As You Like It
As
You Like It is a pastoral comedy
by William Shakespeare
believed to have been written in 1599 and first published in the First
Folio in 1623. The play's first
performance is uncertain, though a performance at Wilton
House in 1603 has been suggested as a
possibility.
As
You Like It follows its heroine Rosalind as she flees persecution in her uncle's court, accompanied
by her cousin Celia
to find safety and, eventually, love, in the Forest of Arden. In the forest,
they encounter a variety of memorable characters, notably the melancholy
traveller Jaques
who speaks many of Shakespeare's most famous speeches (such as "All the world's a stage", "too much of a good thing" and "A
fool! A fool! I met a fool in the forest"). Jaques provides a sharp
contrast to the other characters in the play, always observing and disputing
the hardships of life in the country.
Historically,
critical response has varied, with some critics finding the play a work of
great merit and some finding it to be of lesser quality than other
Shakespearean works. The play remains a favourite among audiences and has been
adapted for radio, film, and musical theatre. The piece has been a favourite of
famous actors on stage and screen, notably Vanessa
Redgrave, Juliet
Stevenson, Maggie
Smith, Rebecca
Hall, Helen
Mirren, and Patti
LuPone in the role of Rosalind and Alan
Rickman, Stephen
Spinella, Kevin
Kline, Stephen
Dillane, and Ellen
Burstyn in the role of Jaques.
Characters
Main
characters:
Court
of Duke Frederick:
- Duke Frederick, Duke Senior's younger brother and his usurper, also Celia's father
- Rosalind, Duke Senior's daughter
- Celia, Duke Frederick's daughter and Rosalind's cousin
- Touchstone, a court fool or jester
- Le Beau, a courtier
- Charles, a wrestler
- Lords and ladies in Duke Frederick's court
Household
of the deceased Sir Rowland de Bois:
- Oliver de Bois, the eldest son and heir
- Jacques de Bois, the second son
- Orlando de Bois, the youngest son
- Adam, a faithful old servant who follows Orlando into exile
- Dennis, Oliver's servant who called Charles
Exiled
court of Duke Senior in the Forest of Arden:
- Duke Senior, Duke Frederick's older brother and Rosalind's father
- Jaques, a discontented, melancholic lord
- Amiens, an attending lord and musician
- Lords in Duke Senior's forest court
Country
folk in the Forest of Arden:
- Phebe, a proud shepherdess
- Silvius, a shepherd
- Audrey, a country girl
- Corin, an elderly shepherd
- William, a country man
- Sir Oliver Martext, a curate
Other
characters:
- Hymen, officiates over the weddings in the end; God of marriage, as appearing in a masque
- Pages and musicians
Synopsis
The
play is set in a duchy
in France, but most of the action takes place in a location called the Forest
of Arden. This may be intended as the Ardennes, a forested region covering an area located in southeast
Belgium, western Luxembourg and northeastern France, or Arden, Warwickshire,
near Shakespeare's home town, which was the ancestral origin of his mother's
family—who incidentally were called Arden.
Frederick
has usurped the duchy and exiled
his older brother, Duke Senior. Duke Senior's daughter, Rosalind, has been
permitted to remain at court because she is the closest friend and cousin of
Frederick's only child, Celia.
Orlando, a young gentleman of the kingdom who at first sight has fallen in love
with Rosalind, is forced to flee his home after being persecuted by his older
brother, Oliver. Frederick becomes angry and banishes Rosalind from court.
Celia and Rosalind decide to flee together accompanied by the court fool,
Touchstone, with Rosalind disguised as a young man and Celia disguised as a
poor lady.
Rosalind,
now disguised as Ganymede
("Jove's
own page"), and Celia, now disguised as Aliena (Latin for
"stranger"), arrive in the Arcadian
Forest of Arden, where the exiled
Duke now lives with some supporters, including "the melancholy
Jaques", a malcontent
figure, who is introduced weeping over the slaughter of a deer. "Ganymede" and "Aliena" do not
immediately encounter the Duke and his companions. Instead, they meet Corin, an
impoverished tenant,
and offer to buy his master's crude cottage.
