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The Two Gentlemen of Verona

The Two Gentlemen of Verona is a comedy by William Shakespeare, believed to have been written between 1589 and 1593. It is considered by some to be Shakespeare's first play,[a] and is often seen as showing his first tentative steps in laying out some of the themes and motifs with which he would later deal in more detail; for example, it is the first of his plays in which a heroine dresses as a boy. The play deals with the themes of friendship and infidelity, the conflict between friendship and love, and the foolish behaviour of people in love. The highlight of the play is considered by some to be Launce, the clownish servant of Proteus, and his dog Crab, to whom "the most scene-stealing non-speaking role in the canon" has been attributed.[1]

Two Gentlemen of Verona by Angelica Kauffman (1789).

Two Gentlemen is often regarded as one of Shakespeare's weakest plays.[2] It has the smallest named cast of any play by Shakespeare.[3]

Characters

  • Valentine – young man living in Verona
  • Proteus – his closest friend
  • Silvia – falls in love with Valentine in Milan
  • Julia – in love with Proteus in Verona
  • Duke of Milan – Silvia's father
  • Lucetta – Julia's waiting woman
  • Antonio – Proteus' father
  • Thurio – foolish rival to Valentine for Silvia
  • Eglamour – aids in Silvia's escape
  • Speed – a clownish servant to Valentine
  • Launce[b] – Proteus's servant
  • Panthino – Antonio's servant
  • Host – of the inn where Julia lodges in Milan
  • Outlaws
  • Crab – Launce's dog
  • Servants
  • Musicians

Summary

 
Silvia by Charles Edward Perugini (1888).

As the play begins, Valentine is preparing to leave Verona for Milan so as to broaden his horizons. He begs his best friend, Proteus, to come with him, but Proteus is in love with Julia, and refuses to leave. Disappointed, Valentine bids Proteus farewell and goes on alone. Meanwhile, Julia is discussing Proteus with her maid, Lucetta, who tells Julia that she thinks Proteus is fond of her. Julia, however, acts coyly, embarrassed to admit that she likes him. Lucetta then produces a letter. She will not say who gave it to her, but teases Julia that it was Valentine's servant, Speed, who brought it from Proteus. Julia, still unwilling to reveal her love in front of Lucetta, angrily tears up the letter. She sends Lucetta away, but then, realising her own rashness, she picks up the fragments of the letter and kisses them, trying to piece them back together.

Meanwhile, Proteus' father has decided that Proteus should travel to Milan and join Valentine. He orders that Proteus must leave the next day, prompting a tearful farewell with Julia, to whom Proteus swears eternal love. The two exchange rings and vows and Proteus promises to return as soon as he can.

In Milan, Proteus finds Valentine in love with the Duke's daughter, Silvia. Despite being in love with Julia, Proteus falls instantly in love with Silvia and vows to win her. Unaware of Proteus' feelings, Valentine tells him the Duke wants Silvia to marry the foppish but wealthy Thurio, against her wishes. Because the Duke suspects that his daughter and Valentine are in love, he locks her nightly in a tower, to which he keeps the only key. However, Valentine tells Proteus that he plans to free her by means of a corded ladder, and together, they will elope. Proteus immediately informs the Duke, who subsequently captures and banishes Valentine. While wandering outside Milan, Valentine runs afoul of a band of outlaws, who claim they are also exiled gentlemen. Valentine lies, saying he was banished for killing a man in a fair fight, and the outlaws elect him their leader.

 
Valentine Rescuing Silvia from Proteus by William Holman Hunt (1851).

Meanwhile, in Verona, Julia decides to join her lover in Milan. She convinces Lucetta to dress her in boy's clothes and help her fix her hair so she will not be harmed on the journey. Once in Milan, Julia quickly discovers Proteus' love for Silvia, watching him attempt to serenade her. She contrives to become his page boy – Sebastian – until she can decide upon a course of action. Proteus sends Sebastian to Silvia with a gift of the ring that Julia gave to him before he left Verona, but Julia learns that Silvia scorns Proteus' affections and is disgusted he would forget his love back home, i.e. Julia herself. Silvia deeply mourns the loss of Valentine, who Proteus has told her is rumoured dead.

Not persuaded of Valentine's death, Silvia determines to flee the city with the help of Sir Eglamour. They escape into the forest but when they are confronted by the outlaws, Eglamour flees and Silvia is taken captive. The outlaws head to their leader (Valentine), but on the way, they encounter Proteus and Julia (still disguised as Sebastian). Proteus rescues Silvia, and then pursues her deeper into the forest. Secretly observed by Valentine, Proteus attempts to persuade Silvia that he loves her, but she rejects his advances.

Proteus insinuates that he will rape her ("I'll force thee yield to my desire"), but at this point, Valentine intervenes and denounces Proteus. Horrified at what has happened, Proteus vows that the hate Valentine feels for him is nothing compared to the hate he feels for himself. Convinced that Proteus' repentance is genuine, Valentine forgives him and seems to offer Silvia to him. At this point, overwhelmed, Julia faints, revealing her true identity. Upon seeing her, Proteus suddenly remembers his love for her and vows fidelity to her once again. The Duke and Thurio are brought as prisoners by the outlaws. Seeing Silvia, Thurio claims her as his, but Valentine warns Thurio that if he makes one move toward her, he will kill him. Terrified, Thurio renounces Silvia. The Duke, disgusted with Thurio's cowardice and impressed by Valentine's actions, approves his and Silvia's love, and consents to their marriage. The two couples are happily united, and the Duke pardons the outlaws, telling them they may return to Milan.

Sources

 

In writing The Two Gentlemen of Verona, Shakespeare drew on the Spanish prose romance Los Siete Libros de la Diana (The Seven Books of the Diana) by the Portuguese writer Jorge de Montemayor. In the second book of Diana, Don Felix, who is in love with Felismena, sends her a letter explaining his feelings. Like Julia, Felismena pretends to reject the letter, and be annoyed with her maid for delivering it. Like Proteus, Felix is sent away by his father, and is followed by Felismena, who, disguised as a boy, becomes his page, only to subsequently learn that Felix has fallen in love with Celia. Felismena is then employed by Felix to act as his messenger in all communications with Celia, who scorns his love. Instead, Celia falls in love with the page (i.e. Felismena in disguise). Eventually, after a combat in a wood, Felix and Felismena are reunited. Upon Felismena revealing herself however, Celia, having no counterpart to Valentine, dies of grief.[4]

Diana was published in Spanish in 1559 and translated into French by Nicholas Collin in 1578.[5] An English translation was made by Bartholomew Young and published in 1598, though Young claims in his preface to have finished the translation sixteen years earlier (c. 1582). Shakespeare could have read a manuscript of Young's English translation, or encountered the story in French, or learned of it from an anonymous English play, The History of Felix and Philomena, which may have been based on Diana, and which was performed for the court at Greenwich Palace by the Queen's Men on 3 January 1585.[6] The History of Felix and Philiomena is now lost.[5]

 

Another major influence on Shakespeare was the story of the intimate friendship of Titus and Gisippus as told in Thomas Elyot's The Boke Named the Governour in 1531 (the same story is told in The Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio, but verbal similarities between The Two Gentlemen and The Governor suggest it was Elyot's work Shakespeare used as his primary source, not Boccaccio's).[7] In this story, Titus and Gisippus are inseparable until Gisippus falls in love with Sophronia. He introduces her to Titus, but Titus is overcome with jealousy and vows to seduce her. Upon hearing of Titus' plan, Gisippus arranges for them to change places on the wedding night, thus placing their friendship above his love.[8]

Also important to Shakespeare in the composition of the play was John Lyly's Euphues: The Anatomy of Wit, published in 1578. Like The Governor, Euphues presents two close friends who are inseparable until a woman comes between them, and, like both The Governor and Two Gentlemen, the story concludes with one friend sacrificing the woman so as to save the friendship.[9] However, as Geoffrey Bullough argues "Shakespeare's debt to Lyly was probably one of technique more than matter."[10] Lyly's Midas may also have influenced the scene where Launce and Speed run through the milkmaid's virtues and defects, as it contains a very similar scene between Lucio and Petulus.[11]

Other minor sources include Arthur Brooke's narrative poem The Tragical History of Romeus and Juliet. Obviously Shakespeare's source for Romeo and Juliet, it features a character called Friar Laurence, as does Two Gentlemen, and a scene where a young man attempts to outwit his lover's father by means of a corded ladder (as Valentine does in Two Gentlemen).[12] Philip Sidney's The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia may also have influenced Shakespeare insofar as it contains a character who follows her betrothed, dressed as his page, and later on, one of the main characters becomes captain of a group of Helots.[13]

Date and text

Date

 
First page of The Two Gentlemen of Verona from the First Folio (1623).

The exact date of composition of The Two Gentlemen of Verona is unknown, but it is generally believed to have been one of Shakespeare's earliest works.[14] The first evidence of its existence is in a list of Shakespeare's plays in Francis Meres's Palladis Tamia, published in 1598,[15] but it is thought to have been written in the early 1590s. Clifford Leech, for example, argues for 1592/1593;[16] G. Blakemore Evans places the date at 1590–1593;[17] Gary Taylor suggests 1590–1591;[18] Kurt Schlueter posits the late 1580s;[19] William C. Carroll suggests 1590–1592;[20] Roger Warren tentatively suggests 1587, but acknowledges 1590/1591 as more likely.[21]

It has been argued that Two Gentlemen may have been Shakespeare's first work for the stage. This theory was first suggested by Edmond Malone in 1821, in the Third Variorum edition of Shakespeare's plays, edited by James Boswell based on Malone's notes. Malone dated the play 1591, a modification of his earlier 1595 date from the third edition of The Plays of William Shakespeare. At this time, the dominant theory was that the Henry VI trilogy had been Shakespeare's first work.[22] More recently, the play was placed first in The Oxford Shakespeare: The Complete Works of 1986, and again in the 2nd edition of 2005, in The Norton Shakespeare of 1997, and again in the 2nd edition of 2008, and in The Complete Pelican Shakespeare of 2002.

A large part of the theory that this may be Shakespeare's first play is the quality of the work itself. Writing in 1968, Norman Sanders argued "all are agreed on the play's immaturity."[23] The argument is that the play betrays a lack of practical theatrical experience on Shakespeare's part, and as such, it must have come extremely early in his career. Stanley Wells, for example, has written the "dramatic structure is comparatively unambitious, and while some of its scenes are expertly constructed, those involving more than, at the most, four characters betray an uncertainty of technique suggestive of inexperience."[1] This uncertainty can be seen in how Shakespeare handles the distribution of dialogue in such scenes. Whenever there are more than three characters on stage, at least one of those characters tends to fall silent. For example, Speed is silent for almost all of Act 2, Scene 4, as are Thurio, Silvia and Julia for most of the last half of the final scene.[24] It has also been suggested that the handling of the final scene in general, in which the faithful lover seemingly offers his beloved as a token of his forgiveness to the man who has just attempted to rape her, is a sign of Shakespeare's lack of maturity as a dramatist.[25]

In his 2008 edition of the play for the Oxford Shakespeare, Roger Warren argues that the play is the oldest surviving piece of Shakespearean literature, suggesting a date of composition as somewhere between 1587 and 1591. He hypothesizes that the play was perhaps written before Shakespeare came to London, with an idea towards using the famous comic actor Richard Tarlton in the role of Launce (this theory stems from the fact that Tarlton had performed several extremely popular and well known scenes with dogs). However, Tarlton died in September 1588, and Warren notes several passages in Two Gentlemen which seem to borrow from John Lyly's Midas, which wasn't written until at least late-1589. As such, Warren acknowledges that 1590/1591 is most likely the correct date of composition.[26]

Text

The play was not printed until 1623, when it appeared in the First Folio of Shakespeare's plays.[1]

Criticism and analysis

 
Silvia Rescued by Valentine by Francis Wheatley (1792).

Critical history

Perhaps the most critically discussed issue in the play is the sequence, bizarre by modern Western standards, in Act 5, Scene 4 in which Valentine seems to 'give' Silvia to Proteus as a sign of his friendship. For many years, the general critical consensus on this issue was that the incident revealed an inherent misogyny in the text. For example, Hilary Spurling wrote in 1970, "Valentine is so overcome [by Proteus' apology] that he promptly offers to hand over his beloved to the man who, not three minutes before, had meant to rape her."[27] Modern scholarship, however, is much more divided about Valentine's actions at the end of the play, with some critics arguing that he does not offer to give Silvia to Proteus at all. The ambiguity lies in the line "All that was mine in Silvia I give thee" (5.4.83). Some critics (such as Stanley Wells, for example[1]) interpret this to mean that Valentine is indeed handing Silvia over to her would-be rapist, but another school of thought suggests that Valentine simply means "I will love you [Proteus] with as much love as I love Silvia," thus reconciling the dichotomy of friendship and love as depicted elsewhere in the play. This is certainly how Jeffrey Masten, for example, sees it, arguing that the play as a whole "reveals not the opposition of male friendship and Petrarchan love but rather their interdependence." As such, the final scene "stages the play's ultimate collaboration of male friendship and its incorporation of the plot we would label "heterosexual"."[28]

This is also how Roger Warren interprets the final scene. Warren cites a number of productions of the play as evidence for this argument, including Robin Phillips' Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) production in 1970, where Valentine kisses Silvia, makes his offer and then kisses Proteus.[29] Another staging cited by Warren is Edward Hall's 1998 Swan Theatre production. In Hall's version of the scene, after Valentine says the controversial line, Silvia approaches him and takes him by the hand. They remain holding hands for the rest of the play, clearly suggesting that Valentine has not 'given' her away.[30] Warren also mentions Leon Rubin's 1984 Stratford Shakespeare Festival production (where the controversial line was altered to "All my love to Silvia I also give to thee"),[31] David Thacker's 1991 Swan Theatre production,[32] and the 1983 BBC Television Shakespeare adaptation as supporting the theory that Valentine is not giving Silvia away, but is simply promising to love Proteus as much as he loves Silvia.[33] Patty S. Derrick also interprets the BBC production in this manner, arguing that "Proteus clearly perceives the offer as a noble gesture of friendship, not an actual offer, because he does not even look towards Silvia but rather falls into an embrace with Valentine" (although Derrick does raise the question that if Valentine is not offering Silvia to Proteus, why does Julia swoon?).[34]

There are other theories regarding this final scene, however. For example, in his 1990 edition of the play for the New Cambridge Shakespeare, Kurt Schlueter suggests that Valentine is indeed handing Silvia over to Proteus, but the audience is not supposed to take it literally; the incident is farcical, and should be interpreted as such. Schlueter argues that the play provides possible evidence it was written to be performed and viewed primarily by a young audience, and as such, to be staged at university theatres, as opposed to public playhouses. Such an audience would be more predisposed to accepting the farcical nature of the scene, and more likely to find humorous the absurdity of Valentine's gift. As such, in Schlueter's theory, the scene does represent what it appears to represent; Valentine does give Silvia to her would-be rapist, but it is done purely for comic effect.[35]

 
Launce's substitute for Proteus' dog by Augustus Egg (1849).

