Much Ado About Nothing

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Friday, April 3, 2009, 5:01 AM
Much Ado About Nothing

Picture from Much Ado About Nothing.



Beatrice & Benedick

Claudio

Borachio , Don John , Conrad

Claudio & Hero


Don Pedro

Benedick & Claudio

Claudio & Hero



Character:

  • Claudio is a close friend of Don Pedro, and in love with Hero. He is rather gullible and naive. He does not believe Hero when she protests her innocence and casts her off, but later realizes his mistake.
  • Hero is in love with Claudio and is the sweet and only daughter of Governor Leonarto. She is falsely accused of being unfaithful to Claudio on the night before her wedding. At the end of the play, Don John's plot against her and Claudio is revealed and they are married as was planned in the beginning.
  • Beatrice is Leonato's niece, and Hero's cousin and chambermate. She is a strong-willed woman whose strongest trait is her wit and cleverness. Beatrice believes from the beginning that her cousin Hero has never been unfaithful to Claudio. Unable to challenge Claudio herself, she impels Benedick to challenge him in order to prove his love for her. Despite all her prickly speech, in Benedick she finds a man who is worthy of her intellect and good humor and in the end agrees to marry him.
  • Benedick is a nobleman in the court of Don Pedro. He is very arrogant but shows himself to have a good character during the "wedding" scene, as he is the only man apart from the Friar who implicitly believes Hero. His pride does not allow him to admit that he loves Beatrice, but at the end of the play, Beatrice and Benedick agree to marry.
  • Don Pedro of Aragon is remarkable for being one of the few "marriageable" men in the piece who does not get married by the end of the play. He helps his two friends Claudio and Benedick to marry, but finds no lady for himself. He believes, with Claudio, in Hero's alleged infidelity, but is earnestly sorry when he learns the truth.
  • Don John is the evil brother of Don Pedro. His dissatisfaction with his own lot in life leads him to his attempts to foil the happiness of his perceived enemies. There is also an unspoken suggestion that he did once or does still have some kind of romantic interest in Hero. He conspires with his men Borachio and Conrade to ruin Hero and Claudio's wedding by casting severe doubt upon Hero's honor. When his plot is found out, he attempts to escape but is captured and imprisoned.
  • Governor Leonato is the father of Hero. He loves his daughter but upon hearing the false news that she was being unfaithful to Claudio, he wishes she had never been born if that would mean that he would be spared the pain of her disgrace. He is party to the plot of saying that Hero has died in order to reunite Claudio and Hero.
  • Dogberry is the local constable. He is not half so clever as he thinks he is and specializes in hilarious. He and his men catch Borachio boasting about his involvement with separating Claudio and Hero and his men arrest Borachio and his conspiring friends. He ultimately saves the day by doing so.
  • Antonio is the brother of Leonato and Beatrice's father. He is very goodnatured, but is deeply aggrieved by the accusations leveled against his niece.
  • Margaret is a rather worldly maidservant who is tricked by Borachio, and mistaken for Hero by the Prince and Claudio.

Story:

Don Pedro, Prince of Aragon and his noblemen are visiting their good friend Leonato in Messina after having quashed the uprising led by Don John, the prince’s half-brother. Among the victors are the misogynistic and witty Benedick, erstwhile flame of Leonato’s equally sharp-tongued and somewhat fierce niece Beatrice (who is something of a misandrist), and Benedick’s “sworn brother” Claudio, a young count. Claudio has been thinking fondly of Leonato’s gentle and lovely daughter Hero since before he went to war, and returns to find her as attractive as ever. Don Pedro, learning of his young friend’s feelings, arranges the match at a party. As an anxious Claudio watches Don Pedro talking earnestly to Hero, a masked Don John comes to him and tells him that "the noble Prince plans to take your desired for himself". Claudio, heartbroken, leaves, but comes back when bidded by Leonarto to find Hero and the Prince waiting for him. "But what is this look on the count's face?" says Beatrice upon seeing his distressed expression, "It is not sadness, nor is it anger - why, I think our Claudio is jealous!" Hero then goes to Claudio and it is revealed that she, too, has been thinking of him in his absence. Claudio, overcome with joy and love, tells Hero, "[And] sweet Hero, as you are mine, I am yours." They then kiss, and their wedding is planned to take place the following week. Using the excuse of needing something to pass the time until the wedding day, Don Pedro decides to arrange a similar fate for Beatrice and Benedick. Of course, both parties being such “professed tyrant[s]” to the opposite sex, this match will take a little more ingenuity.