Orlando
and his servant Adam, meanwhile, find the Duke and his men and are soon living
with them and posting simplistic love poems for Rosalind on the trees. (The
role of Adam may have been played by Shakespeare, though this story is said to
be apocryphal.) Rosalind, also in love with Orlando, meets him as
Ganymede and pretends to counsel him to cure him of being in love. Ganymede
says that "he" will take Rosalind's place and that "he" and
Orlando can act out their relationship.
The
shepherdess, Phebe, with whom Silvius is in love, has fallen in love with
Ganymede (Rosalind in disguise), though "Ganymede" continually shows
that "he" is not interested in Phebe. Touchstone, meanwhile, has
fallen in love with the dull-witted shepherdess, Audrey, and tries to woo her,
but eventually is forced to be married first. William, another shepherd,
attempts to marry Audrey as well, but is stopped by Touchstone, who threatens
to kill him "a hundred and fifty ways".
Finally,
Silvius, Phebe, Ganymede, and Orlando are brought together in an argument with
each other over who will get whom. Ganymede says he will solve the problem,
having Orlando promise to marry Rosalind, and Phebe promise to marry Silvius if
she cannot marry Ganymede.
Orlando
sees Oliver in the forest and rescues him from a lioness, causing Oliver to
repent for mistreating Orlando. Oliver meets Aliena (Celia's false identity)
and falls in love with her, and they agree to marry. Orlando and Rosalind,
Oliver and Celia, Silvius and Phebe, and Touchstone and Audrey all are married
in the final scene,
after which they discover that Frederick also has repented his faults, deciding
to restore his legitimate brother to the dukedom and adopt a religious life. Jaques, ever melancholic,
declines their invitation to return to the court, preferring to stay in the
forest and to adopt a religious life as well. Rosalind speaks an epilogue to
the audience, commending the play to both men and women in the audience.
Date and text
The
direct and immediate source of As You Like It is Thomas
Lodge's Rosalynde, Euphues Golden
Legacie, written 1586–87 and first published in 1590. Lodge's story is
based upon "The Tale of Gamelyn".
As
You Like It was first printed in the collected
edition of Shakespeare's plays, known as the First
Folio, during 1623. No copy of it in Quarto exists, for the play is mentioned by the printers of the First
Folio among those which "are not formerly entered to other men". By
means of evidences, external and internal, the date of composition of the play
has been approximately fixed at a period between the end of 1598 and the middle
of 1599.
External evidence
As
You Like It was entered into the Register of
the Stationers'
Company on 4 August 1600 as a work which
was "to be stayed", i.e., not published till the Stationers' Company
were satisfied that the publisher in whose name the work was entered was the
undisputed owner of the copyright. Thomas Morley's First Book of Ayres,
published in London in 1600 contains a musical setting for the song "It
was a lover and his lass" from As You Like It. This evidence
implies that the play was in existence in some shape or other before 1600.
It
seems likely this play was written after 1598, since Francis Meres did not
mention it in his Palladis Tamia.
Although twelve plays are listed in Palladis Tamia, it was an incomplete
inventory of Shakespeare's plays to that date (1598). The new Globe
Theatre opened some time in the summer of
1599, and tradition has it that the new playhouse's motto was Totus mundus
agit histrionem—"all the Globe's a stage"—an echo of Jaques'
famous line "All the world's a stage" (II.7). This evidence posits
September 1598 and September 1599 as the time frame within which the play was
likely written.
