All's Well That Ends Well
{{Short description|Play by Shakespeare}}
{{about|Shakespeare's play}}
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{{use British English|date=August 2011}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2020}}
File:First Folio, Shakespeare - 0248.jpg of Shakespeare's plays, published in 1623.]]
All's Well That Ends Well is a play by William Shakespeare, published in the First Folio in 1623, where it is listed among the comedies. There is a debate about the date of its composition, with possible dates ranging from 1598 to 1608.{{cite book|last=Snyder|first=Susan|title=The Oxford Shakespeare: All's Well That Ends Well|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=Oxford, England|date=1993|pages=20–24|chapter=Introduction|isbn=978-0-19-283604-5}}{{cite news|title=Many Hands – A New Shakespeare Collaboration?|last1=Maguire|first1=Laurie|date=19 April 2012|newspaper=The Times Literary Supplement|last2=Smith|first2=Emma}} also at [http://www.cems-oxford.org/many-hands Centre for Early Modern Studies] {{Webarchive|url=https://archive.today/20120723151826/http://www.cems-oxford.org/many-hands |date=23 July 2012 }}, University of Oxford accessed 22 April 2012: "The recent redating of All’s Well from 1602–03 to 1606–07 (or later) has gone some way to resolving some of the play’s stylistic anomalies" ... "[S]tylistically it is striking how many of the widely acknowledged textual and tonal problems of All’s Well can be understood differently when we postulate dual authorship."
The play is considered one of Shakespeare's "problem plays", a play that poses complex ethical dilemmas that require more than typically simple solutions.Snyder, Susan (1993). "Introduction". The Oxford Shakespeare: All's Well That Ends Well. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. pp. 16–19. {{ISBN|9780192836045}}
Characters
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- King of France
- Duke of Florence
- Bertram, Count of Roussillon
- Countess of Roussillon, Mother of Bertram
- Lavatch, a Clown in her household
- Helena, a Gentlewoman protected by the Countess{{0|000}}
- Lafew, an old Lord
- Parolles, a follower of Bertram
- An Old Widow of Florence, surnamed Capilet
- Diana, Daughter of the Widow
- Steward of the Countess of Roussillon
- Violenta (ghost character) and Mariana, Neighbours and Friends of the Widow
- A Page
- Soldiers, Servants, Gentlemen, and Courtiers
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Synopsis
Helena, the low-born ward of a French-Spanish countess, is in love with the countess's son Bertram, who is indifferent to her. Bertram goes to Paris to replace his late father as attendant to the ailing King of France. Helena, the daughter of a recently deceased physician, follows Bertram, ostensibly to offer the King her services as a healer. The King is skeptical, and she guarantees the cure with her life: if he dies, she will be put to death, but if he lives, she may choose a husband from the court.
The King is cured and Helena chooses Bertram, who rejects her, owing to her poverty and low status. The King forces him to marry her, but after the ceremony Bertram immediately goes to war in Italy without so much as a goodbye kiss. He says that he will only marry her after she has carried his child and got his family ring from him. Helena returns home to the countess, who is horrified at what her son has done, and claims Helena as her child in Bertram's place.
In Italy, Bertram is a successful warrior and becomes infatuated with Diana, the virgin daughter of an impoverished local noblewoman. Helena follows Bertram to Italy, befriends Diana, and arranges to take Diana's place in bed with him. Diana obtains Bertram's ring in exchange for one of Helena's. In this way Helena, without Bertram's knowledge, consummates their marriage and is given his ring.
Helena fakes her own death. Bertram, thinking he is free of her, comes home. He tries to marry a French lord's daughter with whom he had previously fallen in love, but Diana shows up and breaks up the engagement. Helena appears and explains the ring swap, announcing that she has fulfilled Bertram's challenge; Bertram, impressed by all she has done to win him, swears his love to her. Thus all ends well.
There is a subplot about Parolles, a disloyal friend of Bertram's. Helena, Lafew, the Countess, her fool Lavatch and the two Lords Dumaine have all realised that Parolles is a boastful coward, but Bertram still takes him to war with him. The two Lords convince Parolles to cross into enemy territory to fetch a drum lost in battle. While he is on his way, they pose as enemy soldiers, kidnap him, blindfold him, and, with Bertram observing, get him both to betray his friends and to surrender a letter warning Diana about Bertram's lascivious character.
Sources
File:Decameron Title Page.jpg in 1620.]]
The play is based on the tale of Giletta di Narbona (tale nine of day three) of Boccaccio's The Decameron. F. E. Halliday speculated that Shakespeare may have read a French translation of the tale in William Painter's Palace of Pleasure.F. E. Halliday, A Shakespeare Companion 1564–1964, Baltimore, Penguin, 1964; p. 29.
