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Twelfth Night: Viola 16880 Views
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Description:
Shakespeare and drag? We knew he could think outside of the box, but who could have guessed he had such a unique sense of humor? Casts the ending to Romeo and Juliet in a whole new light, if you think about it (but maybe you shouldn't)
Transcript
- 00:04
Twelfth Night, a la Shmoop. You've just been shipwrecked on an island.
- 00:09
You've got a few options. You could anthropomorphize and befriend a volleyball.
- 00:14
You could go searching for polar bears or smoke monsters.
- 00:18
Or, you could always dress in drag and do the hula.
- 00:21
In Shakespeare's play Twelfth Night, this last option is the one chosen by Viola, who
Full Transcript
- 00:27
has been shipwrecked on the island of Illyria <<uh-leer-ee-uh>>.
- 00:31
Well... almost. She puts on a man's clothes and calls herself Cesario <<suh-zar-ee-oh>>.
- 00:35
She never actually does the hula.
- 00:38
So... why did Shakespeare think that it wasn't such a drag for one of his characters to...
- 00:43
go drag?
- 00:45
What point was he trying to get across with all this cross-dressing?
- 00:48
Well... when Viola entered the service of Duke Orsino, disguised as Cesario, she ended
- 00:52
up spending a lot of time talking with the duke.
- 00:57
Maybe Shakespeare has Viola pretend to be a man because that sets the drama of Orsino's
- 01:01
story in motion. See, not only does Viola fall in love with the duke...
- 01:06
...but he unwittingly has his good buddy Cesario go to a young lady named Olivia to profess
- 01:12
love on his behalf.
- 01:14
Olivia promptly falls head over heels for Cesario, who, of course, is actually a girl.
- 01:23
But maybe it wasn't so much about the demands of the story. Was Shakespeare simply interested
- 01:27
in the gender dynamics of the Elizabethan age?
- 01:32
During his time, women didn't act in the theater. Instead, the character of Viola would have
- 01:36
been played by a boy...
- 01:37
...a boy playing a girl who's pretending to be a boy.
- 01:40
Wrap your head around that one, Tootsie. It could be that Shakespeare just wanted to
- 01:45
explore the idea of gender as a fluid part of our identity, rather than as a set of rules
- 01:51
imposed on us by society.
- 01:54
After all, Viola doesn't pretend to be Cesario forever.
- 01:57
Ultimately, her twin brother, Sebastian, marries Olivia, after Olivia mistakes him for Cesario.
- 02:02
This forces Cesario to reveal that he is, in fact, a chick named Viola. Now that Olivia's
- 02:10
no longer in the picture, Duke Orsino decides to marry his former best friend.
- 02:14
So what was Billy Shakes' main reason for writing this... transgender-bender?
- 02:18
Did he set out to use cross-dressing as a dramatic tool?
- 02:24
Did he want to provide us with a window into Elizabethan gender dynamics?
- 02:29
Or was he making a statement about love... that it's more about what you've got between
- 02:33
your ears than what you've got... between your legs?
- 02:37
Shmoop amongst yourselves.
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