Another theory is provided by William C. Carroll in his 2004 edition for the Arden Shakespeare, Third Series. Carroll argues, like Schlueter, that Valentine is indeed giving Silvia to Proteus, but unlike Schlueter, Carroll detects no sense of farce. Instead, he sees the action as a perfectly logical one in terms of the notions of friendship which were prevalent at the time:

the idealisation of male friendship as superior to male-female love (which was considered not romantic or compassionate but merely lustful, hence inferior) performs a project of cultural nostalgia, a stepping back from potentially more threatening social arrangements to a world of order, a world based on a 'gift' economy of personal relations among male social equals rather than one based on a newer, less stable economy of emotional and economic risk. The offer of the woman from one male friend to another would therefore be the highest expression of friendship from one point of view, a low point of psycho-sexual regression from another.[36]

As in Schlueter, Carroll here interprets Valentine's actions as a gift to Proteus, but unlike Schlueter, and more in line with traditional criticism of the play, Carroll also argues that such a gift, as unacceptable as it is to modern eyes, is perfectly understandable when one considers the cultural and social milieu of the play itself.[37]

Language

Language is of primary importance in the play insofar as Valentine and Proteus speak in blank verse, but Launce and Speed speak (for the most part) in prose.[38] More specifically, the actual content of many of the speeches serve to illustrate the pompousness of Valentine and Proteus' exalted outlook, and the more realistic and practical outlook of the servants. This is most apparent in Act 3, Scene 1. Valentine has just given a lengthy speech lamenting his banishment and musing on how he cannot possibly survive without Silvia; "Except I be by Silvia in the night/There is no music in the nightingale./Unless I look on Silvia in the day/There is no day for me to look upon" (ll.178–181). However, when Launce enters only a few lines later, he announces that he too is in love, and proceeds to outline, along with Speed, all of his betrothed's positives ("She brews good ale"; "She can knit"; "She can wash and scour"), and negatives ("She hath a sweet mouth"; "She doth talk in her sleep"; "She is slow in words"). After weighing his options, Launce decides that the woman's most important quality is that "she hath more hair than wit, and more faults than hairs, and more wealth than faults" (ll.343–344). He announces that her wealth "makes the faults gracious" (l.356), and chooses for that reason to wed her. This purely materialistic reasoning, as revealed in the form of language, is in stark contrast to the more spiritual and idealised love espoused by Valentine earlier in the scene.[39]

Themes

 
H.C. Selous' illustration of Valentine and Proteus' farewell in Act 1, Scene 1; from The Plays of William Shakespeare: The Comedies, edited by Charles Cowden Clarke and Mary Cowden Clarke (1830).

One of the dominant theories as regards the value of Two Gentlemen is that thematically, it represents a 'trial run' of sorts, in which Shakespeare deals briefly with themes which he would examine in more detail in later works. E.K. Chambers, for example, believed that the play represents something of a gestation of Shakespeare's great thematic concerns. Writing in 1905, Chambers stated that Two Gentlemen

was Shakespeare's first essay at originality, at fashioning for himself the outlines of that romantic or tragicomic formula in which so many of his most characteristic dramas were afterwards to be cast. Something which is neither quite tragedy nor quite comedy, something which touches the heights and depths of sentiment and reveals the dark places of the human heart without lingering long enough there to crystallise the painful impression, a love story broken for a moment into passionate chords by absence and inconstancy and intrigue, and then reunited to the music of wedding bells.[40]

As such, the play's primary interest for critics has tended to lie in relation to what it reveals about Shakespeare's conception of certain themes before he became the accomplished playwright of later years. Writing in 1879, A.C. Swinburne, for example, states "here is the first dawn of that higher and more tender humour that was never given in such perfection to any man as ultimately to Shakespeare."[41] Similarly, in 1906, Warwick R. Bond writes "Shakespeare first opens the vein he worked so richly afterwards – the vein of crossed love, of flight and exile under the escort of the generous sentiments; of disguised heroines, and sufferings endured and virtues exhibited under their disguise; and of the Providence, kinder than life, that annuls the errors and forgives the sin."[42] More recently, Stanley Wells has referred to the play as a "dramatic laboratory in which Shakespeare first experimented with the conventions of romantic comedy which he would later treat with a more subtle complexity, but it has its own charm."[1]

 
Early 20th-century Henry James Haley illustration of Act 2, Scene 1 (Silvia refusing Valentine's letter).

Other critics have been less kind however, arguing that if the later plays show a skilled and confident writer exploring serious issues of the human heart, Two Gentlemen represents the initial, primarily unsuccessful attempt to do likewise. In 1921, for example, J. Dover Wilson and Arthur Quiller-Couch, in their edition of the play for the Cambridge Shakespeare, famously stated that after hearing Valentine offer Silvia to Proteus "one's impulse, upon this declaration, is to remark that there are, by this time, no gentlemen in Verona."[43] H.B. Charlton, writing in 1938, argues that "clearly, Shakespeare's first attempt to make romantic comedy had only succeeded so far as it had unexpectedly and inadvertently made romance comic."[44] Another such argument is provided by Norman Sanders in 1968; "because the play reveals a relatively unsure dramatist and many effects managed with a tiro's lack of expertise, it offers us an opportunity to see more clearly than anywhere else in the canon what were to become characteristic techniques. It stands as an 'anatomie' or show-through version, as it were, of Shakespeare's comic art."[45] Kurt Schlueter, on the other hand, argues that critics have been too harsh on the play precisely because the later plays are so much superior. He suggests that when looking at Shakespeare's earlier works, scholars put too much emphasis on how they fail to measure up to the later works, rather than looking at them for their own intrinsic merits; "we should not continue the practice of holding his later achievements against him when dealing with his early beginnings."[35]

Love and friendship

Norman Sanders calls the play "almost a complete anthology of the practices of the doctrine of romantic love which inspired the poetic and prose Romances of the period."[46] At the very centre of this is the contest between love and friendship; "an essential part of the comicality of The Two Gentlemen of Verona is created by the necessary conflict between highly stylised concepts of love and friendship."[47] This is manifested in the question of whether the relationship between two male friends is more important than that between lovers, encapsulated by Proteus' rhetorical question at 5.4.54; "In love/Who respects friend?" This question "exposes the raw nerve at the heart of the central relationships, the dark reality lurking beneath the wit and lyricism with which the play has in general presented lovers' behaviour."[48] In the program notes for John Barton's 1981 RSC production at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Anne Barton, his wife, wrote that the central theme of the play was "how to bring love and friendship into a constructive and mutually enhancing relationship."[49] As William C. Carroll points out, this is a common theme in Renaissance literature, which often celebrates friendship as the more important relationship (because it is pure and unconcerned with sexual attraction), and contends that love and friendship cannot co-exist.[36] As actor Alex Avery argues, "The love between two men is a greater love for some reason. There seems to be a sense that the function of a male/female relationship is purely for the family and to procreate, to have a family. But a love between two men is something that you choose. You have arranged marriages, [but] a friendship between two men is created by the desires and wills of those two men, whereas a relationship between a man and a girl is actually constructed completely peripheral to whatever the feelings of the said boy and girl are."[50]

Carroll sees this societal belief as vital in interpreting the final scene of the play, arguing that Valentine does give Silvia to Proteus, and in so doing, he is merely acting in accordance with the practices of the day.[36] However, if one accepts that Valentine does not give Silvia to Proteus, as critics such as Jeffrey Masten argue, but instead offers to love Proteus as much as he loves Silvia, then the conclusion of the play can be read as a final triumphant reconciliation between friendship and love; Valentine intends to love his friend as much as he does his betrothed. Love and friendship are shown to be co-existent, not exclusive.[28]

 
Scene from The Two Gentlemen of Verona (Valentine woos Silvia; the Duke sits nearby, pretending to be asleep) by Alfred Elmore (1857).

Foolishness of lovers

Another major theme is the foolishness of lovers, what Roger Warren refers to as "mockery of the absurdity of conventional lovers' behaviour."[51] Valentine for example, is introduced into the play mocking the excesses of love; "To be in love, where scorn is bought with groans/Coy looks with heart-sore sighs, one fading moment's mirth/With twenty watchful, weary, tedious nights" (1.1.29–31). Later, however, he becomes as much a prisoner of love as Proteus, exclaiming, "For in revenge of my contempt for love/Love hath chased sleep from my enthrall'd eyes/And made them watchers of my own heart's sorrow" (2.4.131–133).

The majority of the cynicism and mockery as regards conventional lovers, however, comes from Launce and Speed, who serve as foils for the two protagonists, and "supply a mundane view of the idealistic flights of fancy indulged in by Proteus and Valentine."[52] Several times in the play, after either Valentine or Proteus has made an eloquent speech about love, Shakespeare introduces either Launce or Speed (or both), whose more mundane concerns serve to undercut what has just been said, thus exposing Proteus and Valentine to mockery.[39] For example, in Act 2, Scene 1, as Valentine and Silvia engage in a game of flirtation, hinting at their love for one another, Speed provides constant asides which serve to directly mock the couple;

VALENTINE
Peace, here she comes.

Enter Silvia

SPEED (aside)
O excellent motion! O exceeding puppet! Now he will interpret her.

VALENTINE
Madame and mistress, a thousand good-morrows.

SPEED (aside)
O, give ye good e'en. Here's a million of manners.

SILVIA
Sir Valentine and servant, to you two thousand.

SPEED (aside)
He should give her interest, and she gives it him.
(2.1.85-94)

Inconstancy

A third major theme is inconstancy, particularly as manifested in Proteus,[53] whose very name hints at his changeable mind (in Ovid's Metamorphoses, Proteus is a sea-god forever changing its shape[54]). At the start of the play, Proteus has only eyes for Julia. However, upon meeting Silvia, he immediately falls in love with her (although he has no idea why). He then finds himself drawn to the page Sebastian (Julia in disguise) whilst still trying to woo Silvia, and at the end of the play, he announces that Silvia is no better than Julia and vows he now loves Julia again. Indeed, Proteus himself seems to be aware of this mutability, pointing out towards the end of the play; "O heaven, were man/But constant, he were perfect. That one error/Fills him with faults, makes him run through all th'sins;/Inconstancy falls off ere it begins" (5.4.109–112).

Performance

 
Who is Sylvia – What is she, that all the swains commend her by Edwin Austin Abbey (1899).

There is no record of a performance during Shakespeare's lifetime, although due to its inclusion in Francis Meres' Palladis Tamia, we know the play had definitely been performed by 1598.[55] The earliest known performance was at Drury Lane in 1762. However, this production was of a version of the play rewritten by Benjamin Victor.[55] The earliest known performance of the straight Shakespearean text was at Covent Garden in 1784, advertised as "Shaxespeare's with alterations." Although the play was supposed to run for several weeks, it closed after the first night.[56]

From the middle of the eighteenth century, even if staging Shakespeare's original (as opposed to Victor's rewrite) it was common to cut the lines in the final scene where Valentine seems to offer Silvia to Proteus. This practice prevailed until William Macready reintroduced the lines in 1841 in a production at Drury Lane,[57] although they were still being removed as late as 1952, in Denis Carey's production at the Bristol Old Vic.[57] Notable nineteenth-century performances include Charles Kean's 1848 production at the Haymarket Theatre, Samuel Phelps' 1857 production at Sadler's Wells Theatre and William Poel's 1892 and 1896 productions.[58]

During the twentieth century, the play has been produced sporadically in the English-speaking world, although it has proved more popular in Europe.[59] Indeed, there have been only a few significant English speaking productions. Little is known, for example, about Harley Granville-Barker's 1904 production at the Court Theatre,[60] F.R. Benson's 1910 production at the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre,[61] Robert Atkins' 1923 production at the Apollo Theatre,[62] or Ben Iden Payne's 1938 production at Stratford-upon-Avon.[58] The earliest production about which we have significant information is Michael Langham's 1957 production at The Old Vic, starring Richard Gale as Valentine, Keith Michell as Proteus, Barbara Jefford as Julia and Ingrid Hafner as Silvia. In this production, set in late nineteenth-century Italy and grounded very much in high Romanticism, Proteus threatens to kill himself with a pistol at the end of the play, prompting Valentine's hasty offer of Silvia.[63]

Perhaps the most notable 20th-century production was Peter Hall's 1960 production at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre. Set in a late medieval milieu, the play starred Denholm Elliott as Valentine, Derek Godfrey as Proteus, Susan Maryott as Silvia, Frances Cuka as Julia, and featured a much lauded performance by Patrick Wymark as Launce.[64][65] Hall had only recently been appointed as Artistic Director of the RSC, and, somewhat unexpectedly, he chose Two Gentlemen as his inaugural production, billed as the opening show in a re-examination of the development of Shakespearean comedy.[66]

 
Tim Mace as Launce and Abbie as Crab from a 2009 modern dress performance at the Capitol Center Theater.

Ten years later, in 1970, Robin Phillips' RSC production starred Peter Egan as Valentine, Ian Richardson as Proteus, Helen Mirren as Julia, Estelle Kohler as Silvia, and Patrick Stewart as Launce. This production concentrated on the issues of friendship and treachery, and set the play in a decadent world of social elitism. Valentine and Proteus were presented as aristocratic students, the Duke was a Don, and Eglamour an old scout master. On the other hand, the poverty-stricken outlaws were dressed in animal skins.[67][68]

The RSC again staged the play at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre in 1981, as a double bill with Titus Andronicus, with both plays heavily edited. Directed by John Barton, the production starred Peter Chelsom as Valentine, Peter Land as Proteus, Julia Swift as Julia and Diana Hardcastle as Silvia. This production saw the actors not involved in the current on-stage scene sit at the front of the stage and watch the performance.[69][70] Leon Rubin directed a performance at the Stratford Shakespeare Festival in 1984, where the actors were dressed in modern clothes and contemporary pop music was featured within the play (for example, the outlaws are portrayed as an anarchic rock group).[71]

A 1991 RSC production at the Swan Theatre saw director David Thacker use an on-stage band for the duration of the play, playing music from the 1930s, such as Cole Porter and George Gershwin. Thacker's production featured Hugh Bonneville (then billed as Richard Bonneville) as Valentine, Finbar Lynch as Proteus, Clare Holman as Julia and Saskia Reeves as Silvia. In 1992, Thacker's production moved to the Barbican Centre, and in 1993 went on regional tour.[72][73] In 1996, Jack Shepherd directed a modern dress version at the Royal National Theatre as part of Shakespeare's Globe's "Prologue Season". The production starred Lenny James as Valentine, Mark Rylance as Proteus, Stephanie Roth Haberle as Julia and Anastasia Hille as Silvia.[58] Another RSC production took place at the Swan in 1998, under the direction of Edward Hall, and starring Tom Goodman-Hill as Valentine, Dominic Rowan as Proteus, Lesley Vickerage as Julia and Poppy Miller as Silvia. This production set the play in a grimy unnamed contemporary city where material obsession was all-encompassing.[38]

 
Valentine (Alex Avery), Silvia (Rachel Pickup) and Proteus (Laurence Mitchell) in the 2004 Fiona Buffini production.