Internal evidence
In
Act III, vi, Phebe refers to the famous line "Whoever loved that loved not
at first sight" taken from Marlowe's
Hero and Leander, which was published in 1598. This line, however, dates
from 1593 when Marlowe was killed, and the poem was likely circulated in
unfinished form before being completed by George
Chapman. It is suggested in Michael Wood's In Search of Shakespeare that the words of
Touchstone, "When a man's verses cannot be understood, nor a man's good
wit seconded with the forward child understanding, it strikes a man more dead
than a great reckoning in a little room", allude to Marlowe's
assassination. According to the inquest into his death, Marlowe had been killed
in a brawl following an argument over the "reckoning" of a bill in a
room in a house in Deptford,
owned by the widow Eleanor Bull
in 1593. The 1598 posthumous publication of Hero and Leander would have
revived interest in his work and the circumstances of his death. These words in
Act IV, i, in Rosalind's speech, "I will weep for nothing, like Diana in
the fountain", may refer to an alabaster image of Diana which was set up
in Cheapside in 1598. However, it should be remembered Diana
is mentioned by Shakespeare in at least ten other plays, and is often depicted
in myth and art as at her bath. Diana was a literary epithet for Queen
Elizabeth I during her reign, along with Cynthia, Phoebe,
Astraea, and the Virgin
Mary. Certain anachronisms exist as
well, such as the minor character Sir Oliver Martext's possible reference to
the Marprelate Controversy which transpired between 1588 and 1589. On the basis of
these references, it seems that As You Like It may have been composed in
1599–1600, but it remains impossible to say with any certainty.
Analysis and criticism
Though
the play is consistently one of Shakespeare's most frequently performed
comedies, scholars have long disputed over its merits. George Bernard Shaw
complained that As You Like It is lacking in the high artistry of which
Shakespeare was capable. Shaw liked to think that Shakespeare wrote the play as
a mere crowdpleaser,
and signalled his own middling opinion of the work by calling it As You
Like It—as if the playwright did not agree. Tolstoy objected to the immorality of the characters and Touchstone's constant clowning. Other
critics have found great literary value in the work. Harold
Bloom has written that Rosalind is among
Shakespeare's greatest and most fully realised female characters.
The
elaborate gender reversals in the story are of particular interest to modern
critics interested in gender
studies. Through four acts of the play,
Rosalind, who in Shakespeare's day would have been played by a boy, finds it
necessary to disguise herself as a boy, whereupon the rustic Phebe, also played
by a boy, becomes infatuated with this "Ganymede",
a name with homoerotic
overtones. In fact, the epilogue, spoken by Rosalind to the audience, states
rather explicitly that she (or at least the actor playing her) is not a woman.
In several scenes, "Ganymede" impersonates Rosalind' so a boy actor
would have been playing a girl disguised as a boy impersonating a girl.
Setting
Arden
is the name of a forest located close to Shakespeare's home town of Stratford-upon-Avon,
but Shakespeare probably had in mind the French Arden Wood, featured in Orlando Innamorato,
especially since the two Orlando
epics, Orlando Innamorato and Orlando
Furioso, have other connections with the
play. In the Orlando mythos, Arden Wood is the location of Merlin's Fountain, a
magic fountain causing anyone who drinks from it to fall out of love. The
Oxford Shakespeare edition rationalises the confusion between the two Ardens by
assuming that "Arden" is an anglicisation of the forested Ardennes region of France, where Lodge set his tale) and alters the
spelling to reflect this. Other editions keep Shakespeare's "Arden"
spelling, since it can be argued that the pastoral mode
depicts a fantastical world in which geographical details are irrelevant. The
Arden edition of Shakespeare makes the suggestion that the name
"Arden" comes from a combination of the classical
region of Arcadia
and the biblical garden
of Eden, as there is a strong interplay of
classical and Christian belief systems and philosophies within the play. Arden
was also the maiden name of Shakespeare's mother and her family home is located
within the Forest of Arden.
Themes
Love
Love
is the central theme of As You Like It, like other romantic comedies of
Shakespeare. Following the tradition of a romantic comedy, As You Like It
is a tale of love manifested in its varied forms. In many of the love-stories,
it is love at first sight.
