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As You Like It 10350 Views
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Description:
We're not sure if good ol' Shakespeare would endorse The Bachelor and The Bachelorette , but that's not going to stop us from hosting themed viewing parties every season. The proposals just melt you heart.
Transcript
- 00:04
As You Like It, a la Shmoop. Being a bride isn't just about showing off
- 00:09
the ring and receiving gifts with a gracious smile.
- 00:12
Oh, no. The bride has to pull a wedding together in which everyone has fun, no one gets insulted,
- 00:19
and the event stays at or under budget.
- 00:26
And while the end result may be the most awesome celebration ever...
Full Transcript
- 00:30
...you may find yourself wondering if as much thought went into the newlywed couple's decision
- 00:35
to marry as into the decision to have the bridesmaids wear tangerine-colored dresses.
- 00:41
William Shakespeare put his thoughts about marriage into his comedic play, As You Like
- 00:42
It.
- 00:42
Rosalind and Celia are forced to flee from the usurper Frederick into the Forest of Arden.
- 00:48
Because Rosalind is disguised as a boy, she has to fight off the attentions of another
- 00:52
woman while continuing to engage the affection of the man she loves, Orlando.
- 00:58
Everything turns out fine: everyone marries who they're supposed to and all the villains
- 01:03
repent of their naughtiness.
- 01:04
But...what does As You Like It really have to say about marriage?
- 01:08
At first, it seems as if the play is all in favor of the practice.
- 01:13
Rosalind and Orlando, Celia and Oliver, Phoebe and Silvius, and Audrey and Touchstone all
- 01:19
get hitched in the end, presumably to live happily ever after...
- 01:23
...although given how Shakespeare treats some of the characters in his other plays, that's
- 01:27
never a safe bet. The problem is that love makes these characters
- 01:33
act like...idiots.
- 01:35
You have Rosalind, dressed as a guy, who tries to convince Orlando to let him/her take Rosalind's
- 01:41
place so he/she and Orlando can act out the relationship Orlando would like to have with
- 01:46
Rosalind. Awkward.
- 01:48
You have the shepherdess Phoebe, who's fallen for Rosalind-dressed-as-a-guy, and you'd think
- 01:54
Phoebe would sense something amiss there, but apparently not.
- 01:58
You end up with a massive argument in which everyone fights over who's going to marry
- 02:03
who.
- 02:04
And let's not forget that As You Like It is rife with jokes about wives cheating on their
- 02:08
husbands.
- 02:09
Either Shakespeare was a bit one-note on his humor in this play, or he didn't think much
- 02:14
of marriage. But maybe what Shakespeare really wants is
- 02:17
for us to take an honest look at marriage and the person we're going to vow to love
- 02:21
and cherish for the rest of our lives.
- 02:24
There's a great deal of disguise and deceit in As You Like It; many of the characters
- 02:29
are not who they present themselves to be.
- 02:32
Today's dating world is very much like Shakespeare's play: people will say anything to get a hot
- 02:37
date.
- 02:37
Perhaps Shakespeare is encouraging us to truly get to know the people we're attracted to and to understand what
- 02:48
making a lifelong commitment means so that...
- 02:51
...if we decide to take that big step and spend thousands of dollars on a beach wedding in
- 02:56
Cancun, we won't be regretting the expenditure six months later.
- 03:00
So, what do you think Shakespeare was trying to say about marriage?
- 03:03
Did he think that wedding vows were a waste of time?
- 03:06
Or was he pro...putting a ring on it? Shmoop amongst yourselves.
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