In 2004, Fiona Buffini directed a touring production for the RSC. Premiering at the Swan, the production starred Alex Avery as Valentine, Laurence Mitchell as Proteus, Vanessa Ackerman as Julia and Rachel Pickup as Silvia. Buffini set the play in a swinging 1930s milieu, and featuring numerous dance numbers. Additionally, London and New York replaced Verona and Milan; initially, Valentine and Proteus are shown as living in the English countryside, in a rural paradise devoid of any real vitality, the sons of wealthy families who have retired from the city. When Valentine leaves, he heads to New York to pursue the American Dream and falls in love with Silvia, the famous actress daughter of a powerful media magnate. Another change to the play was that the roles of the outlaws (represented here as a group of paparazzi) were increased considerably. Scenes added to the play show them arriving in New York and going about their daily business, although none of the new scenes featured any dialogue.[74] Another performance worth noting occurred at the Courtyard Theatre in Stratford in 2006. A non-professional acting company from Brazil, named Nós do Morro, in collaboration with a Gallery 37 group from Birmingham, gave a single performance of the play during the RSC's presentation of the Complete Works, directed by Guti Fraga. The production was spoken in Portuguese, with the original English text projected as surtitles onto the back of the stage. It also featured two 17-year-olds in the roles of Valentine and Proteus (usually, actors in their 20s are cast), and Crab was played not by a dog, but by a human actor in a dog costume.[75][76] In 2009, Joe Dowling directed the play at the Guthrie Theater, starring Sam Bardwell as Valentine, Jonas Goslow as Proteus, Sun Mee Chomet as Julia and Valeri Mudek as Silvia. Staged as a 1950s live television production, large black-and-white monitors were set on either side of the stage, with cameras feeding the action to them. Additionally, period advertisements appeared both before the show and during the intermission. The actors spoke the original dialogue, but wore 1950s clothing. Rock and roll music and dance sequences were occasionally mixed with the action.[77][78]

In 2011, Laura Cole directed a production at the Shakespeare Tavern. Presented as an "in repertory" production, alongside The Taming of the Shrew and The Comedy of Errors, it starred Kenneth Wigley as Valentine, Jonathan Horne as Proteus, Amee Vyas as Julia and Kati Grace Morton as Silvia.[79] In 2012, P.J. Paparelli directed a Shakespeare Theatre Company production at the Lansburgh Theatre, starring Andrew Veenstra as Valentine, Nick Dillenburg as Proteus, Natalie Mitchell as Silvia and Miriam Silverman as Julia. Set in the 1990s, and featuring a contemporary soundtrack, mobile phones and guns, the production downplayed the comedy, and instead presented the play as a semi-tragic coming-of-age story. Reviews were mixed, with most critics impressed with the attempts to do something new with the play, but not universally sure the new ideas worked.[80][81] Also in 2012, a touring production was staged at various venues throughout the UK, including a performance at the Globe Theatre as part of the Globe to Globe Festival, under the name Vakomana Vaviri Ve Zimbabwe (The Two Gentlemen from Zimbabwe). Directed by Arne Pohlmeier, and spoken in Shona, the entire play was performed with a cast of two; Denton Chikura and Tonderai Munyevu.[82][83] In 2014, for the first time since Robin Phillips' 1970 production, the RSC performed the play in a full production at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre. Directed by Simon Godwin, the production starred Michael Marcus as Valentine, Mark Arends as Proteus, Pearl Chanda as Julia and Sarah MacRae as Silvia. On 3 September, the play was broadcast live to cinemas around the world as part of the "Live from Stratford-upon-Avon" series. The production received generally positive reviews, with most critics happy to see it back on the RSC stage.[84][85]

In 2022, the comedy was performed by members of Mary Baldwin University's MFA company model for Treehouse Shakespeare Ensemble's 2022-2023 season. The production was a small-scale show, in which only five actors portrayed all of the characters. Directed by Beth Somerville and Kelsey Harrison, the shows concept set the play in tumultuous 1970's Italy.

Adaptations

Theatrical

 
Henry Roberts' engraving of Richard Yates as Launce in the 1762 Drury Lane adaptation by Benjamin Victor.

Benjamin Victor rewrote the play for performance in 1762 (the earliest recorded performance we have of the play), at the Theatre Royal in Drury Lane. Starring Richard Yates as Launce, his wife, Mary Ann Yates as Julia and Elizabeth Pope as Silvia, Victor brought all of the Verona scenes together, removed Valentine's 'gift' of Silvia to Proteus and increased the roles of Launce and Crab (especially during the outlaw scenes, where both characters are intimately involved in the action). He also switched the emphasis of the play away from the love-friendship dichotomy and instead focused on the issues of fidelity, with the last line of the play altered to, "Lovers must be faithful to be bless'd." This necessitated rewriting Valentine as a near flawless protagonist who represents such faithfulness, and Proteus as a traditional villain, who doesn't care for such notions. The two are not presented as old friends, but simply as acquaintances. Thurio was also rewritten as a harmless, but lovable fool, not unlike Launce and Speed. Although not a major success (the play initially ran for only six performances), it was still being staged as late as 1895.[86][87][88]

In 1790, John Philip Kemble staged his own production of the play at Drury Lane, maintaining many of Victor's alterations whilst also adding many of his own. The production starred Richard Wroughton as Proteus and Elizabeth Satchell as Silvia. The play was again staged at Covent Garden in 1808, with Kemble, who was fifty years old at the time, playing Valentine.[89]

Opera/Musical

Frederic Reynolds staged an operatic version in 1821 at Covent Garden as part of his series of adaptations of the works of Shakespeare. Reynolds wrote the lyrics, with Henry Bishop writing the music. The production ran for twenty-nine performances, and included some of Shakespeare's sonnets set to music.[90] Augustin Daly revived the opera in 1895 at Daly's Theatre, in an elaborate production starring Ada Rehan as Julia.[91][92]

In 1826, Franz Schubert set a German translation by Eduard von Bauernfeld of Proteus' serenade to Silvia ("Who is Silvia? What is she,/That all our swains commend her?") to music. This song is usually known in English as "Who is Sylvia?," but in German it is known as "An Sylvia" ("Vier Lieder", opus 106, number 4, D. 891).[93] In 1909, Eric Coates's "Four Old English Songs" included a setting of "Who is Sylvia".[94] In 1942, Gerald Finzi included a setting of "Who Is Silvia?" in his song cycle on Shakespearean texts Let Us Garlands Bring; the title of the work is the last line of the song.[95]

In 1971, Galt MacDermot, John Guare and Mel Shapiro adapted the show into a rock musical under the same name as the play. Guare and Shapiro wrote the book, Guare the lyrics, and MacDermot the music. Opening at the St. James Theatre on 1 December 1971, with Shapiro directing and Jean Erdman as choreographer, it ran for 614 performances, closing on 20 May 1973.[96] During its initial run, the play won two Tony Awards; Best Musical and Best Book.[97] The original cast included Clifton Davis as Valentine, Raúl Juliá as Proteus, Jonelle Allen as Silvia and Diana Dávila as Julia. The play moved to the West End in 1973, playing at the Phoenix Theatre from 26 April, and running for 237 performances.[98] It was revived in 1996 at the New Jersey Shakespeare Festival, directed by Robert Duke,[99] and again in 2005, directed and choreographed by Kathleen Marshall as part of the Shakespeare in the Park festival. Marshall's production was performed at the Delacorte Theater in Central Park, and starred Norm Lewis as Valentine, Oscar Isaac as Proteus, Renée Elise Goldsberry as Silvia and Rosario Dawson as Julia.[100]

Film

The only cinematic adaptation of the play is Yī jiǎn méi (more commonly known by its English title A Spray of Plum Blossoms), a 1931 silent film from China, directed by Bu Wancang and written by Huang Yicuo. A loose adaptation of the play, the film tells the story of Bai Lede (Wang Chilong) and Hu Luting (Jin Yan), two military cadets who have been friends since they were children. After graduating, Hu, a playboy uninterested in love, is appointed as a captain in Guangdong and leaves his home town in Shanghai. Bai however, deeply in love with Hu's sister, Hu Zhuli (Ruan Lingyu) stays behind. At Guangdong, Hu falls in love with the local general's daughter, Shi Luohua (Lim Cho Cho), although the general, Shi (Wang Guilin), is unaware of the relationship, and instead wants his daughter to marry the foolish Liao Di'ao (Kao Chien Fei). Meanwhile, Bai's father uses his influence to get Bai posted to Guangdong, and after a sorrowful farewell between himself and Zhuli, he arrives at his new post and instantly falls in love with Luohua. In an effort to have her for himself, Bai betrays his friend, by informing General Shi of his daughter's plans to elope with Hu, leading to Shi dishonourably discharging Hu. Bai tries to win Luohua over, but she is uninterested, only concerned with lamenting the loss of Hu. In the meantime, Hu encounters a group of bandits who ask him to be their leader, to which he agrees, planning on returning for Luohua at some point in the future. Some time passes, and one day, as Luohua, Bai and Liao are passing through the forest, they are attacked. Luohua manages to flee, and Bai pursues her into the forest. They engage in an argument, but just as Bai seems about to lose his temper, Hu intervenes, and he and Luohua are reunited. General Shi arrives in time to see Liao flee the scene, and he now realises that he was wrong to get in the way of the relationship between Hu and his daughter. Hu then forgives Bai his betrayal, and Bai reveals that he has discovered that his only true love is in fact Zhuli back in Shanghai. The film is notable for being one of many Chinese films of the period which, although performed in Mandarin when filming, used English intertitles upon its original release. In the English intertitles and credits, the characters are named after their counterparts in the play; Hu is Valentine, Bai is Proteus, Zhuli is Julia and Luohua is Silvia. Liao is named Tiburio rather than Thurio.[101][102]

Two Gentlemen is also featured in Shakespeare in Love (1998). Directed by John Philip Madden and written by Marc Norman and Tom Stoppard, the film tells the fictional story of William Shakespeare's (Joseph Fiennes) composition of Romeo and Juliet. Early in the film, Queen Elizabeth (Judi Dench) attends a production of Two Gentlemen, greatly enjoying William Kempe (Patrick Barlow) being thoroughly outperformed by Crab, and then falling asleep during Henry Condell's (Nicholas Boulton) recitation of Proteus' soliloquy from Act 2, Scene 1. Later, after reading the first draft of Romeo and Ethel, theatre manager Philip Henslowe (Geoffrey Rush) suggests that Shakespeare add a dog to liven the play up.[103]

Television

The first television adaptation was in 1952, when BBC Television Service broadcast Act 1 of the play live from the Bristol Old Vic. Directed by Denis Carey, the production starred John Neville as Valentine, Laurence Payne as Proteus, Gudrun Ure as Silvia and Pamela Ann as Julia.[104]

In 1956, the entire play was broadcast on West German TV channel Das Erste from a performance at the Munich Kammerspiele, under the title Zwei Herren aus Verona. The theatrical production was directed by Hans Schalla, with the TV adaptation directed by Ernst Markwardt. The cast included Rolf Schult as Valentine, Hannes Riesenberger as Proteus, Helga Siemers as Julia and Isolde Chlapek as Silvia.[105] In 1964, the play was made into a TV movie in West Germany, again using the title Zwei Herren aus Verona. Screened on ZDF, it was directed by Hans Dieter Schwarze and starred Norbert Hansing as Valentine, Rolf Becker as Proteus, Katinka Hoffman as Julia and Heidelinde Weis as Silvia.[106] Another West German TV movie, under the title Die zwei Herren aus Verona, was screened on Das Erste in 1966. Directed by Harald Benesch, it starred Jürgen Kloth as Valentine, Lothar Berg as Proteus, Anne-Marie Lermon as Julia and Carola Regnier as Silvia.[107] In 1969, the entire play was broadcast on Austrian TV channel ORF eins from a performance at the Theater in der Josefstadt, under the title Zwei aus Verona. The theatrical production was directed by Edwin Zbonek, with the TV adaptation directed by Wolfgang Lesowsky. The cast included Klaus Maria Brandauer as Valentine, Albert Rueprecht as Proteus, Kitty Speiser as Julia and Brigitte Neumeister as Silvia.[108]

 
An outlaw hides in the "Christmas at Selfridges" set (note the stylised steel 'trees' and tinsel foliage).

In 1983, the play was adapted for the BBC Television Shakespeare series, as the fourth episode of the sixth season. Directed by Don Taylor, it starred Tyler Butterworth as Proteus, John Hudson as Valentine, Tessa Peake-Jones as Julia and Joanne Pearce as Silvia. For the most part, the adaptation is taken verbatim from the First Folio, with some very minor differences. For example, omitted lines include the Duke's "Knowing that tender youth is soon suggested" (3.1.34), and Julia's "Her eyes are grey as glass, and so are mine" (4.4.189). Other differences include a slightly different opening scene to that indicated in the text. Whereas the play seems to open with Valentine and Proteus in mid-conversation, the adaptation begins with Mercatio and Eglamour attempting to formally woo Julia; Mercatio by showing her a coffer overflowing with gold coins, Eglamour by displaying a parchment detailing his ancestry. Neither Eglamour nor Mercatio appear in the text. However, there is no dialogue in this scene, and the first words spoken are the same as in the text ("Cease to persuade my loving Proteus"). Eglamour is also present in the final scene, albeit once again without any dialogue, and, additionally, the capture of Silvia and the flight of Eglamour is seen, as opposed to merely being described. The music for the episode was created by Anthony Rooley, who wrote new arrangements of works from Shakespeare's own time, such as John Dowland's "Lachrimae". Performed by The Consort of Musicke, other musicians whose music was used include William Byrd, Thomas Campion, Anthony Holborne, John Johnson, Thomas Morley and Orazio Vecchi.[109]

Taylor initially planned a representational setting for the film; Verona, Milan and the forest were all to be realistic. However, he changed his mind early in preproduction and had production designer Barbara Gosnold go in the opposite direction – a stylised setting. To this end, the forest is composed of metal poles with bits of green tinsel and brown sticks stuck to them (the cast and crew referred to the set as "Christmas at Selfridges"). Whilst the set for Verona remained relatively realistic, that for Milan featured young actors dressed like cherubs as extras. This was to convey the idea that the characters lived in a 'Garden of Courtly Love', which was slightly divorced from the everyday reality represented by Verona.[110] Working in tandem with this idea, upon Proteus' arrival in Milan, after meeting Silvia, he is left alone on screen, and the weather suddenly changes from calm and sunny to cloudy and windy, accompanied by a thunderclap. The implication being that Proteus has brought a darkness within him into the garden of courtly delights previously experienced by Silvia.[111] Although the production is edited in a fairly conventional manner, much of it was shot in extremely long takes, and then edited into sections, rather than actually shooting in sections. Director Don Taylor would shoot most of the scenes in single takes, as he felt this enhanced performances and allowed actors to discover aspects which they never would were everything broken up into pieces.[112][113]

In 1995, a production of the play aired on Polish TV channel TVP1 under the title Dwaj panowie z Werony, directed by Roland Rowiński and starring Rafal Krolikowski as Proteus, Marek Bukowski as Valentine, Agnieszka Krukówna as Julia and Edyta Jungowska as Sylvia.[114]

In 2000, episode three of season four of Dawson's Creek, "Two Gentlemen of Capeside" loosely adapted the plot of the play. Written by Chris Levinson and Jeffrey Stepakoff, and directed by Sandy Smolan, the episode depicts how Dawson Leery (James Van Der Beek) and Pacey Witter (Joshua Jackson), formerly best friends, have been driven apart over their love for the same woman. The play is referenced early in the episode as the characters are reading it for their English class.[115]

Radio

In 1923, extracts from the play were broadcast on BBC Radio, performed by the Cardiff Station Repertory Company as the first episode of a series of programs showcasing Shakespeare's plays, entitled Shakespeare Night.[116] In 1924, the entire play was broadcast by 2BD, directed by Joyce Tremayne and R.E. Jeffrey, with Treymane playing Silvia and Jeffrey playing Valentine, alongside G.R. Harvey as Proteus and Daisy Moncur as Julia.[117] In 1927, the scenes between Julia and Lucetta were broadcast on BBC Radio as part of the Echoes from Greenwich Theatre series. Betty Rayner played Julia and Joan Rayner played Lucetta.[118] BBC National Programme broadcast the full play in 1934, adapted for radio by Barbara Burnham and produced by Lance Sieveking. Ion Swinley played Valentine, Robert Craven was Proteus, Helen Horsey was Silvia and Lydia Sherwood played Julia.[119]

In 1958, the entire play was broadcast on BBC Third Programme. Produced and directed by Raymond Raikes, it starred John Westbrook as Valentine, Charles Hodgson as Proteus, Caroline Leigh as Silvia, Perlita Neilson as Julia, and Frankie Howerd as Launce.[120] BBC Third Programme aired another full production of the play in 1968, produced and directed by R.D. Smith and starring Denys Hawthorne as Valentine, Michael N. Harbour as Proteus, Judi Dench as Julia and Kate Coleridge as Silvia.[121]

In 2007, producer Roger Elsgood and director Willi Richards adapted the play into a radio drama called The Two Gentlemen of Valasna. Set in two petty Indian princely states called Malpur and Valasna in the weeks leading up to the Indian Rebellion of 1857, the play was first broadcast on BBC Radio 3 on 29 July 2007.[122] It was recorded on location in Maharashtra, India earlier in 2007 with a cast drawn from Bollywood, Indian television and the Mumbai English-speaking theatre traditions; actors included Nadir Khan as Vishvadev (i.e. Valentine), Arghya Lahiri as Parminder (Proteus), Anuradha Menon as Syoni (Silvia), Avantika Akerkar as Jumaana/Servi (Julia/Sebastian), Sohrab Ardishir as The Maharaja (Duke of Milan) and Zafar Karachiwala as Thaqib (Thurio).[123]

References

Notes

  1. ^ It is placed first in both The Oxford Shakespeare: The Complete Works (1986 and 2005), The Norton Shakespeare (1997 and 2008) and The Complete Pelican Shakespeare (2002); see also Leech (1969: xxx), Wells and Taylor (1997: 109), Carroll (2004: 130) and Warren (2008: 26–27)
  2. ^ Most modern editors of the play tend to rename this character 'Lance', on the basis that 'Lance' represents a modernisation of 'Launce'. See, for example, the editions by Kurt Schlueter (1990), William C. Carroll (2004) and Roger Warren (2008).