This principle of "love at first sight" is seen in the love-stories
of Rosalind and Orlando, Celia and Oliver, as well as Phebe and Ganymede. The
love-story of Audrey and Touchstone is a parody of romantic love. Another form
of love is between women, as in Rosalind and Celia's deep bond.
Usurpation and Injustice
This
is a significant theme of this play. The new Duke Frederick usurps his older
brother Duke Senior, while Oliver parallels this behavior by treating his
younger brother Orlando so ungenerously as to compel him to seek his fortune
elsewhere. Both Duke Senior and Orlando take refuge in the forest, where
justice is restored "through nature".
Forgiveness
The
play highlights the theme of usurpation and injustice on the property of
others. However, it ends happily with reconciliation and forgiveness. Duke Frederick
is converted by a hermit and he restores the dukedom to Duke Senior who, in his
turn, restores the forest to the deer. Oliver also undergoes a change of heart
and learns to love Orlando. Thus, the play ends on a note of rejoicing and
merry-making.
Court life and country life
Most
of the play is a celebration of life in the country. The inhabitants of Duke
Frederick's court suffer the perils of arbitrary injustice and even threats of
death; the courtiers who followed the old duke into forced exile in the
"desert city" of the forest are, by contrast, experiencing liberty
but at the expense of some easily borne discomfort. (Act II, i). A passage
between Touchstone, the court jester, and shepherd Corin establishes the
contentment to be found in country life, compared with the perfumed, mannered
life at court. (Act III, I). At the end of the play the usurping duke and the
exiled courtier Jaques both elect to remain within the forest.
Religious allegory
University
of Wisconsin professor Richard Knowles, the editor of the 1977 New Variorum edition of this play, in his article "Myth and Type in
As You Like It", pointed out that the play contains mythological
references in particular to Eden and to Hercules.
Music and songs
As
You Like It is known as a musical comedy
because of the number of songs in the play. Indeed, there are more songs in it
than in any other play of Shakespeare. These songs and music are incorporated
in the action that takes place in the forest of Arden, as shown below:
- "Under the Greenwood tree": It summarises the views of Duke Senior on the advantages of country life over the amenities of the court. Amiens sings this song.
- "Blow, blow, thou winter wind": This song is sung by Amiens. It states that physical suffering caused by frost and winter winds is preferable to the inner suffering caused by man's ingratitude.
- "What shall he have that killed the deer": It is another song which adds a lively spectacle and some forest-colouring to contrast with love-talk in the adjoining scenes. it highlights the pastoral atmosphere.
- "It was a lover and his lass": It serves as a prelude to the wedding ceremony. It praises spring time and is intended to announce the rebirth of nature and the theme of moral regeneration in human life.
Language
Use of prose
Shakespeare
uses prose for about 55% of the text, with the remainder in verse. Shaw
explains that as used here the prose, "brief [and] sure", drives the
meaning and is part of the play's appeal, whereas some of its verse he regards
only as ornament. The dramatic convention of the time required the courtly
characters to use verse, and the country characters prose, but in As You
Like It this convention is deliberately overturned. For example, Rosalind,
although the daughter of a Duke and thinking and behaving in high poetic style,
actually speaks in prose as this is the "natural and suitable" way of
expressing the directness of her character, and the love scenes between
Rosalind and Orlando are in prose (III, ii, 277). In a deliberate contrast,
Silvius describes his love for Phebe in verse (II, iv, 20). As a mood of a
character changes, he or she may change from one form of expression to the
other in mid-scene. Indeed, in a metafictional touch, Jaques cuts off a prose dialogue with Rosalind
because Orlando enters, using verse: "Nay then, God be with you, an you
talk in blank verse" (IV, i, 29). The defiance of convention is continued
when the epilogue is given in prose.