Analysis and criticism
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There is no evidence that All's Well That Ends Well was popular in Shakespeare's time and it has remained one of his lesser-known plays ever since, in part due to its unorthodox mixture of fairy tale logic, gender role reversals and cynical realism. Helena's love for the seemingly unlovable Bertram is difficult to explain on the page, but in performance, it can be made acceptable by casting an extremely attractive actor and emphasising the possibility of a homosexual relationship between Bertram and the "clothes horse" fop Parolles: "A filthy officer he is in those suggestions for the young earl" (Act III, scene 5).{{cite book|last=McCandless|first=David |title=Gender and performance in Shakespeare's problem comedies|publisher=Indiana University Press|location=Bloomington, IN|date=1997|pages=57–59|chapter=All's Well That Ends Well|isbn=0-253-33306-7}} This interpretation also assists at the point in the final scene when Bertram suddenly switches from hatred to love in just one line. This is considered a particular problem for actors trained to admire psychological realism. Some alternative readings emphasise the "if" in his equivocal promise: "If she, my liege, can make me know this clearly, I'll love her dearly, ever, ever dearly." Here, there has been no change of heart at all.{{cite book|last=Dickson|first=Andrew|title=The Rough Guide to Shakespeare|publisher=Penguin|location=London|date=2008|pages=3–11|chapter=All's Well That Ends Well|isbn=978-1-85828-443-9}} Productions like London's National Theatre in 2009 have Bertram make his promise seemingly normally, but then end the play hand in hand with Helena, staring out at the audience with a look of "aghast bewilderment" suggesting he relented only to save face in front of the King.{{cite news|last=Billington|first=Michael|author-link=Michael Billington (critic)|title=Theatre review: All's Well That Ends Well / Olivier, London|url=https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2009/may/29/theatre|access-date=9 May 2011|newspaper=The Guardian|date=29 May 2009}} A 2018 interpretation by director Caroline Byrne at the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse, London, effects Bertram's reconciliation with Helena by having him make good his vow (Act 2 Scene 2) of taking her as his wife only when she bears his child; as well as Bertram's ring, Helena brings their infant child to their final confrontation before the king.{{cite web|last1=Taylor|first1=Paul|title=All's Well That Ends Well, review: Eye-opening and vividly alive|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/theatre-dance/reviews/alls-well-that-ends-well-sam-wanamaker-playhouse-review-a8165611.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180120184250/http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/theatre-dance/reviews/alls-well-that-ends-well-sam-wanamaker-playhouse-review-a8165611.html |archive-date=2018-01-20 |url-access=limited |url-status=live|website=The Independent|date=18 January 2018}}
File:All's Well That Ends Well Act V Scene iii.jpg
Many critics consider the truncated ending a drawback, with Bertram's conversion so sudden. Speculative explanations have been given for this. There is (as always) possibly missing text. Some suggest that Bertram's conversion is meant to be sudden and magical in keeping with the play's 'clever wench performing tasks to win an unwilling higher-born husband' theme.W. W. Lawrence, Shakespeare's Problem Comedies 1931. Some think that Bertram is not meant to be contemptible but merely a callow youth learning valuable lessons about values.J. L. Styan Shakespeare in Performance 1984; Francis G Schoff Claudio, Bertram and a Note on Interpretation, 1959 Andrew Hadfield of the University of Sussex argues that contemporary audiences would readily have recognised Bertram's enforced marriage as a metaphor for the new requirement (1606) for Catholics to swear an Oath of Allegiance to Protestant King James.{{cite journal|last1=Hadfield|first1=Andrew|title=Bad Faith|journal=Globe|date=August 2017|pages=48–53|issn=2398-9483}}
Many directors have taken the view that when Shakespeare wrote a comedy, he intended there to be a happy ending, and accordingly that the concluding scene should be staged as such. Elijah Moshinsky in his BBC Television Shakespeare version in 1981 had his Bertram (Ian Charleson) give Helena a tender kiss and speak wonderingly. Despite his outrageous actions, Bertram can come across as beguiling; the 1967 RSC performance with Ian Richardson as Bertram by various accounts (The New Cambridge Shakespeare, 2003 etc.) managed to make Bertram sympathetic, even charming. Charleson's Bertram was cold and egotistical but still attractive.
One character who has been admired is the Countess of Roussillon, whom Shaw thought "the most beautiful old woman's part ever written". Modern productions are often promoted as vehicles for great mature actresses; recent examples have starred Judi Dench and Peggy Ashcroft, who delivered a performance of "entranc[ing]...worldly wisdom and compassion" in Trevor Nunn's sympathetic, "Chekhovian" staging at Stratford in 1982.{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/theobserver/2003/dec/14/features.review77|title=Judi...and the beast|last=Kellaway|first=Kate|date=14 December 2003|work=The Observer |location=UK|access-date=5 July 2009}}{{cite book|last=Billington|first=Michael|author-link=Michael Billington (critic)|title=One Night Stands: a Critic's View of Modern British Theatre|publisher=Nick Hern Books|location=London|date=2001|edition=2|pages=174–176|isbn=1-85459-660-8}} In the BBC Television Shakespeare production she was played by Celia Johnson, dressed and posed as Rembrandt's portrait of Margaretha de Geer.