Citations

All references to The Two Gentlemen of Verona, unless otherwise specified, are taken from the Oxford Shakespeare (Warren), based on the First Folio text of 1623. Under its referencing system, 2.3.14 means act 2, scene 3, line 14.

  1. ^ a b c d e Wells et al. (2005), p. 1.
  2. ^ Carroll (2004), p. 110.
  3. ^ Greenblatt et al. (2008), p. 103.
  4. ^ Carroll (2004), pp. 142–145.
  5. ^ a b Schlueter (1990), p. 1.
  6. ^ Carroll (2004), p. 128.
  7. ^ Warren (2008), pp. 15–16.
  8. ^ Schlueter (1990), pp. 10–12.
  9. ^ Warren (2008), p. 19.
  10. ^ Bullough (1957), p. 204.
  11. ^ Warren (2008), p. 20.
  12. ^ Quiller-Couch & Wilson (1955), pp. ix–x.
  13. ^ Sanders (1968), p. 11.
  14. ^ See Leech (1969), p. xxx, Wells & Taylor (1997), p. 109, Carroll (2004), p. 130 and Warren (2008), pp. 26–27
  15. ^ Jackson (2005), p. xliv.
  16. ^ Leech (1969), p. xxxv.
  17. ^ Evans (2007), p. 78.
  18. ^ Wells & Taylor (1997), p. 109.
  19. ^ Schlueter (1990), p. 2.
  20. ^ Carroll (2004), pp. 127–130.
  21. ^ Warren (2008), pp. 23–25.
  22. ^ Warren (2008), pp. 21.
  23. ^ Sanders (1968), p. 7.
  24. ^ Wells (1963), pp. 161–173.
  25. ^ Greenblatt et al. (2008), p. 79.
  26. ^ Warren (2008), pp. 24–27.
  27. ^ Program notes for 1970 RSC production of The Two Gentlemen of Verona.
  28. ^ a b Masten (1997), pp. 41, 46–47.
  29. ^ Warren (2008), pp. 55–56.
  30. ^ Warren (2008), p. 57.
  31. ^ Warren (2008), pp. 8–9.
  32. ^ Warren (2008), pp. 56–57.
  33. ^ Warren (2008), p. 56.
  34. ^ Derrick, Patty S. (December 1991). "Two Gents: A Crucial Moment". Shakespeare on Film Newsletter. 16 (1): 4. Also available in Schlueter (1996), pp. 259–262
  35. ^ a b Schlueter (1990), p. 3.
  36. ^ a b c Carroll (2004), pp. 15–16.
  37. ^ Carroll (2004), pp. 16.
  38. ^ a b Warren (2008), p. 10.
  39. ^ a b Kiefer, Frederick (1996). "Love Letters in The Two Gentlemen of Verona". In Schlueter, June (ed.). The Two Gentlemen of Verona: Critical Essays. London: Routledge. pp. 133–152. ISBN 978-0815310204.
  40. ^ Chambers, E.K., ed. (1905). The Two Gentlemen of Verona. Red Letter Shakespeare. Glasgow: Blackie and Son. pp. 5–6.
  41. ^ Carroll (2004), p. 115.
  42. ^ Bond (1906), p. xxxiv.
  43. ^ Quiller-Couch & Wilson (1955), p. xiv.
  44. ^ Charlton, H.B. (1966) [1st pub. 1938]. Shakesperean Comedy. London: Routledge. p. 43. ISBN 978-0416692600.
  45. ^ Sanders (1968), p. 15.
  46. ^ Sanders (1968), p. 8.
  47. ^ Schlueter (1990), p. 17.
  48. ^ Warren (2008), p. 53.
  49. ^ Warren (2008), p. 14.
  50. ^ Avery, Alex (2004). . Royal Shakespeare Company. Archived from the original on 12 September 2007. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  51. ^ Warren (2008), p. 44.
  52. ^ Sanders (1968), p. 10.
  53. ^ Carroll (2004), pp. 57–65.
  54. ^ Warren (2008), p. 71n1.1.0.1.
  55. ^ a b Warren (2008), p. 1.
  56. ^ Schlueter (1990), p. 22.
  57. ^ a b Carroll (2004), p. 93.
  58. ^ a b c Carroll (2004), p. 85.
  59. ^ Halliday (1964), p. 506.
  60. ^ Trewin (1964), pp. 30–31.
  61. ^ Schlueter (1990), pp. 37–38.
  62. ^ Schlueter (1990), p. 37.
  63. ^ Warren (2008), pp. 3–5.
  64. ^ Schlueter (1990), pp. 43–44.
  65. ^ Warren (2008), p. 5.
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  67. ^ Carroll (2004), pp. 43–47.
  68. ^ Warren (2008), pp. 6–7.
  69. ^ Schlueter (1990), pp. 47–48.
  70. ^ Warren (2008), pp. 7–8.
  71. ^ Warren (2008), p. 9.
  72. ^ Carroll (2004), pp. 90–98.
  73. ^ Warren (2008), pp. 9–10.
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  87. ^ Carroll (2004), pp. 86–88.
  88. ^ Warren (2008), pp. 1–2.
  89. ^ Schlueter (1990), pp. 25–29.
  90. ^ Schlueter (1990), pp. 29–33.
  91. ^ Jackson (2005), pp. liv–lv.
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  107. ^ Ledebur, Ruth (1974). Deutsche Shakespeare-Rezeption seit 1945. Leipzig: Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft. p. 332. ISBN 978-3799702386.
  108. ^ Blum, Heiko R.; Schmitt, Sigrid (1996). Klaus Maria Brandauer: Schauspieler und Regisseur. Munich: Heyen. p. 229. ISBN 978-3453094062.
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  110. ^ Willis, Susan (1991). The BBC Shakespeare Plays: Making the Televised Canon. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. p. 212. ISBN 978-0807843178.
  111. ^ Warren (2008), pp. 11–13.
  112. ^ Wilders, John, ed. (1984). The Two Gentlemen of Verona. The BBC TV Shakespeare. London: BBC Books. p. 26. ISBN 978-0563202776.
  113. ^ See also Keyishian, Harry (December 1984). "The Shakespeare Plays on TV: Two Gentlemen of Verona". Shakespeare on Film Newsletter. 9 (1): 6–7. and Derrick, Patty S. (December 1991). "Two Gents: A Crucial Moment". Shakespeare on Film Newsletter. 16 (1): 1–4. Both essays are reprinted in Schlueter (1996), pp. 257–262
  114. ^ Fabiszak, Jacek (2005). Polish Televised Shakespeares: A Study of Shakespeare Productions Within the Television Theatre Format. Poznan: Motivex. pp. 212–225. ISBN 978-8387314460.
  115. ^ Shaughnessy, Robert (2011). The Routledge Guide to William Shakespeare. Oxford: Routledge. p. 94. ISBN 978-0415275408.
  116. ^ "Shakespeare Night: Love's Labour's Lost and The Two Gentlemen of Verona". British Universities Film & Video Council. Retrieved 30 November 2014.
  117. ^ "The Two Gentlemen of Verona (1924)". British Universities Film & Video Council. Retrieved 30 November 2014.
  118. ^ "Echoes from the Greenleaf Theatre". British Universities Film & Video Council. Retrieved 30 November 2014.
  119. ^ "The Two Gentlemen of Verona (1934)". British Universities Film & Video Council. Retrieved 30 November 2014.
  120. ^ "The Two Gentlemen of Verona (1958)". British Universities Film & Video Council. Retrieved 30 November 2014.
  121. ^ "The Two Gentlemen of Verona (1968)". British Universities Film & Video Council. Retrieved 30 November 2014.
  122. ^ . BBC Radio 3. Archived from the original on 7 October 2015. Retrieved 25 October 2014.
  123. ^ "The Two Gentlemen of Valasna (2007)". British Universities Film & Video Council. Retrieved 30 November 2014.

Editions of The Two Gentlemen of Verona

  • Bate, Jonathan; Rasmussen, Eric, eds. (2011). The Two Gentlemen of Verona. The RSC Shakespeare. Basingstoke: Macmillan. ISBN 978-0230300910.
  • Bond, R. Warwick, ed. (1906). The Two Gentlemen of Verona. The Arden Shakespeare, First Series. London: Methuen.
  • Carroll, William C., ed. (2004). The Two Gentlemen of Verona. The Arden Shakespeare, Third Series. London: Thompson Learning. ISBN 978-1903436950.
  • Evans, Bertrand, ed. (2007) [1964]. The Two Gentlemen of Verona. Signet Classic Shakespeare (Revised ed.). New York: New American Library. ISBN 978-0451530639.
  • Evans, G. Blakemore, ed. (1997) [1974]. The Riverside Shakespeare (Second ed.). Boston: Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 978-0395754900.
  • Greenblatt, Stephen; Cohen, Walter; Howard, Jean E.; Maus, Katharine Eisaman, eds. (2008) [1997]. The Norton Shakespeare: Based on the Oxford Shakespeare (Second ed.). London: Norton. ISBN 978-0393111354.
  • Jackson, Berners A.W., ed. (1980) [1964]. The Two Gentlemen of Verona. The Pelican Shakespeare (Revised ed.). London: Penguin. ISBN 978-0140714319.
  • Jackson, Russell, ed. (2005). The Two Gentlemen of Verona. The Penguin Shakespeare. London: Penguin. ISBN 978-0141016627.
  • Leech, Clifford, ed. (1969). The Two Gentlemen of Verona. The Arden Shakespeare, Second Series. London: Methuen. ISBN 978-0174435815.
  • Quiller-Couch, Arthur; Wilson, John Dover, eds. (1955) [1921]. The Two Gentlemen of Verona. The New Shakespeare (2nd ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1108006101.
  • Rose, Mary Beth, ed. (2000). The Two Gentlemen of Verona. The New Pelican Shakespeare. London: Penguin. ISBN 978-0140714616.
  • Sanders, Norman, ed. (1968). The Two Gentlemen of Verona. The New Penguin Shakespeare. London: Penguin. ISBN 978-0140707175.
  • Schlueter, Kurt, ed. (1990). The Two Gentlemen of Verona. The New Cambridge Shakespeare. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521181693.
  • Warren, Roger, ed. (2008). The Two Gentlemen of Verona. The Oxford Shakespeare. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0192831422.
  • Wells, Stanley; Taylor, Gary; Jowett, John; Montgomery, William, eds. (2005) [1986]. The Oxford Shakespeare: The Complete Works (2nd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199267187.
  • Werstine, Paul; Mowat, Barbara A., eds. (1999). The Two Gentlemen of Verona. Folger Shakespeare Library. Washington: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0671722951.

Secondary sources

  • Bullough, Geoffrey (1957). Narrative and Dramatic Sources of Shakespeare. Vol. One: Early Comedies, Poems, Romeo and Juliet. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0231088916.
  • Brooks, Harold F. (1963). "Two clowns in a comedy (to say nothing of the dog): Speed, Launce (and Crab) in The Two Gentlemen of Verona". Essays and Studies. XVI: 91–100.
  • Carlisle, Carol J.; Derrick, Patty S. (1997). "The Two Gentlemen of Verona on Stage: Protean Problems and Protean Solutions". In Collins, Michael J. (ed.). Shakespeare's Sweet Thunder: Essays on the Early Comedies. Newark, DE: University of Delaware Press. pp. 126–154. ISBN 978-0874135824.
  • Ewbank, Inga-Stina (1972). ""Were man but constant, he were perfect": Constancy and Consistency in The Two Gentlemen of Verona". Stratford-Upon-Avon Studies. 14: 31–57.
  • Godshalk, William Leigh (April 1969). "The Structural Unity of The Two Gentlemen of Verona". Studies in Philology. 66 (2): 168–181. ISSN 0039-3738. JSTOR 4173636. (subscription required)
  • Green, Stanley (1984) [1960]. The World of Musical Comedy: The story of the American musical stage as told through the careers of its foremost composers and lyricists (Revised Fourth ed.). San Diego, CA: Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0306802072.
  • Guy-Bray, Stephen (October 2007). "Shakespeare and the Invention of the Heterosexual". Early Modern Literary Studies. 13 (2): 1–28. from the original on 25 May 2013. Retrieved 8 December 2014.
  • Halliday, F.E. (1964) [1950]. A Shakespeare Companion, 1564–1964 (Second ed.). London: Penguin. ISBN 978-1842321270.
  • Holmberg, Arthur (Spring 1983). "The Two Gentlemen of Verona: Shakesperean Comedy as a Rite of Passage". Queen's Quarterly. 90 (1): 33–44.
  • Masten, Jeffrey (1997). Textual Intercourse: Collaboration, Authorship and Sexualities in Renaissance Drama. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521589208.
  • Masten, Jeffrey (2003). "The Two Gentlemen of Verona". In Dutton, Richard; Howard, Jean E. (eds.). A Companion to Shakespeare's Works, Volume III: The Comedies. Oxford: Blackwell. pp. 266–289. ISBN 978-0631226345.
  • Morozov, Mikhail M. (1947). Shakespeare on the Soviet Stage. Translated by David Magarshack. London: Open Library.
  • Morse, Ruth (Summer 1983). "Two Gentlemen and the Cult of Friendship". Neuphilologische Mitteilungen. 84 (2): 214–224.
  • Muir, Kenneth (2005) [1st pub. 1977]. The Sources of Shakespeare's Plays. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0415489133.
  • Onions, C.T. (1986) [1953]. A Shakespeare Glossary. Enlarged and Revised by Robert D. Eagleson. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0198125211.
  • Rackin, Phyllis (2005). Shakespeare and Women. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0198186946.
  • Schlueter, June, ed. (1996). The Two Gentlemen of Verona: Critical Essays. New York: Garland. ISBN 978-0815310204.
  • Speaight, Robert (1973). Shakespeare on the Stage: An Illustrated History of Shakespearian Performance. London: Collins. ISBN 978-0316805001.
  • Tillyard, E.M.W. (1992) [1st pub. 1965]. Shakespeare's Early Comedies. London: The Athlone Press. ISBN 978-0485300154.
  • Trewin, J.C. (1964). Shakespeare on the English Stage, 1900–1964: A Survey of Productions. London: Barrie and Rockliff. ISBN 978-0214157479.
  • Wells, Stanley (1963). "The Failure of The Two Gentlemen of Verona". Shakespeare Jahrbüch. 99: 161–173.
  • Wells, Stanley; Taylor, Gary, eds. (1997) [1987]. William Shakespeare: A Textual Companion (Revised ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0393316674.
  • Williams, Gordon (2006) [1997]. Shakespeare's Sexual Language: A Glossary (2nd ed.). London: Continuum. ISBN 978-0826491343.

