Miranda
Orsino is pursuing the same lady as he pursues throughout the play, until he finds she has married someone else. It's Olivia.
There are 17 characters who have spoken lines in the play: Viola/Cesario, Duke Orsino, Sebastian, Olivia, Sir Toby Belch, Sir Andrew Augecheek, Feste, Maria, Fabian, Antonio, Captain, Priest, 2 Officers, Valentine (Orsino's servant), Curio (Orsino's servant), Servant (of Olivia). I think that's all of them!
Obsessed.. In love Distracted Self Centered ( im doing a report on that right now...URG) Orsino is a meloncholy and fickle minded Duke. His iconic line - "If music be the food of love play on, give me excess of it, that surfeiting, The appetite may sicken and so die ......" It appears from this quote that Orsino is in love with the idea of being in love.
Shakespeares "Othello"
Miranda
no....yes ofcourseLOL
He marries Audrey
The three suitors pursuing Olivia in Shakespeare's Twelfth Night are Orsino, Duke of Illyria; Sir Andrew Aguecheek; and Malvolio, Olivia's steward.
Orsino is pursuing the same lady as he pursues throughout the play, until he finds she has married someone else. It's Olivia.
There are 17 characters who have spoken lines in the play: Viola/Cesario, Duke Orsino, Sebastian, Olivia, Sir Toby Belch, Sir Andrew Augecheek, Feste, Maria, Fabian, Antonio, Captain, Priest, 2 Officers, Valentine (Orsino's servant), Curio (Orsino's servant), Servant (of Olivia). I think that's all of them!
Obsessed.. In love Distracted Self Centered ( im doing a report on that right now...URG) Orsino is a meloncholy and fickle minded Duke. His iconic line - "If music be the food of love play on, give me excess of it, that surfeiting, The appetite may sicken and so die ......" It appears from this quote that Orsino is in love with the idea of being in love.
Juliet's lover in Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet" is Romeo, the son of the Montague family. Their love story is one of the most famous and tragic in literature, as they come from feuding families but are deeply in love with each other.
Fylde Oberon, and Fylde Orsino.
Duke Orsino:If music be the food of love, play on,Give me excess of it; that surfeiting,The appetite may sicken, and so die.Twelfth Night Act 1, scene 1, 1-3Duke Orsino of Illyria, presiding over the merry, mixed-up world of Twelfth Night, opens the play with these festive sentiments, soured though they be by the affected airs of the melancholic lover. He has convinced himself that he's insanely in love with a wealthy and resistant lady, who is in mourning for her brother and only annoyed by Orsino's inappropriate attentions. The duke's idea of a cure for his disease is to stuff himself sick with his own passions.Orsino's brand of self-indulgent pouting comes in for much ribbing here and elsewhere in Shakespeare, most vividly in As You Like It and Much Ado about Nothing. For melancholic poseurs like Orsino, who are actually expected to make spectacles of themselves, affecting gestures are more important than sincere emotions.
Shakespeares "Othello"
The audience