It has recently been argued that Thomas Middleton either collaborated with Shakespeare on the play or revised it at a later time,Taylor, Gary; Jowett, John; Bourus, Terri; Egan, Gabriel, eds. (2016). New Oxford Shakespeare: Modern Critical Edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 2274. {{ISBN|978-0-19-959115-2}}. Accessed 27 January 2020: "Shakespeare is undoubtedly the original author. Thomas Middleton added new material for a revival after Shakespeare's death, including the virginity dialogue..., the Kings speech about status and virtue..., and the gulling of Paroles". but the proposed revisions are not universally accepted.
Performance history
No records of early performances of All's Well That Ends Well have been found. In 1741, the work was played at Goodman's Fields, with a later transfer to Drury Lane. Rehearsals at Drury Lane started in October 1741 but William Milward (1702–1742), playing the king, fell ill, and the opening was delayed until 22 January. Peg Woffington, playing Helena, fainted on the first night and her part was read. Milward fell ill again on 2 February and died on 6 February.{{cite book|last=Highfill|first=Philip|title=A biographical dictionary of actors, actresses, musicians, dancers, managers and other stage personnel in London, 1660–1800|volume=10|year=1984|publisher=Southern Illinois University Press|location=Carbondale, IL|isbn=978-0-8093-1130-9|page=262}} This, together with unsubstantiated tales of more illnesses befalling other actresses during the run, gave the play an "unlucky" reputation, similar to that attached to Macbeth, which may have curtailed the number of revivals.{{cite book|last=Genest|first=John|author-link=John Genest|title=Some account of the English stage: from the Restoration in 1660 to 1830|volume=3|year=1832|publisher=Carrington|location=Bath, England|pages=645–647}}Fraser (2003: 15)
Henry Woodward (1714–1777) popularised the part of Parolles in the era of David Garrick.{{cite ODNB|last=Cave|first=Richard Allen|title=Oxford Dictionary of National Biography|year=2004|location=Oxford, England|chapter=Woodward, Henry (1714–1777)|doi=10.1093/ref:odnb/29944}} Sporadic performances followed in the ensuing decades, with an operatic version at Covent Garden in 1832.William Linley's song "Was this fair face" was written for All's Well That Ends Well.
The play, with plot elements drawn from romance and the ribald tale, depends on gender role conventions, both as expressed (Bertram) and challenged (Helena). With evolving conventions of gender roles, Victorian objections centred on the character of Helena, who was variously deemed predatory, immodest and both "really despicable" and a "doormat" by Ellen Terry, who also—and rather contradictorily—accused her of "hunt[ing] men down in the most undignified way".Ellen Terry (1932) Four Essays on Shakespeare Terry's friend George Bernard Shaw greatly admired Helena's character, comparing her with the New Woman figures such as Nora in Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House. The editor of the Arden Shakespeare volume summed up 19th-century repugnance: "everyone who reads this play is at first shocked and perplexed by the revolting idea that underlies the plot."W. Osborne Brigstocke, ed. All's Well That Ends Well, "Introduction" p. xv.
In 1896, Frederick S. Boas coined the term "problem play" to include the unpopular work, grouping it with Hamlet, Troilus and Cressida and Measure for Measure.{{cite book|last=Neely|first=Carol Thomas |title=Broken nuptials in Shakespeare's plays|location=New Haven, CT|date=1983|publisher=University of Yale Press|page=58|chapter=Power and Virginity in the Problem Comedies: All's Well That Ends Well|isbn=978-0-300-03341-0}}
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
Bibliography
- Evans, G. Blakemore, The Riverside Shakespeare, 1974.
- {{cite book|last=Fraser|first=Russell|title=All's Well That Ends Well|edition=2|series=The New Cambridge Shakespeare|year=2003|publisher=Cambridge University Press|location=Cambridge, England|isbn=978-0-521-53515-1}}
- Lawrence, W. W., Shakespeare's Problem Comedies, 1931.
- Price, Joseph G., The Unfortunate Comedy, 1968.
- Schoff, Francis G., "Claudio, Bertram, and a Note on Interpretation", Shakespeare Quarterly, 1959.
- Styan, J. L., Shakespeare in Performance series: All's Well That Ends Well, 1985.
External links
- {{StandardEbooks|Standard Ebooks URL=https://standardebooks.org/ebooks/william-shakespeare/alls-well-that-ends-well}}
- {{gutenberg|no=1529|name=All's Well That Ends Well}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20110217230733/http://www.folger.edu/template.cfm?cid=877 Folger Shakespeare Library: All's Well That Ends Well]
- [http://www.maximumedge.com/shakespeare/allwell.htm MaximumEdge.com Shakespeare: All's Well That Ends Well] – searchable scene-indexed version of the play.
- {{librivox book | title=All's Well That Ends Well | author=William Shakespeare}}
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Category:Plays based on works by Giovanni Boccaccio
Category:English Renaissance plays
Category:British plays adapted into films
Category:Plays by Thomas Middleton