External links

  • The Two Gentlemen of Verona at Standard Ebooks
  • The Two Gentlemen of Verona at Project Gutenberg
  •   The Two Gentlemen of Verona public domain audiobook at LibriVox
  • The Two Gentlemen of Verona at Shakespeare Illustrated.
  • The Two Gentlemen of Verona at IMDb (BBC Television Shakespeare Version).

gentlemen, verona, this, article, about, play, william, shakespeare, 1971, musical, gentlemen, verona, musical, 2000, album, gentlemen, verona, comedy, william, shakespeare, believed, have, been, written, between, 1589, 1593, considered, some, shakespeare, fir. This article is about the play by William Shakespeare For the 1971 musical see Two Gentlemen of Verona musical For the 2000 album see 2 Gentlemen in Verona The Two Gentlemen of Verona is a comedy by William Shakespeare believed to have been written between 1589 and 1593 It is considered by some to be Shakespeare s first play a and is often seen as showing his first tentative steps in laying out some of the themes and motifs with which he would later deal in more detail for example it is the first of his plays in which a heroine dresses as a boy The play deals with the themes of friendship and infidelity the conflict between friendship and love and the foolish behaviour of people in love The highlight of the play is considered by some to be Launce the clownish servant of Proteus and his dog Crab to whom the most scene stealing non speaking role in the canon has been attributed 1 Two Gentlemen of Verona by Angelica Kauffman 1789 Two Gentlemen is often regarded as one of Shakespeare s weakest plays 2 It has the smallest named cast of any play by Shakespeare 3 Contents 1 Characters 2 Summary 3 Sources 4 Date and text 4 1 Date 4 2 Text 5 Criticism and analysis 5 1 Critical history 5 2 Language 5 3 Themes 5 3 1 Love and friendship 5 3 2 Foolishness of lovers 5 3 3 Inconstancy 6 Performance 7 Adaptations 7 1 Theatrical 7 2 Opera Musical 7 3 Film 7 4 Television 7 5 Radio 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Citations 8 3 Editions of The Two Gentlemen of Verona 8 4 Secondary sources 9 External linksCharacters EditValentine young man living in Verona Proteus his closest friend Silvia falls in love with Valentine in Milan Julia in love with Proteus in Verona Duke of Milan Silvia s father Lucetta Julia s waiting woman Antonio Proteus father Thurio foolish rival to Valentine for Silvia Eglamour aids in Silvia s escape Speed a clownish servant to Valentine Launce b Proteus s servant Panthino Antonio s servant Host of the inn where Julia lodges in Milan Outlaws Crab Launce s dog Servants MusiciansSummary Edit Silvia by Charles Edward Perugini 1888 As the play begins Valentine is preparing to leave Verona for Milan so as to broaden his horizons He begs his best friend Proteus to come with him but Proteus is in love with Julia and refuses to leave Disappointed Valentine bids Proteus farewell and goes on alone Meanwhile Julia is discussing Proteus with her maid Lucetta who tells Julia that she thinks Proteus is fond of her Julia however acts coyly embarrassed to admit that she likes him Lucetta then produces a letter She will not say who gave it to her but teases Julia that it was Valentine s servant Speed who brought it from Proteus Julia still unwilling to reveal her love in front of Lucetta angrily tears up the letter She sends Lucetta away but then realising her own rashness she picks up the fragments of the letter and kisses them trying to piece them back together Meanwhile Proteus father has decided that Proteus should travel to Milan and join Valentine He orders that Proteus must leave the next day prompting a tearful farewell with Julia to whom Proteus swears eternal love The two exchange rings and vows and Proteus promises to return as soon as he can In Milan Proteus finds Valentine in love with the Duke s daughter Silvia Despite being in love with Julia Proteus falls instantly in love with Silvia and vows to win her Unaware of Proteus feelings Valentine tells him the Duke wants Silvia to marry the foppish but wealthy Thurio against her wishes Because the Duke suspects that his daughter and Valentine are in love he locks her nightly in a tower to which he keeps the only key However Valentine tells Proteus that he plans to free her by means of a corded ladder and together they will elope Proteus immediately informs the Duke who subsequently captures and banishes Valentine While wandering outside Milan Valentine runs afoul of a band of outlaws who claim they are also exiled gentlemen Valentine lies saying he was banished for killing a man in a fair fight and the outlaws elect him their leader Valentine Rescuing Silvia from Proteus by William Holman Hunt 1851 Meanwhile in Verona Julia decides to join her lover in Milan She convinces Lucetta to dress her in boy s clothes and help her fix her hair so she will not be harmed on the journey Once in Milan Julia quickly discovers Proteus love for Silvia watching him attempt to serenade her She contrives to become his page boy Sebastian until she can decide upon a course of action Proteus sends Sebastian to Silvia with a gift of the ring that Julia gave to him before he left Verona but Julia learns that Silvia scorns Proteus affections and is disgusted he would forget his love back home i e Julia herself Silvia deeply mourns the loss of Valentine who Proteus has told her is rumoured dead Not persuaded of Valentine s death Silvia determines to flee the city with the help of Sir Eglamour They escape into the forest but when they are confronted by the outlaws Eglamour flees and Silvia is taken captive The outlaws head to their leader Valentine but on the way they encounter Proteus and Julia still disguised as Sebastian Proteus rescues Silvia and then pursues her deeper into the forest Secretly observed by Valentine Proteus attempts to persuade Silvia that he loves her but she rejects his advances Proteus insinuates that he will rape her I ll force thee yield to my desire but at this point Valentine intervenes and denounces Proteus Horrified at what has happened Proteus vows that the hate Valentine feels for him is nothing compared to the hate he feels for himself Convinced that Proteus repentance is genuine Valentine forgives him and seems to offer Silvia to him At this point overwhelmed Julia faints revealing her true identity Upon seeing her Proteus suddenly remembers his love for her and vows fidelity to her once again The Duke and Thurio are brought as prisoners by the outlaws Seeing Silvia Thurio claims her as his but Valentine warns Thurio that if he makes one move toward her he will kill him Terrified Thurio renounces Silvia The Duke disgusted with Thurio s cowardice and impressed by Valentine s actions approves his and Silvia s love and consents to their marriage The two couples are happily united and the Duke pardons the outlaws telling them they may return to Milan Sources Edit First page of The Boke Named the Governour by Thomas Elyot 1531 In writing The Two Gentlemen of Verona Shakespeare drew on the Spanish prose romance Los Siete Libros de la Diana The Seven Books of the Diana by the Portuguese writer Jorge de Montemayor In the second book of Diana Don Felix who is in love with Felismena sends her a letter explaining his feelings Like Julia Felismena pretends to reject the letter and be annoyed with her maid for delivering it Like Proteus Felix is sent away by his father and is followed by Felismena who disguised as a boy becomes his page only to subsequently learn that Felix has fallen in love with Celia Felismena is then employed by Felix to act as his messenger in all communications with Celia who scorns his love Instead Celia falls in love with the page i e Felismena in disguise Eventually after a combat in a wood Felix and Felismena are reunited Upon Felismena revealing herself however Celia having no counterpart to Valentine dies of grief 4 Diana was published in Spanish in 1559 and translated into French by Nicholas Collin in 1578 5 An English translation was made by Bartholomew Young and published in 1598 though Young claims in his preface to have finished the translation sixteen years earlier c 1582 Shakespeare could have read a manuscript of Young s English translation or encountered the story in French or learned of it from an anonymous English play The History of Felix and Philomena which may have been based on Diana and which was performed for the court at Greenwich Palace by the Queen s Men on 3 January 1585 6 The History of Felix and Philiomena is now lost 5 A 1587 printing of John Lyly s Euphues The Anatomy of Wit Another major influence on Shakespeare was the story of the intimate friendship of Titus and Gisippus as told in Thomas Elyot s The Boke Named the Governour in 1531 the same story is told in The Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio but verbal similarities between The Two Gentlemen and The Governor suggest it was Elyot s work Shakespeare used as his primary source not Boccaccio s 7 In this story Titus and Gisippus are inseparable until Gisippus falls in love with Sophronia He introduces her to Titus but Titus is overcome with jealousy and vows to seduce her Upon hearing of Titus plan Gisippus arranges for them to change places on the wedding night thus placing their friendship above his love 8 Also important to Shakespeare in the composition of the play was John Lyly s Euphues The Anatomy of Wit published in 1578 Like The Governor Euphues presents two close friends who are inseparable until a woman comes between them and like both The Governor and Two Gentlemen the story concludes with one friend sacrificing the woman so as to save the friendship 9 However as Geoffrey Bullough argues Shakespeare s debt to Lyly was probably one of technique more than matter 10 Lyly s Midas may also have influenced the scene where Launce and Speed run through the milkmaid s virtues and defects as it contains a very similar scene between Lucio and Petulus 11 Other minor sources include Arthur Brooke s narrative poem The Tragical History of Romeus and Juliet Obviously Shakespeare s source for Romeo and Juliet it features a character called Friar Laurence as does Two Gentlemen and a scene where a young man attempts to outwit his lover s father by means of a corded ladder as Valentine does in Two Gentlemen 12 Philip Sidney s The Countess of Pembroke s Arcadia may also have influenced Shakespeare insofar as it contains a character who follows her betrothed dressed as his page and later on one of the main characters becomes captain of a group of Helots 13 Date and text EditDate Edit First page of The Two Gentlemen of Verona from the First Folio 1623 The exact date of composition of The Two Gentlemen of Verona is unknown but it is generally believed to have been one of Shakespeare s earliest works 14 The first evidence of its existence is in a list of Shakespeare s plays in Francis Meres s Palladis Tamia published in 1598 15 but it is thought to have been written in the early 1590s Clifford Leech for example argues for 1592 1593 16 G Blakemore Evans places the date at 1590 1593 17 Gary Taylor suggests 1590 1591 18 Kurt Schlueter posits the late 1580s 19 William C Carroll suggests 1590 1592 20 Roger Warren tentatively suggests 1587 but acknowledges 1590 1591 as more likely 21 It has been argued that Two Gentlemen may have been Shakespeare s first work for the stage This theory was first suggested by Edmond Malone in 1821 in the Third Variorum edition of Shakespeare s plays edited by James Boswell based on Malone s notes Malone dated the play 1591 a modification of his earlier 1595 date from the third edition of The Plays of William Shakespeare At this time the dominant theory was that the Henry VI trilogy had been Shakespeare s first work 22 More recently the play was placed first in The Oxford Shakespeare The Complete Works of 1986 and again in the 2nd edition of 2005 in The Norton Shakespeare of 1997 and again in the 2nd edition of 2008 and in The Complete Pelican Shakespeare of 2002 A large part of the theory that this may be Shakespeare s first play is the quality of the work itself Writing in 1968 Norman Sanders argued all are agreed on the play s immaturity 23 The argument is that the play betrays a lack of practical theatrical experience on Shakespeare s part and as such it must have come extremely early in his career Stanley Wells for example has written the dramatic structure is comparatively unambitious and while some of its scenes are expertly constructed those involving more than at the most four characters betray an uncertainty of technique suggestive of inexperience 1 This uncertainty can be seen in how Shakespeare handles the distribution of dialogue in such scenes Whenever there are more than three characters on stage at least one of those characters tends to fall silent For example Speed is silent for almost all of Act 2 Scene 4 as are Thurio Silvia and Julia for most of the last half of the final scene 24 It has also been suggested that the handling of the final scene in general in which the faithful lover seemingly offers his beloved as a token of his forgiveness to the man who has just attempted to rape her is a sign of Shakespeare s lack of maturity as a dramatist 25 In his 2008 edition of the play for the Oxford Shakespeare Roger Warren argues that the play is the oldest surviving piece of Shakespearean literature suggesting a date of composition as somewhere between 1587 and 1591 He hypothesizes that the play was perhaps written before Shakespeare came to London with an idea towards using the famous comic actor Richard Tarlton in the role of Launce this theory stems from the fact that Tarlton had performed several extremely popular and well known scenes with dogs However Tarlton died in September 1588 and Warren notes several passages in Two Gentlemen which seem to borrow from John Lyly s Midas which wasn t written until at least late 1589 As such Warren acknowledges that 1590 1591 is most likely the correct date of composition 26 Text Edit The play was not printed until 1623 when it appeared in the First Folio of Shakespeare s plays 1 Criticism and analysis Edit Silvia Rescued by Valentine by Francis Wheatley 1792 Critical history Edit Perhaps the most critically discussed issue in the play is the sequence bizarre by modern Western standards in Act 5 Scene 4 in which Valentine seems to give Silvia to Proteus as a sign of his friendship For many years the general critical consensus on this issue was that the incident revealed an inherent misogyny in the text For example Hilary Spurling wrote in 1970 Valentine is so overcome by Proteus apology that he promptly offers to hand over his beloved to the man who not three minutes before had meant to rape her 27 Modern scholarship however is much more divided about Valentine s actions at the end of the play with some critics arguing that he does not offer to give Silvia to Proteus at all The ambiguity lies in the line All that was mine in Silvia I give thee 5 4 83 Some critics such as Stanley Wells for example 1 interpret this to mean that Valentine is indeed handing Silvia over to her would be rapist but another school of thought suggests that Valentine simply means I will love you Proteus with as much love as I love Silvia thus reconciling the dichotomy of friendship and love as depicted elsewhere in the play This is certainly how Jeffrey Masten for example sees it arguing that the play as a whole reveals not the opposition of male friendship and Petrarchan love but rather their interdependence As such the final scene stages the play s ultimate collaboration of male friendship and its incorporation of the plot we would label heterosexual 28 This is also how Roger Warren interprets the final scene Warren cites a number of productions of the play as evidence for this argument including Robin Phillips Royal Shakespeare Company RSC production in 1970 where Valentine kisses Silvia makes his offer and then kisses Proteus 29 Another staging cited by Warren is Edward Hall s 1998 Swan Theatre production In Hall s version of the scene after Valentine says the controversial line Silvia approaches him and takes him by the hand They remain holding hands for the rest of the play clearly suggesting that Valentine has not given her away 30 Warren also mentions Leon Rubin s 1984 Stratford Shakespeare Festival production where the controversial line was altered to All my love to Silvia I also give to thee 31 David Thacker s 1991 Swan Theatre production 32 and the 1983 BBC Television Shakespeare adaptation as supporting the theory that Valentine is not giving Silvia away but is simply promising to love Proteus as much as he loves Silvia 33 Patty S Derrick also interprets the BBC production in this manner arguing that Proteus clearly perceives the offer as a noble gesture of friendship not an actual offer because he does not even look towards Silvia but rather falls into an embrace with Valentine although Derrick does raise the question that if Valentine is not offering Silvia to Proteus why does Julia swoon 34 There are other theories regarding