Leonato, Claudio and the Prince stage a loud conversation containing a fictitious account of how much Beatrice is in love with Benedick; all the while, they know Benedick to be hiding well within earshot. Hero and her gentlewoman Ursula play the same trick upon Beatrice. Each of them believes the story they hear about the other. In the midst of all of this good-natured scheming, Don John and his men have been casting about for ways to stop the intended marriage between the man who “hath all the glory of [Don John’s] overthrow” and the woman for whom one may suspect he has cherished some tender feeling. The night before the wedding, his servant Borachio arranges to meet with Hero’s gentlewoman Margaret at Hero’s chamber window. John shows his half-brother and Claudio the rendezvous and makes them believe that they are seeing Hero in the act of infidelity.

Against the revelry of the evening, the constable Dogberry appoints a watch to keep the peace. The three hapless watchmen happen to hear Borachio bragging to his colleague Conrade about how he and Don John had finally succeeded in wrecking the wedding plans. They make the arrest and send Dogberry in the morning to fetch Leonato for the examination, but the old gentleman is in too much of a hurry to try to decipher what the constable would say to him. Amidst the confusion, the villain has managed to escape to parts unknown before he can get his comeuppance.

At the wedding, Claudio publicly disgraces his would-be bride and storms away along with all of the guests except for Ursula, the Friar, Leonato, Beatrice, her father Antonio, and Benedick. They all agree to the Friar’s plan to publish the tale that Hero, upon the grief of Claudio’s accusations, suddenly died. Beatrice and Benedick linger a moment, and wind up confessing their love to one another. In the wake of this declaration, Beatrice asks Benedick to do the one thing that will satisfy her outrage with what has just happened; she asks him to kill Claudio. He agrees, but it is with a heavy heart. Just after the challenge is issued, the story of Don John’s deception comes to light, and the Prince and Claudio are sorely grieved for their grave mistake. Leonato forgives Claudio on the condition that he marry Hero’s cousin on the next morning. When the bride is brought forth, she is revealed to be none other than Hero herself! Claudio, overcome with emotion, drops to his knees and apologizes tearfully, telling her how wrong he was, how he should have known better, and asking her to take him back into her heart, "For all the wrongs the traitor Don John has done you, and all the slander I so foolishly believed I still love you with my whole heart." Hero then tells him that she had every intention of taking him back and forgiving him and they embrace. They then profess their true and undying love for each other, as do Beatrice and Benedick when faced with written evidence (acquired and produced by Hero and Claudio) found in the pockets of each, Benedick's in the form of a song, Beatrice's in an unknown style. All are reconciled and Don John is discovered and promised punishment. The movie ends with the whole of Leonarto's household dancing in the courtyard, with the newlyweds at the center of them.


Music - Sigh No More

Sigh no more, ladies , sigh no more

Men were deceivers ever,

One foot in sea and one on shore.

To one thing constant never,

Then sigh not so, but let them go,

And be you blithe and bonny,

Converting all your sounds of woe.

Into Hey , Nonny nonny.

Sing no more ditties, Sing no more.

Of dumps so dull and heavy,

The fraud of men was ever so.

Since summer first was leavy.

Then sigh not so , But let them go.

And be you blithe and bonny,

Converting all your sounds of woe.

Into Hey , Nonny nonny (:






4:20 AM
Sign no more - Much ado about nothing