Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Snug (A Midsummer Night's Dream)

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Snug (A Midsummer Night's Dream) muraluvesosclasnugjpg

Played by
  
Gregory Jbara, Dewey Robinson, Walter Brandt

Movies
  
A Midsummer Night's Dream, Wood Love, Table for Three

Similar
  
Robin Starveling, Francis Flute, Peter Quince, Egeus, Tom Snout

Snug is a major character from William Shakespeare's play A Midsummer Night's Dream. He is a joiner who comes from Athens who is hired by Peter Quince to play the part of the lion in Pyramus and Thisbe. When he is first assigned the part, he is afraid it may take him a while to finally remember his lines (even though the lion's role was nothing but roaring originally). Bottom offers to play the part of the lion (as he offers to play all other parts), but he is rejected by Quince, who worries (as do the other characters) that his loud and ferocious roar in the play will frighten the ladies of power in the audience and get Quince and all his actors hanged. In the end, the lion's part is revised to explain that he is in fact not a lion and means the audience no harm. This is a subtle reminder by Shakespeare that the mechanicals are not learned men.

Snug (A Midsummer Night's Dream) introduccion

Note: although the fear of roaring too loud was at first applied to Bottom, it seems to have settled into the players' minds, as they warn the ladies even when it isn't Bottom who plays the part in the end.

Snug (A Midsummer Night's Dream) Lion Costume 2011 photos of A Midsummer Night39s Dream at the Utah

Like all Shakesperean characters, Snug is open to all manner of interpretation. Often he is played as a stupid man, a manner describing almost all of the Mechanicals. His lines are therefore delivered in sometimes a serious manner, or else a sarcastic manner (sarcasm in that Snug is making a joke about how easy the lines are "...for I am slow of study". In this manner, he is saying that the lines are so easy to memorize that it is almost insulting to say "memorize these"). He is also often played as being rather timid, especially when delivering his "roar".

Snug (A Midsummer Night's Dream) October 2008 Silver Bay Blog

Snug is the only Mechanical to whom the playwright did not assign a first name.

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References

Snug (A Midsummer Night's Dream) Wikipedia