this final scene however For example in his 1990 edition of the play for the New Cambridge Shakespeare Kurt Schlueter suggests that Valentine is indeed handing Silvia over to Proteus but the audience is not supposed to take it literally the incident is farcical and should be interpreted as such Schlueter argues that the play provides possible evidence it was written to be performed and viewed primarily by a young audience and as such to be staged at university theatres as opposed to public playhouses Such an audience would be more predisposed to accepting the farcical nature of the scene and more likely to find humorous the absurdity of Valentine s gift As such in Schlueter s theory the scene does represent what it appears to represent Valentine does give Silvia to her would be rapist but it is done purely for comic effect 35 Launce s substitute for Proteus dog by Augustus Egg 1849 Another theory is provided by William C Carroll in his 2004 edition for the Arden Shakespeare Third Series Carroll argues like Schlueter that Valentine is indeed giving Silvia to Proteus but unlike Schlueter Carroll detects no sense of farce Instead he sees the action as a perfectly logical one in terms of the notions of friendship which were prevalent at the time the idealisation of male friendship as superior to male female love which was considered not romantic or compassionate but merely lustful hence inferior performs a project of cultural nostalgia a stepping back from potentially more threatening social arrangements to a world of order a world based on a gift economy of personal relations among male social equals rather than one based on a newer less stable economy of emotional and economic risk The offer of the woman from one male friend to another would therefore be the highest expression of friendship from one point of view a low point of psycho sexual regression from another 36 As in Schlueter Carroll here interprets Valentine s actions as a gift to Proteus but unlike Schlueter and more in line with traditional criticism of the play Carroll also argues that such a gift as unacceptable as it is to modern eyes is perfectly understandable when one considers the cultural and social milieu of the play itself 37 Language Edit Language is of primary importance in the play insofar as Valentine and Proteus speak in blank verse but Launce and Speed speak for the most part in prose 38 More specifically the actual content of many of the speeches serve to illustrate the pompousness of Valentine and Proteus exalted outlook and the more realistic and practical outlook of the servants This is most apparent in Act 3 Scene 1 Valentine has just given a lengthy speech lamenting his banishment and musing on how he cannot possibly survive without Silvia Except I be by Silvia in the night There is no music in the nightingale Unless I look on Silvia in the day There is no day for me to look upon ll 178 181 However when Launce enters only a few lines later he announces that he too is in love and proceeds to outline along with Speed all of his betrothed s positives She brews good ale She can knit She can wash and scour and negatives She hath a sweet mouth She doth talk in her sleep She is slow in words After weighing his options Launce decides that the woman s most important quality is that she hath more hair than wit and more faults than hairs and more wealth than faults ll 343 344 He announces that her wealth makes the faults gracious l 356 and chooses for that reason to wed her This purely materialistic reasoning as revealed in the form of language is in stark contrast to the more spiritual and idealised love espoused by Valentine earlier in the scene 39 Themes Edit H C Selous illustration of Valentine and Proteus farewell in Act 1 Scene 1 from The Plays of William Shakespeare The Comedies edited by Charles Cowden Clarke and Mary Cowden Clarke 1830 One of the dominant theories as regards the value of Two Gentlemen is that thematically it represents a trial run of sorts in which Shakespeare deals briefly with themes which he would examine in more detail in later works E K Chambers for example believed that the play represents something of a gestation of Shakespeare s great thematic concerns Writing in 1905 Chambers stated that Two Gentlemen was Shakespeare s first essay at originality at fashioning for himself the outlines of that romantic or tragicomic formula in which so many of his most characteristic dramas were afterwards to be cast Something which is neither quite tragedy nor quite comedy something which touches the heights and depths of sentiment and reveals the dark places of the human heart without lingering long enough there to crystallise the painful impression a love story broken for a moment into passionate chords by absence and inconstancy and intrigue and then reunited to the music of wedding bells 40 As such the play s primary interest for critics has tended to lie in relation to what it reveals about Shakespeare s conception of certain themes before he became the accomplished playwright of later years Writing in 1879 A C Swinburne for example states here is the first dawn of that higher and more tender humour that was never given in such perfection to any man as ultimately to Shakespeare 41 Similarly in 1906 Warwick R Bond writes Shakespeare first opens the vein he worked so richly afterwards the vein of crossed love of flight and exile under the escort of the generous sentiments of disguised heroines and sufferings endured and virtues exhibited under their disguise and of the Providence kinder than life that annuls the errors and forgives the sin 42 More recently Stanley Wells has referred to the play as a dramatic laboratory in which Shakespeare first experimented with the conventions of romantic comedy which he would later treat with a more subtle complexity but it has its own charm 1 Early 20th century Henry James Haley illustration of Act 2 Scene 1 Silvia refusing Valentine s letter Other critics have been less kind however arguing that if the later plays show a skilled and confident writer exploring serious issues of the human heart Two Gentlemen represents the initial primarily unsuccessful attempt to do likewise In 1921 for example J Dover Wilson and Arthur Quiller Couch in their edition of the play for the Cambridge Shakespeare famously stated that after hearing Valentine offer Silvia to Proteus one s impulse upon this declaration is to remark that there are by this time no gentlemen in Verona 43 H B Charlton writing in 1938 argues that clearly Shakespeare s first attempt to make romantic comedy had only succeeded so far as it had unexpectedly and inadvertently made romance comic 44 Another such argument is provided by Norman Sanders in 1968 because the play reveals a relatively unsure dramatist and many effects managed with a tiro s lack of expertise it offers us an opportunity to see more clearly than anywhere else in the canon what were to become characteristic techniques It stands as an anatomie or show through version as it were of Shakespeare s comic art 45 Kurt Schlueter on the other hand argues that critics have been too harsh on the play precisely because the later plays are so much superior He suggests that when looking at Shakespeare s earlier works scholars put too much emphasis on how they fail to measure up to the later works rather than looking at them for their own intrinsic merits we should not continue the practice of holding his later achievements against him when dealing with his early beginnings 35 Love and friendship Edit Norman Sanders calls the play almost a complete anthology of the practices of the doctrine of romantic love which inspired the poetic and prose Romances of the period 46 At the very centre of this is the contest between love and friendship an essential part of the comicality of The Two Gentlemen of Verona is created by the necessary conflict between highly stylised concepts of love and friendship 47 This is manifested in the question of whether the relationship between two male friends is more important than that between lovers encapsulated by Proteus rhetorical question at 5 4 54 In love Who respects friend This question exposes the raw nerve at the heart of the central relationships the dark reality lurking beneath the wit and lyricism with which the play has in general presented lovers behaviour 48 In the program notes for John Barton s 1981 RSC production at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre Anne Barton his wife wrote that the central theme of the play was how to bring love and friendship into a constructive and mutually enhancing relationship 49 As William C Carroll points out this is a common theme in Renaissance literature which often celebrates friendship as the more important relationship because it is pure and unconcerned with sexual attraction and contends that love and friendship cannot co exist 36 As actor Alex Avery argues The love between two men is a greater love for some reason There seems to be a sense that the function of a male female relationship is purely for the family and to procreate to have a family But a love between two men is something that you choose You have arranged marriages but a friendship between two men is created by the desires and wills of those two men whereas a relationship between a man and a girl is actually constructed completely peripheral to whatever the feelings of the said boy and girl are 50 Carroll sees this societal belief as vital in interpreting the final scene of the play arguing that Valentine does give Silvia to Proteus and in so doing he is merely acting in accordance with the practices of the day 36 However if one accepts that Valentine does not give Silvia to Proteus as critics such as Jeffrey Masten argue but instead offers to love Proteus as much as he loves Silvia then the conclusion of the play can be read as a final triumphant reconciliation between friendship and love Valentine intends to love his friend as much as he does his betrothed Love and friendship are shown to be co existent not exclusive 28 Scene from The Two Gentlemen of Verona Valentine woos Silvia the Duke sits nearby pretending to be asleep by Alfred Elmore 1857 Foolishness of lovers Edit Another major theme is the foolishness of lovers what Roger Warren refers to as mockery of the absurdity of conventional lovers behaviour 51 Valentine for example is introduced into the play mocking the excesses of love To be in love where scorn is bought with groans Coy looks with heart sore sighs one fading moment s mirth With twenty watchful weary tedious nights 1 1 29 31 Later however he becomes as much a prisoner of love as Proteus exclaiming For in revenge of my contempt for love Love hath chased sleep from my enthrall d eyes And made them watchers of my own heart s sorrow 2 4 131 133 The majority of the cynicism and mockery as regards conventional lovers however comes from Launce and Speed who serve as foils for the two protagonists and supply a mundane view of the idealistic flights of fancy indulged in by Proteus and Valentine 52 Several times in the play after either Valentine or Proteus has made an eloquent speech about love Shakespeare introduces either Launce or Speed or both whose more mundane concerns serve to undercut what has just been said thus exposing Proteus and Valentine to mockery 39 For example in Act 2 Scene 1 as Valentine and Silvia engage in a game of flirtation hinting at their love for one another Speed provides constant asides which serve to directly mock the couple VALENTINE Peace here she comes Enter SilviaSPEED aside O excellent motion O exceeding puppet Now he will interpret her VALENTINE Madame and mistress a thousand good morrows SPEED aside O give ye good e en Here s a million of manners SILVIA Sir Valentine and servant to you two thousand SPEED aside He should give her interest and she gives it him 2 1 85 94 Inconstancy Edit A third major theme is inconstancy particularly as manifested in Proteus 53 whose very name hints at his changeable mind in Ovid s Metamorphoses Proteus is a sea god forever changing its shape 54 At the start of the play Proteus has only eyes for Julia However upon meeting Silvia he immediately falls in love with her although he has no idea why He then finds himself drawn to the page Sebastian Julia in disguise whilst still trying to woo Silvia and at the end of the play he announces that Silvia is no better than Julia and vows he now loves Julia again Indeed Proteus himself seems to be aware of this mutability pointing out towards the end of the play O heaven were man But constant he were perfect That one error Fills him with faults makes him run through all th sins Inconstancy falls off ere it begins 5 4 109 112 Performance Edit Who is Sylvia What is she that all the swains commend her by Edwin Austin Abbey 1899 There is no record of a performance during Shakespeare s lifetime although due to its inclusion in Francis Meres Palladis Tamia we know the play had definitely been performed by 1598 55 The earliest known performance was at Drury Lane in 1762 However this production was of a version of the play rewritten by Benjamin Victor 55 The earliest known performance of the straight Shakespearean text was at Covent Garden in 1784 advertised as Shaxespeare s with alterations Although the play was supposed to run for several weeks it closed after the first night 56 From the middle of the eighteenth century even if staging Shakespeare s original as opposed to Victor s rewrite it was common to cut the lines in the final scene where Valentine seems to offer Silvia to Proteus This practice prevailed until William Macready reintroduced the lines in 1841 in a production at Drury Lane 57 although they were still being removed as late as 1952 in Denis Carey s production at the Bristol Old Vic 57 Notable nineteenth century performances include Charles Kean s 1848 production at the Haymarket Theatre Samuel Phelps 1857 production at Sadler s Wells Theatre and William Poel s 1892 and 1896 productions 58 During the twentieth century the play has been produced sporadically in the English speaking world although it has proved more popular in Europe 59 Indeed there have been only a few significant English speaking productions Little is known for example about Harley Granville Barker s 1904 production at the Court Theatre 60 F R Benson s 1910 production at the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre 61 Robert Atkins 1923 production at the Apollo Theatre 62 or Ben Iden Payne s 1938 production at Stratford upon Avon 58 The earliest production about which we have significant information is Michael Langham s 1957 production at The Old Vic starring Richard Gale as Valentine Keith Michell as Proteus Barbara Jefford as Julia and Ingrid Hafner as Silvia In this production set in late nineteenth century Italy and grounded very much in high Romanticism Proteus threatens to kill himself with a pistol at the end of the play prompting Valentine s hasty offer of Silvia 63 Perhaps the most notable 20th century production was Peter Hall s 1960 production at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre Set in a late medieval milieu the play starred Denholm Elliott as Valentine Derek Godfrey as Proteus Susan Maryott as Silvia Frances Cuka as Julia and featured a much lauded performance by Patrick Wymark as Launce 64 65 Hall had only recently been appointed as Artistic Director of the RSC and somewhat unexpectedly he chose Two Gentlemen as his inaugural production billed as the opening show in a re examination of the development of Shakespearean comedy 66 Tim Mace as Launce and Abbie as Crab from a 2009 modern dress performance at the Capitol Center Theater Ten years later in 1970 Robin Phillips RSC production starred Peter Egan as Valentine Ian Richardson as Proteus Helen Mirren as Julia Estelle Kohler as Silvia and Patrick Stewart as Launce This production concentrated on the issues of friendship and treachery and set the play in a decadent world of social elitism Valentine and Proteus were presented as aristocratic students the Duke was a Don and Eglamour an old scout master On the other hand the poverty stricken outlaws were dressed in animal skins 67 68 The RSC again staged the play at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre in 1981 as a double bill with Titus Andronicus with both plays heavily edited Directed by John Barton the production starred Peter Chelsom as Valentine Peter Land as Proteus Julia Swift as Julia and Diana Hardcastle as Silvia This production saw the actors not involved in the current on stage scene sit at the front of the stage and watch the performance 69 70 Leon Rubin directed a performance at the Stratford Shakespeare Festival in 1984 where the actors were dressed in modern clothes and contemporary pop music was featured within the play for example the outlaws are portrayed as an anarchic rock group 71 A 1991 RSC production at the Swan Theatre saw director David Thacker use an on stage band for the duration of the play playing music from the 1930s such as Cole Porter and George Gershwin