's. She writes a note to her husband, bluntly confessing her choice:

Margarita (Master and Margarita) httpsiytimgcomvi2DLMPrOgGAhqdefaultjpg

"Forgive me and forget me as soon as possible. I am leaving you for ever. Do not look for me, it is useless. I have become a witch from the grief and calamities that have struck me. It's time for me to go. Farewell."

She also displays generosity towards her maid, Natasha, by sharing the transformative cream with her, reinforcing the notion that she truly does not care for money or beauty but only for the Master and love.

References

Margarita (Master and Margarita) Wikipedia