All the world's a stage
Act
II, Scene VII, features one of Shakespeare's most famous monologues, spoken by
Jaques, which begins:
All the world's a stage
And all the men and women merely players;
They have their exits and their entrances,
And one man in his time plays many parts
And all the men and women merely players;
They have their exits and their entrances,
And one man in his time plays many parts
The
arresting imagery and figures of speech in the monologue develop the central
metaphor: a person's lifespan is a play in seven acts. These acts, or
"seven ages", begin with "the infant/Mewling and puking in the
nurse's arms" and work through six further vivid verbal sketches,
culminating in "second childishness and mere oblivion,/Sans teeth, sans
eyes, sans taste, sans everything".
Pastoral mode
The
main theme of pastoral
comedy is love in all its guises in a rustic setting, the genuine love embodied
by Rosalind contrasted with the sentimentalised affectations of Orlando, and
the improbable happenings that set the urban courtiers wandering to find exile,
solace or freedom in a woodland setting are no more unrealistic than the string
of chance encounters in the forest which provoke witty banter and which require
no subtleties of plotting and character development. The main action of the
first act is no more than a wrestling match, and the action throughout is often
interrupted by a song. At the end, Hymen himself arrives to bless the wedding festivities.
William
Shakespeare’s play As You Like It clearly falls into the Pastoral
Romance genre; but Shakespeare does not merely use the genre, he develops it.
Shakespeare also used the Pastoral genre in As You Like It to ‘cast a
critical eye on social practices that produce injustice and unhappiness, and to
make fun of anti-social, foolish and self-destructive behaviour’, most
obviously through the theme of love, culminating in a rejection of the notion
of the traditional Petrarchan
lovers.
The
stock characters in conventional situations were familiar material for
Shakespeare and his audience; it is the light repartee and the breadth of the subjects that provide opportunities
for wit that put a fresh stamp on the proceedings. At the centre the optimism of Rosalind is contrasted with the misogynistic melancholy of Jaques. Shakespeare would take up some of the
themes more seriously later: the usurper Duke and the Duke in exile provide
themes for Measure for Measure and The
Tempest.
The
play, turning upon chance encounters in the forest and several entangled love
affairs in a serene pastoral setting, has been found, by many directors, to be
especially effective staged outdoors in a park or similar site.
Performance history
There
is no certain record of any performance before the Restoration. Evidence suggests that the premiere may have taken place
at Richmond Palace
on 20 Feb 1599, enacted by the Lord Chamberlain's Men.[17] Another possible performance may have taken place at Wilton
House in Wiltshire,
the country seat of the Earls
of Pembroke. William Herbert, 3rd
Earl of Pembroke hosted James I
and his Court at Wilton House from October to December 1603, while Jacobean London was suffering an epidemic of bubonic
plague. The King's Men were paid £30 to come to Wilton House and perform for the
King and Court on 2 December 1603. A Herbert family tradition holds that the
play acted that night was As You Like It.
During
the English Restoration, the King's
Company was assigned the play by royal
warrant in 1669. It is known to have been
acted at Drury Lane in 1723, in an adapted form called Love in a Forest;
Colley Cibber
played Jaques. Another Drury Lane production seventeen years later returned to
the Shakespearean text (1740).
Notable
recent productions of As You Like It include the 1936 Old
Vic Theatre production starring Edith
Evans and the 1961 Shakespeare Memorial Theatre production starring Vanessa
Redgrave. The longest running Broadway
production starred Katharine
Hepburn as Rosalind, Cloris
Leachman as Celia, William Prince
as Orlando, and Ernest Thesiger
as Jaques, and was directed by Michael
Benthall. It ran for 145 performances in
1950. Another notable production was at the 2005 Stratford Festival
in Stratford, Ontario,
which was set in the 1960s and featured Shakespeare's lyrics set to music written
by Barenaked Ladies.
In 2014, theatre critic Michael Billington said his favourite production of the play was Cheek
by Jowl's 1991 production, directed by Declan
Donnellan.
Adaptations
Thomas
Morley (c. 1557–1602) composed music for
"It was a lover and his lass"; he lived in the same parish as
Shakespeare, and at times composed music for Shakespeare's plays.