Thacker s production featured Hugh Bonneville then billed as Richard Bonneville as Valentine Finbar Lynch as Proteus Clare Holman as Julia and Saskia Reeves as Silvia In 1992 Thacker s production moved to the Barbican Centre and in 1993 went on regional tour 72 73 In 1996 Jack Shepherd directed a modern dress version at the Royal National Theatre as part of Shakespeare s Globe s Prologue Season The production starred Lenny James as Valentine Mark Rylance as Proteus Stephanie Roth Haberle as Julia and Anastasia Hille as Silvia 58 Another RSC production took place at the Swan in 1998 under the direction of Edward Hall and starring Tom Goodman Hill as Valentine Dominic Rowan as Proteus Lesley Vickerage as Julia and Poppy Miller as Silvia This production set the play in a grimy unnamed contemporary city where material obsession was all encompassing 38 Valentine Alex Avery Silvia Rachel Pickup and Proteus Laurence Mitchell in the 2004 Fiona Buffini production In 2004 Fiona Buffini directed a touring production for the RSC Premiering at the Swan the production starred Alex Avery as Valentine Laurence Mitchell as Proteus Vanessa Ackerman as Julia and Rachel Pickup as Silvia Buffini set the play in a swinging 1930s milieu and featuring numerous dance numbers Additionally London and New York replaced Verona and Milan initially Valentine and Proteus are shown as living in the English countryside in a rural paradise devoid of any real vitality the sons of wealthy families who have retired from the city When Valentine leaves he heads to New York to pursue the American Dream and falls in love with Silvia the famous actress daughter of a powerful media magnate Another change to the play was that the roles of the outlaws represented here as a group of paparazzi were increased considerably Scenes added to the play show them arriving in New York and going about their daily business although none of the new scenes featured any dialogue 74 Another performance worth noting occurred at the Courtyard Theatre in Stratford in 2006 A non professional acting company from Brazil named Nos do Morro in collaboration with a Gallery 37 group from Birmingham gave a single performance of the play during the RSC s presentation of the Complete Works directed by Guti Fraga The production was spoken in Portuguese with the original English text projected as surtitles onto the back of the stage It also featured two 17 year olds in the roles of Valentine and Proteus usually actors in their 20s are cast and Crab was played not by a dog but by a human actor in a dog costume 75 76 In 2009 Joe Dowling directed the play at the Guthrie Theater starring Sam Bardwell as Valentine Jonas Goslow as Proteus Sun Mee Chomet as Julia and Valeri Mudek as Silvia Staged as a 1950s live television production large black and white monitors were set on either side of the stage with cameras feeding the action to them Additionally period advertisements appeared both before the show and during the intermission The actors spoke the original dialogue but wore 1950s clothing Rock and roll music and dance sequences were occasionally mixed with the action 77 78 In 2011 Laura Cole directed a production at the Shakespeare Tavern Presented as an in repertory production alongside The Taming of the Shrew and The Comedy of Errors it starred Kenneth Wigley as Valentine Jonathan Horne as Proteus Amee Vyas as Julia and Kati Grace Morton as Silvia 79 In 2012 P J Paparelli directed a Shakespeare Theatre Company production at the Lansburgh Theatre starring Andrew Veenstra as Valentine Nick Dillenburg as Proteus Natalie Mitchell as Silvia and Miriam Silverman as Julia Set in the 1990s and featuring a contemporary soundtrack mobile phones and guns the production downplayed the comedy and instead presented the play as a semi tragic coming of age story Reviews were mixed with most critics impressed with the attempts to do something new with the play but not universally sure the new ideas worked 80 81 Also in 2012 a touring production was staged at various venues throughout the UK including a performance at the Globe Theatre as part of the Globe to Globe Festival under the name Vakomana Vaviri Ve Zimbabwe The Two Gentlemen from Zimbabwe Directed by Arne Pohlmeier and spoken in Shona the entire play was performed with a cast of two Denton Chikura and Tonderai Munyevu 82 83 In 2014 for the first time since Robin Phillips 1970 production the RSC performed the play in a full production at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre Directed by Simon Godwin the production starred Michael Marcus as Valentine Mark Arends as Proteus Pearl Chanda as Julia and Sarah MacRae as Silvia On 3 September the play was broadcast live to cinemas around the world as part of the Live from Stratford upon Avon series The production received generally positive reviews with most critics happy to see it back on the RSC stage 84 85 In 2022 the comedy was performed by members of Mary Baldwin University s MFA company model for Treehouse Shakespeare Ensemble s 2022 2023 season The production was a small scale show in which only five actors portrayed all of the characters Directed by Beth Somerville and Kelsey Harrison the shows concept set the play in tumultuous 1970 s Italy Adaptations EditTheatrical Edit Henry Roberts engraving of Richard Yates as Launce in the 1762 Drury Lane adaptation by Benjamin Victor Benjamin Victor rewrote the play for performance in 1762 the earliest recorded performance we have of the play at the Theatre Royal in Drury Lane Starring Richard Yates as Launce his wife Mary Ann Yates as Julia and Elizabeth Pope as Silvia Victor brought all of the Verona scenes together removed Valentine s gift of Silvia to Proteus and increased the roles of Launce and Crab especially during the outlaw scenes where both characters are intimately involved in the action He also switched the emphasis of the play away from the love friendship dichotomy and instead focused on the issues of fidelity with the last line of the play altered to Lovers must be faithful to be bless d This necessitated rewriting Valentine as a near flawless protagonist who represents such faithfulness and Proteus as a traditional villain who doesn t care for such notions The two are not presented as old friends but simply as acquaintances Thurio was also rewritten as a harmless but lovable fool not unlike Launce and Speed Although not a major success the play initially ran for only six performances it was still being staged as late as 1895 86 87 88 In 1790 John Philip Kemble staged his own production of the play at Drury Lane maintaining many of Victor s alterations whilst also adding many of his own The production starred Richard Wroughton as Proteus and Elizabeth Satchell as Silvia The play was again staged at Covent Garden in 1808 with Kemble who was fifty years old at the time playing Valentine 89 Opera Musical Edit Frederic Reynolds staged an operatic version in 1821 at Covent Garden as part of his series of adaptations of the works of Shakespeare Reynolds wrote the lyrics with Henry Bishop writing the music The production ran for twenty nine performances and included some of Shakespeare s sonnets set to music 90 Augustin Daly revived the opera in 1895 at Daly s Theatre in an elaborate production starring Ada Rehan as Julia 91 92 In 1826 Franz Schubert set a German translation by Eduard von Bauernfeld of Proteus serenade to Silvia Who is Silvia What is she That all our swains commend her to music This song is usually known in English as Who is Sylvia but in German it is known as An Sylvia Vier Lieder opus 106 number 4 D 891 93 In 1909 Eric Coates s Four Old English Songs included a setting of Who is Sylvia 94 In 1942 Gerald Finzi included a setting of Who Is Silvia in his song cycle on Shakespearean texts Let Us Garlands Bring the title of the work is the last line of the song 95 In 1971 Galt MacDermot John Guare and Mel Shapiro adapted the show into a rock musical under the same name as the play Guare and Shapiro wrote the book Guare the lyrics and MacDermot the music Opening at the St James Theatre on 1 December 1971 with Shapiro directing and Jean Erdman as choreographer it ran for 614 performances closing on 20 May 1973 96 During its initial run the play won two Tony Awards Best Musical and Best Book 97 The original cast included Clifton Davis as Valentine Raul Julia as Proteus Jonelle Allen as Silvia and Diana Davila as Julia The play moved to the West End in 1973 playing at the Phoenix Theatre from 26 April and running for 237 performances 98 It was revived in 1996 at the New Jersey Shakespeare Festival directed by Robert Duke 99 and again in 2005 directed and choreographed by Kathleen Marshall as part of the Shakespeare in the Park festival Marshall s production was performed at the Delacorte Theater in Central Park and starred Norm Lewis as Valentine Oscar Isaac as Proteus Renee Elise Goldsberry as Silvia and Rosario Dawson as Julia 100 Film Edit The only cinematic adaptation of the play is Yi jiǎn mei more commonly known by its English title A Spray of Plum Blossoms a 1931 silent film from China directed by Bu Wancang and written by Huang Yicuo A loose adaptation of the play the film tells the story of Bai Lede Wang Chilong and Hu Luting Jin Yan two military cadets who have been friends since they were children After graduating Hu a playboy uninterested in love is appointed as a captain in Guangdong and leaves his home town in Shanghai Bai however deeply in love with Hu s sister Hu Zhuli Ruan Lingyu stays behind At Guangdong Hu falls in love with the local general s daughter Shi Luohua Lim Cho Cho although the general Shi Wang Guilin is unaware of the relationship and instead wants his daughter to marry the foolish Liao Di ao Kao Chien Fei Meanwhile Bai s father uses his influence to get Bai posted to Guangdong and after a sorrowful farewell between himself and Zhuli he arrives at his new post and instantly falls in love with Luohua In an effort to have her for himself Bai betrays his friend by informing General Shi of his daughter s plans to elope with Hu leading to Shi dishonourably discharging Hu Bai tries to win Luohua over but she is uninterested only concerned with lamenting the loss of Hu In the meantime Hu encounters a group of bandits who ask him to be their leader to which he agrees planning on returning for Luohua at some point in the future Some time passes and one day as Luohua Bai and Liao are passing through the forest they are attacked Luohua manages to flee and Bai pursues her into the forest They engage in an argument but just as Bai seems about to lose his temper Hu intervenes and he and Luohua are reunited General Shi arrives in time to see Liao flee the scene and he now realises that he was wrong to get in the way of the relationship between Hu and his daughter Hu then forgives Bai his betrayal and Bai reveals that he has discovered that his only true love is in fact Zhuli back in Shanghai The film is notable for being one of many Chinese films of the period which although performed in Mandarin when filming used English intertitles upon its original release In the English intertitles and credits the characters are named after their counterparts in the play Hu is Valentine Bai is Proteus Zhuli is Julia and Luohua is Silvia Liao is named Tiburio rather than Thurio 101 102 Two Gentlemen is also featured in Shakespeare in Love 1998 Directed by John Philip Madden and written by Marc Norman and Tom Stoppard the film tells the fictional story of William Shakespeare s Joseph Fiennes composition of Romeo and Juliet Early in the film Queen Elizabeth Judi Dench attends a production of Two Gentlemen greatly enjoying William Kempe Patrick Barlow being thoroughly outperformed by Crab and then falling asleep during Henry Condell s Nicholas Boulton recitation of Proteus soliloquy from Act 2 Scene 1 Later after reading the first draft of Romeo and Ethel theatre manager Philip Henslowe Geoffrey Rush suggests that Shakespeare add a dog to liven the play up 103 Television Edit The first television adaptation was in 1952 when BBC Television Service broadcast Act 1 of the play live from the Bristol Old Vic Directed by Denis Carey the production starred John Neville as Valentine Laurence Payne as Proteus Gudrun Ure as Silvia and Pamela Ann as Julia 104 In 1956 the entire play was broadcast on West German TV channel Das Erste from a performance at the Munich Kammerspiele under the title Zwei Herren aus Verona The theatrical production was directed by Hans Schalla with the TV adaptation directed by Ernst Markwardt The cast included Rolf Schult as Valentine Hannes Riesenberger as Proteus Helga Siemers as Julia and Isolde Chlapek as Silvia 105 In 1964 the play was made into a TV movie in West Germany again using the title Zwei Herren aus Verona Screened on ZDF it was directed by Hans Dieter Schwarze and starred Norbert Hansing as Valentine Rolf Becker as Proteus Katinka Hoffman as Julia and Heidelinde Weis as Silvia 106 Another West German TV movie under the title Die zwei Herren aus Verona was screened on Das Erste in 1966 Directed by Harald Benesch it starred Jurgen Kloth as Valentine Lothar Berg as Proteus Anne Marie Lermon as Julia and Carola Regnier as Silvia 107 In 1969 the entire play was broadcast on Austrian TV channel ORF eins from a performance at the Theater in der Josefstadt under the title Zwei aus Verona The theatrical production was directed by Edwin Zbonek with the TV adaptation directed by Wolfgang Lesowsky The cast included Klaus Maria Brandauer as Valentine Albert Rueprecht as Proteus Kitty Speiser as Julia and Brigitte Neumeister as Silvia 108 An outlaw hides in the Christmas at Selfridges set note the stylised steel trees and tinsel foliage In 1983 the play was adapted for the BBC Television Shakespeare series as the fourth episode of the sixth season Directed by Don Taylor it starred Tyler Butterworth as Proteus John Hudson as Valentine Tessa Peake Jones as Julia and Joanne Pearce as Silvia For the most part the adaptation is taken verbatim from the First Folio with some very minor differences For example omitted lines include the Duke s Knowing that tender youth is soon suggested 3 1 34 and Julia s Her eyes are grey as glass and so are mine 4 4 189 Other differences include a slightly different opening scene to that indicated in the text Whereas the play seems to open with Valentine and Proteus in mid conversation the adaptation begins with Mercatio and Eglamour attempting to formally woo Julia Mercatio by showing her a coffer overflowing with gold coins Eglamour by displaying a parchment detailing his ancestry Neither Eglamour nor Mercatio appear in the text However there is no dialogue in this scene and the first words spoken are the same as in the text Cease to persuade my loving Proteus Eglamour is also present in the final scene albeit once again without any dialogue and additionally the capture of Silvia and the flight of Eglamour is seen as opposed to merely being described The music for the episode was created by Anthony Rooley who wrote new arrangements of works from Shakespeare s own time such as John Dowland s Lachrimae Performed by The Consort of Musicke other musicians whose music was used include William Byrd Thomas Campion Anthony Holborne John Johnson Thomas Morley and Orazio Vecchi 109 Taylor initially planned a representational setting for the film Verona Milan and the forest were all to be realistic However he changed his mind early in preproduction and had production designer Barbara Gosnold go in the opposite direction a stylised setting To this end the forest is composed of metal poles with bits of green tinsel and brown sticks stuck to them the cast and crew referred to the set as Christmas at Selfridges Whilst the set for Verona remained relatively realistic that for Milan featured young actors dressed like cherubs as extras This was to convey the idea that the characters lived in a Garden of Courtly Love which was slightly divorced from the everyday reality represented by Verona 110 Working in tandem with this idea upon Proteus arrival in Milan after meeting Silvia he is left alone on screen and the weather suddenly changes from calm and sunny to cloudy and windy accompanied by a thunderclap The implication being that Proteus has brought a darkness within him into the garden of courtly delights previously experienced by Silvia 111 Although the production is edited in a fairly conventional manner much of it was shot in extremely long takes and then edited into sections rather than actually shooting in sections Director Don Taylor would shoot most of the scenes in single takes as he felt this enhanced performances and allowed actors to discover aspects which they never would were everything broken up into pieces 112 113 In 1995 a production of the play aired on Polish TV channel TVP1 under the title Dwaj panowie z Werony directed by Roland Rowinski and starring Rafal Krolikowski as Proteus Marek Bukowski as Valentine Agnieszka Krukowna as Julia and Edyta Jungowska as Sylvia 114 In 2000 episode three of season four of