Product Details
Pelican Shakespeare Two Gentlemen Of Verona

Pelican Shakespeare Two Gentlemen Of Verona
By William Shakespeare

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Product Description

With new editors who have incorporated the most up-to-date scholarship, this revised Pelican Shakespeare series will be the premiere choice for students, professors, and general readers well into the twenty-first century.

Each volume features:
Authoritative, reliable texts
High quality introductions and notes
New, more readable trade trim size
An essay on the theatrical world of Shakespeare and essays on Shakespeare's life and the selection of texts


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #278747 in Books
  • Published on: 2000-02-03
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: .37" h x 5.07" w x 7.77" l, .21 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 224 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Amazon.co.uk
One of Shakespeare's earliest comedies, and unjustly neglected over the years, The Two Gentlemen of Verona has deserved its growing critical reputation over recent years. The play dramatises the entangled relations between the two gentlemen of the play's title, Valentine and Proteus. Valentine leaves Verona for Milan to seek his fortune, whilst Proteus stays to be near his love, Julia. Spurned by Julia, Proteus heads for Milan, where he finds himself a rival of Valentine for the hand of Silvia, the Duke's daughter. Julia the reappears, disguised in boy's clothes as Proteus' page. As in many of Shakespeare's later comedies, the lovers flee to the forest, where confusion and conflict is finally resolved, and the two gentlemen are reunited not only with their "correct" lovers, but also with each other.

The play is particularly interesting for its dramatisation of the intense friendship between Valentine and Proteus, which it often characterises as more intimate and meaningful than relations with women. Proteus complains that Julia "hast metamorphosed me" into something he cannot understand, and the play suggests that social and sexual relations between men are often more satisfying than the dangerous instability involved in wooing women. --Jerry Brotton

Ingram
A full-cast presentation of Shakespeare's classic romantic comedy follows the adventures of close friends Valentine and Proteus and the series of intrigues that ensue when Proteus, betrothed to another, falls in love with Valentine's beloved. Performed by Peter Wyngarde and John Laurie.

About the Author
William Shakespeare lived between 1552-1616, but his work endures and is enjoyed the world over.