Roger
Quilter set "Blow, Blow, Thou Winter
Wind" for voice and piano (1905) in his 3 Shakespeare songs Op. 6
In
1942, Gerald Finzi
included a setting of "It was a lover and his lass" (V, iii) in his song
cycle on Shakespearean texts Let Us Garlands
Bring.
Cleo
Laine sang a jazz setting of "It was
a lover and his lass" on her 1964 album "Shakespeare... and all that
Jazz". The composer is credited as "Young".
Donovan set "Under the Greenwood Tree" to music and
recorded it for A Gift from a Flower
to a Garden in 1968.
John
Rutter composed a setting of "Blow,
Blow, Thou Winter Wind" for chorus in 1992.
Michael John Trotta
composed a setting of "Blow, Blow, Thou Winter Wind" for choir in
2013.
Meg
Sturiano and Benji Goldsmith added original songs to their 2019 production.
Radio
According
to the history of radio station WCAL in the US state of Minnesota, As You Like It may have been the first play ever
broadcast. It went over the air in 1922.
On
1 March 2015, BBC Radio 3
broadcast a new production directed by Sally Avens with music composed by actor and singer Johnny Flynn
of the folk rock band Johnny Flynn and The Sussex Wit. The production included Pippa
Nixon as Rosalind, Luke Norris
as Orlando, Adrian Scarborough
as Touchstone, William Houston
as Jaques, Ellie Kendrick
as Celia and Jude Akuwudike
as Corin.
Film
As You Like It was Laurence
Olivier's first Shakespeare film. Olivier,
however, served only in an acting capacity (performing the role of Orlando),
rather than producing or directing the film. Made in England and released in
1936, As You Like It also starred director Paul
Czinner's wife Elisabeth
Bergner, who played Rosalind with a thick
German accent. Although it is much less "Hollywoody" than the
versions of A Midsummer Night's Dream and Romeo and Juliet made
at about the same time, and although its cast was made up entirely of
Shakespearean actors, it was not considered a success by either Olivier or the
critics.
Helen
Mirren starred as Rosalind in the 1978 BBC videotaped version of As You Like It, directed by Basil Coleman.
In
1992, Christine Edzard made another film adaptation of the play. It features James
Fox, Cyril
Cusack, Andrew
Tiernan, Griff
Rhys Jones, and Ewen
Bremner. The action is transposed to a
modern and bleak urban world.
A
film version of As You Like It, set in 19th-century Japan, was released in 2006, directed
by Kenneth Branagh.
It stars Bryce Dallas Howard,
David Oyelowo,
Romola
Garai, Alfred
Molina, Kevin
Kline, and Brian
Blessed. Although it was actually made for
cinemas, it was released to theatres only in Europe, and had its U.S. premiere
on HBO in 2007. Although it was not a made-for-television film,
Kevin Kline won a Screen Actors Guild
award for Best Performance by a Male Actor in a Television Movie or Miniseries
for his performance as Jaques.
Through
donations from her indiegogo
campaign that made up an estimated $16,000, Marika Sonja Cotter (now Sonja
Kelly) was able to release her 2012 indie
film LOVE: As You Like It, backed
by the indie film company: Distant Thunder Films. Cotter had decided to create
the film after graduating from University of
Southern California and was inspired having had seen a
film adaptation of Hamlet
from Kenneth Branagh.
LOVE: As You Like It is set in modern San
Francisco with the cityscape in place of a
forest and color-blind casting.
The choice of color-blind casting had interested a reviewer as they had
mentioned how interracial couples would have been condemned at Shakespeare's
time. Her film gained two awards at the International Indie Gathering Film
Festival and Convention: one for second place as Best Romantic Comedy and the
other for Best Supporting Actor. Kristina Michelle had also reported about the
film in an episode titled "The Indie Gathering Special" from her show
The Reel Show with Kristina Michelle.
Other musical work
The Seven Doors of
Danny, by Ricky
Horscraft and John McCullough is based on the "Seven Ages of Man"
element of the "All the world's a
stage"
speech and was premiered in April 2016.
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