Dawson s Creek Two Gentlemen of Capeside loosely adapted the plot of the play Written by Chris Levinson and Jeffrey Stepakoff and directed by Sandy Smolan the episode depicts how Dawson Leery James Van Der Beek and Pacey Witter Joshua Jackson formerly best friends have been driven apart over their love for the same woman The play is referenced early in the episode as the characters are reading it for their English class 115 Radio Edit In 1923 extracts from the play were broadcast on BBC Radio performed by the Cardiff Station Repertory Company as the first episode of a series of programs showcasing Shakespeare s plays entitled Shakespeare Night 116 In 1924 the entire play was broadcast by 2BD directed by Joyce Tremayne and R E Jeffrey with Treymane playing Silvia and Jeffrey playing Valentine alongside G R Harvey as Proteus and Daisy Moncur as Julia 117 In 1927 the scenes between Julia and Lucetta were broadcast on BBC Radio as part of the Echoes from Greenwich Theatre series Betty Rayner played Julia and Joan Rayner played Lucetta 118 BBC National Programme broadcast the full play in 1934 adapted for radio by Barbara Burnham and produced by Lance Sieveking Ion Swinley played Valentine Robert Craven was Proteus Helen Horsey was Silvia and Lydia Sherwood played Julia 119 In 1958 the entire play was broadcast on BBC Third Programme Produced and directed by Raymond Raikes it starred John Westbrook as Valentine Charles Hodgson as Proteus Caroline Leigh as Silvia Perlita Neilson as Julia and Frankie Howerd as Launce 120 BBC Third Programme aired another full production of the play in 1968 produced and directed by R D Smith and starring Denys Hawthorne as Valentine Michael N Harbour as Proteus Judi Dench as Julia and Kate Coleridge as Silvia 121 In 2007 producer Roger Elsgood and director Willi Richards adapted the play into a radio drama called The Two Gentlemen of Valasna Set in two petty Indian princely states called Malpur and Valasna in the weeks leading up to the Indian Rebellion of 1857 the play was first broadcast on BBC Radio 3 on 29 July 2007 122 It was recorded on location in Maharashtra India earlier in 2007 with a cast drawn from Bollywood Indian television and the Mumbai English speaking theatre traditions actors included Nadir Khan as Vishvadev i e Valentine Arghya Lahiri as Parminder Proteus Anuradha Menon as Syoni Silvia Avantika Akerkar as Jumaana Servi Julia Sebastian Sohrab Ardishir as The Maharaja Duke of Milan and Zafar Karachiwala as Thaqib Thurio 123 References EditNotes Edit It is placed first in both The Oxford Shakespeare The Complete Works 1986 and 2005 The Norton Shakespeare 1997 and 2008 and The Complete Pelican Shakespeare 2002 see also Leech 1969 xxx Wells and Taylor 1997 109 Carroll 2004 130 and Warren 2008 26 27 Most modern editors of the play tend to rename this character Lance on the basis that Lance represents a modernisation of Launce See for example the editions by Kurt Schlueter 1990 William C Carroll 2004 and Roger Warren 2008 Citations Edit All references to The Two Gentlemen of Verona unless otherwise specified are taken from the Oxford Shakespeare Warren based on the First Folio text of 1623 Under its referencing system 2 3 14 means act 2 scene 3 line 14 a b c d e Wells et al 2005 p 1 Carroll 2004 p 110 Greenblatt et al 2008 p 103 Carroll 2004 pp 142 145 a b Schlueter 1990 p 1 Carroll 2004 p 128 Warren 2008 pp 15 16 Schlueter 1990 pp 10 12 Warren 2008 p 19 Bullough 1957 p 204 Warren 2008 p 20 Quiller Couch amp Wilson 1955 pp ix x Sanders 1968 p 11 See Leech 1969 p xxx Wells amp Taylor 1997 p 109 Carroll 2004 p 130 and Warren 2008 pp 26 27 Jackson 2005 p xliv Leech 1969 p xxxv Evans 2007 p 78 Wells amp Taylor 1997 p 109 Schlueter 1990 p 2 Carroll 2004 pp 127 130 Warren 2008 pp 23 25 Warren 2008 pp 21 Sanders 1968 p 7 Wells 1963 pp 161 173 Greenblatt et al 2008 p 79 Warren 2008 pp 24 27 Program notes for 1970 RSC production of The Two Gentlemen of Verona a b Masten 1997 pp 41 46 47 Warren 2008 pp 55 56 Warren 2008 p 57 Warren 2008 pp 8 9 Warren 2008 pp 56 57 Warren 2008 p 56 Derrick Patty S December 1991 Two Gents A Crucial Moment Shakespeare on Film Newsletter 16 1 4 Also available in Schlueter 1996 pp 259 262 a b Schlueter 1990 p 3 a b c Carroll 2004 pp 15 16 Carroll 2004 pp 16 a b Warren 2008 p 10 a b Kiefer Frederick 1996 Love Letters in The Two Gentlemen of Verona In Schlueter June ed The Two Gentlemen of Verona Critical Essays London Routledge pp 133 152 ISBN 978 0815310204 Chambers E K ed 1905 The Two Gentlemen of Verona Red Letter Shakespeare Glasgow Blackie and Son pp 5 6 Carroll 2004 p 115 Bond 1906 p xxxiv Quiller Couch amp Wilson 1955 p xiv Charlton H B 1966 1st pub 1938 Shakesperean Comedy London Routledge p 43 ISBN 978 0416692600 Sanders 1968 p 15 Sanders 1968 p 8 Schlueter 1990 p 17 Warren 2008 p 53 Warren 2008 p 14 Avery Alex 2004 Working with the language Royal Shakespeare Company Archived from the original on 12 September 2007 Retrieved 20 November 2012 Warren 2008 p 44 Sanders 1968 p 10 Carroll 2004 pp 57 65 Warren 2008 p 71n1 1 0 1 a b Warren 2008 p 1 Schlueter 1990 p 22 a b Carroll 2004 p 93 a b c Carroll 2004 p 85 Halliday 1964 p 506 Trewin 1964 pp 30 31 Schlueter 1990 pp 37 38 Schlueter 1990 p 37 Warren 2008 pp 3 5 Schlueter 1990 pp 43 44 Warren 2008 p 5 Past Productions Peter Hall Royal Shakespeare Company Archived from the original on 10 September 2007 Retrieved 20 November 2012 Carroll 2004 pp 43 47 Warren 2008 pp 6 7 Schlueter 1990 pp 47 48 Warren 2008 pp 7 8 Warren 2008 p 9 Carroll 2004 pp 90 98 Warren 2008 pp 9 10 The Two Gentlemen of Verona Study Guide for Teachers Royal Shakespeare Company 2005 Retrieved 28 November 2014 Warren 2008 pp 13 14 Dois Cavalheiros de Verona MIT Global Shakespeares 2010 Retrieved 28 November 2014 The Two Gentlemen of Verona Guthrie Theater Retrieved 28 November 2014 Jones Keith 3 March 2009 Shakespeare in the 1950s The Guthrie Theatre s Production of Two Gentlemen of Verona Bardfilm Retrieved 28 November 2014 In Repertory The Two Gentlemen of Verona The Taming of the Shrew The Comedy of Errors The New American Shakespeare Tavern Retrieved 20 November 2012 Klimek Chris 27 January 2012 OMG Shakespeare can text message Washington City Paper Retrieved 4 February 2014 Minton Eric 31 January 2012 Taking a Serious Stab at This Comedy With Youthful Aggression and a Great Crab Shakespearences com Retrieved 4 February 2014 The Two Gentlemen of Verona 2012 Shakespeare s Globe Retrieved 3 February 2014 Kirwan Peter 13 December 2009 Two Gentlemen of Verona or Vakomana Vaviri Ve Zimbabwe Reviewing Shakespeare Retrieved 23 October 2014 The Two Gentlemen of Verona Royal Shakespeare Company Archived from the original on 17 November 2014 Retrieved 28 November 2014 Nicholl Charles 11 July 2014 Why Shakespeare s Two Gentlemen of Verona is as flawed as it is fascinating The Guardian Retrieved 28 November 2014 Schlueter 1990 pp 17 25 Carroll 2004 pp 86 88 Warren 2008 pp 1 2 Schlueter 1990 pp 25 29 Schlueter 1990 pp 29 33 Jackson 2005 pp liv lv Pre 20th century productions RSC Archived from the original on 10 September 2007 Retrieved 20 November 2012 An Silvia Gesang an Silvia D891 Hyperion Records Retrieved 29 November 2014 Ponder Michael 1995 Notes to Naxos CD 8 223806 Sanders Julie 2007 Shakespeare and Music Afterlives and Borrowings Cambridge Polity p 41 ISBN 978 0745632971 Green 1984 p 350 Search Past Winners Tony Awards Archived from the original on 31 August 2016 Retrieved 29 November 2014 London Musicals 1973 PDF Over The Footlights A History of British Theatre Retrieved 29 November 2014 Klein Alvin 2 June 1996 A Most Fitting Maiden Voyage into Musicals The New York Times Retrieved 29 November 2014 Smith Dinitia 16 August 2005 Age of Aquarius Returns in Shakespearean Romp The New York Times Retrieved 29 November 2014 Pang Laikwan 2002 Building a New China in Cinema The Chinese Left Wing Cinema Movement 1932 1937 Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield p 26 ISBN 978 0742509467 Lei Bi qi Beatrice 2012 Paradox of Chinese Nationalism Two Gentlemen of Verona in Silent Film In Lei Bi qi Beatrice Perng Ching Hsi eds Shakespeare in Culture Taiwan National Taiwan University Press pp 251 284 Masten 2003 pp 266 269 Rothwell Kenneth S Melzer Annabelle Henkin 1990 Shakespeare on Screen An International Filmography and Videography New York Neal Schuman p 311 ISBN 978 0720121063 Dornemann Kurt 1979 Shakespeare Theater Bochum 1919 1979 Bochum Verlag Laupenmuhlen Druck p 76 Holderness Graham McCullough Christopher 1986 Shakespeare on the Screen A Selective Filmography Shakespeare Survey 39 36 doi 10 1017 CCOL0521327571 002 ISBN 978 1139053167 Retrieved 24 October 2014 subscription required Ledebur Ruth 1974 Deutsche Shakespeare Rezeption seit 1945 Leipzig Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft p 332 ISBN 978 3799702386 Blum Heiko R Schmitt Sigrid 1996 Klaus Maria Brandauer Schauspieler und Regisseur Munich Heyen p 229 ISBN 978 3453094062 Brooke Michael The Two Gentlemen of Verona 1983 BFI Screenonline Retrieved 30 November 2014 Willis Susan 1991 The BBC Shakespeare Plays Making the Televised Canon Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press p 212 ISBN 978 0807843178 Warren 2008 pp 11 13 Wilders John ed 1984 The Two Gentlemen of Verona The BBC TV Shakespeare London BBC Books p 26 ISBN 978 0563202776 See also Keyishian Harry December 1984 The Shakespeare Plays on TV Two Gentlemen of Verona Shakespeare on Film Newsletter 9 1 6 7 and Derrick Patty S December 1991 Two Gents A Crucial Moment Shakespeare on Film Newsletter 16 1 1 4 Both essays are reprinted in Schlueter 1996 pp 257 262 Fabiszak Jacek 2005 Polish Televised Shakespeares A Study of Shakespeare Productions Within the Television Theatre Format Poznan Motivex pp 212 225 ISBN 978 8387314460 Shaughnessy Robert 2011 The Routledge Guide to William Shakespeare Oxford Routledge p 94 ISBN 978 0415275408 Shakespeare Night Love s Labour s Lost and The Two Gentlemen of Verona British Universities Film amp Video Council Retrieved 30 November 2014 The Two Gentlemen of Verona 1924 British Universities Film amp Video Council Retrieved 30 November 2014 Echoes from the Greenleaf Theatre British Universities Film amp Video Council Retrieved 30 November 2014 The Two Gentlemen of Verona 1934 British Universities Film amp Video Council Retrieved 30 November 2014 The Two Gentlemen of Verona 1958 British Universities Film amp Video Council Retrieved 30 November 2014 The Two Gentlemen of Verona 1968 British Universities Film amp Video Council Retrieved 30 November 2014 Drama on 3 BBC Radio 3 Archived from the original on 7 October 2015 Retrieved 25 October 2014 The Two Gentlemen of Valasna 2007 British Universities Film amp Video Council Retrieved 30 November 2014 Editions of The Two Gentlemen of Verona Edit Bate Jonathan Rasmussen Eric eds 2011 The Two Gentlemen of Verona The RSC Shakespeare Basingstoke Macmillan ISBN 978 0230300910 Bond R Warwick ed 1906 The Two Gentlemen of Verona The Arden Shakespeare First Series London Methuen Carroll William C ed 2004 The Two Gentlemen of Verona The Arden Shakespeare Third Series London Thompson Learning ISBN 978 1903436950 Evans Bertrand ed 2007 1964 The Two Gentlemen of Verona Signet Classic Shakespeare Revised ed New York New American Library ISBN 978 0451530639 Evans G Blakemore ed 1997 1974 The Riverside Shakespeare Second ed Boston Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 0395754900 Greenblatt Stephen Cohen Walter Howard Jean E Maus Katharine Eisaman eds 2008 1997 The Norton Shakespeare Based on the Oxford Shakespeare Second ed London Norton ISBN 978 0393111354 Jackson Berners A W ed 1980 1964 The Two Gentlemen of Verona The Pelican Shakespeare Revised ed London Penguin ISBN 978 0140714319 Jackson Russell ed 2005 The Two Gentlemen of Verona The Penguin Shakespeare London Penguin ISBN 978 0141016627 Leech Clifford ed 1969 The Two Gentlemen of Verona The Arden Shakespeare Second Series London Methuen ISBN 978 0174435815 Quiller Couch Arthur Wilson John Dover eds 1955 1921 The Two Gentlemen of Verona The New Shakespeare 2nd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1108006101 Rose Mary Beth ed 2000 The Two Gentlemen of Verona The New Pelican Shakespeare London Penguin ISBN 978 0140714616 Sanders Norman ed 1968 The Two Gentlemen of Verona The New Penguin Shakespeare London Penguin ISBN 978 0140707175 Schlueter Kurt ed 1990 The Two Gentlemen of Verona The New Cambridge Shakespeare Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521181693 Warren Roger ed 2008 The Two Gentlemen of Verona The Oxford Shakespeare Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0192831422 Wells Stanley Taylor Gary Jowett John Montgomery William eds 2005 1986 The Oxford Shakespeare The Complete Works 2nd ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199267187 Werstine Paul Mowat Barbara A eds 1999 The Two Gentlemen of Verona Folger Shakespeare Library Washington Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0671722951 Secondary sources Edit Bullough Geoffrey 1957 Narrative and Dramatic Sources of Shakespeare Vol One Early Comedies Poems Romeo and Juliet New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231088916 Brooks Harold F 1963 Two clowns in a comedy to say nothing of the dog Speed Launce and Crab in The Two Gentlemen of Verona Essays and Studies XVI 91 100 Carlisle Carol J Derrick Patty S 1997 The Two Gentlemen of Verona on Stage Protean Problems and Protean Solutions In Collins Michael J ed Shakespeare s Sweet Thunder Essays on the Early Comedies Newark DE University of Delaware Press pp 126 154 ISBN 978 0874135824 Ewbank Inga Stina 1972 Were man but constant he were perfect Constancy and Consistency in The Two Gentlemen of Verona Stratford Upon Avon Studies 14 31 57 Godshalk William Leigh April 1969 The Structural Unity of The Two Gentlemen of Verona Studies in Philology 66 2 168 181 ISSN 0039 3738 JSTOR 4173636 subscription required Green Stanley 1984 1960 The World of Musical Comedy The story of the American musical stage as told through the careers of its foremost composers and lyricists Revised Fourth ed San Diego CA Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0306802072 Guy Bray Stephen October 2007 Shakespeare and the Invention of the Heterosexual Early Modern Literary Studies 13 2 1 28 Archived from the original on 25 May 2013 Retrieved 8 December 2014 Halliday F E 1964 1950 A Shakespeare Companion 1564 1964 Second ed London Penguin ISBN 978 1842321270 Holmberg Arthur Spring 1983 The Two Gentlemen of Verona Shakesperean Comedy as a Rite of Passage Queen s Quarterly 90 1 33 44 Masten Jeffrey 1997 Textual Intercourse Collaboration Authorship and Sexualities in Renaissance Drama Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521589208 Masten Jeffrey 2003 The Two Gentlemen of Verona In Dutton Richard Howard Jean E eds A Companion to Shakespeare s Works Volume III The Comedies Oxford Blackwell pp 266 289 ISBN 978 0631226345 Morozov Mikhail M 1947 Shakespeare on the Soviet Stage Translated by David Magarshack London Open Library Morse Ruth Summer 1983 Two Gentlemen and the Cult of Friendship Neuphilologische Mitteilungen 84 2 214 224 Muir Kenneth 2005 1st pub 1977 The Sources of Shakespeare s Plays London Routledge ISBN 978 0415489133 Onions C T 1986 1953 A Shakespeare Glossary Enlarged and Revised by Robert D Eagleson Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0198125211 Rackin Phyllis 2005 Shakespeare and Women Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0198186946 Schlueter June ed 1996 The Two Gentlemen of Verona Critical Essays New York Garland ISBN 978 0815310204 Speaight Robert 1973 Shakespeare on the Stage An Illustrated History of Shakespearian Performance London Collins ISBN 978 0316805001 Tillyard E M W 1992 1st pub 1965 Shakespeare s Early Comedies London The Athlone Press ISBN 978 0485300154 Trewin J C 1964 Shakespeare on the English Stage 1900 1964 A Survey of Productions London Barrie and Rockliff ISBN 978 0214157479 Wells Stanley 1963 The Failure of The Two Gentlemen of Verona Shakespeare Jahrbuch 99 161 173 Wells Stanley Taylor Gary eds 1997 1987 William Shakespeare A Textual Companion Revised ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0393316674 Williams Gordon 2006 1997 Shakespeare s Sexual Language A Glossary 2nd ed London Continuum ISBN 978 0826491343 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to The Two Gentlemen of Verona Wikisource has original text related to this article The Two Gentlemen of Verona Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Two Gentlemen of Verona The Two Gentlemen of Verona at Standard Ebooks The Two Gentlemen of Verona at Project Gutenberg The Two Gentlemen of Verona public domain audiobook at LibriVox The Two Gentlemen of Verona at Shakespeare Illustrated The Two Gentlemen of Verona at IMDb BBC Television Shakespeare Version Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Two Gentlemen of Verona amp oldid 1129643151, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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