Comedy of Errors Study Guide
Comedy of Errors Study Guide
Comedy of Errors Study Guide
BY WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
ADAPTED BY SEAN GRANEY
Directed by Sean Graney
September 16 October 17, 2010
2010
at Court Theatre
CHARACTERS
STORY
The play opens with the Town Crier explaining a new law forbidding
Syracusians to enter Ephesus, at which point Egeon, an elderly Syracusian,
arrives and is immediately arrested. As he is led to his execution, he tells
the Duke of Ephesus that he has come to Syracuse in search of his wife and
one of his twin sons, who were separated from him 25 years ago in a
shipwreck. The other twin, who grew up with Egeon, is also traveling the
world in search of the missing half of their family. (The twins, we learn, are
identical, and each has an identical twin slave named Dromio.) The Duke is
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so moved by this story that he grants Egeon a day to raise the thousand-mark ransom that would be necessary to save his life.
Meanwhile, unknown to Egeon, his son Antipholus of Syracuse (and Antipholus's slave Dromio) is also visiting Ephesus, where Antipholus's
missing twin, known as Antipholus of Ephesus, is a prosperous citizen of the city. Adriana, Antipholus of Ephesus's wife, mistakes Antipholus of
Syracuse for her husband and drags him home for dinner, leaving Dromio of Syracuse to stand guard at the door and admit no one. Shortly
thereafter, Antipholus of Ephesus (with his slave Dromio of Ephesus) returns home and is refused entry to his own house. Meanwhile,
Antipholus of Syracuse has fallen in love with Luciana, Adriana's sister, who is appalled at the behavior of the man she thinks is her brother-inlaw.
The confusion increases when a gold chain ordered by the Ephesian Antipholus is given to Antipholus of Syracuse. Antipholus of Ephesus refuses
to pay for the chain (since he never received it) and is arrested for debt. His wife, seeing his strange behavior, decides he has gone mad and
orders him bound. Meanwhile, Antipholus of Syracuse and his slave decide to flee the city, which they believe to be enchanted, as soon as
possible, only to be harassed by Adriana and the debt officer. They seek refuge in a nearby abbey.
Adriana begs the Duke to intervene and remove her "husband" from the abbey into her custody. Her real husband, meanwhile, has broken loose
and now comes to the Duke and levels charges against his wife. The situation is finally resolved by the Abbess, Emilia, who reveals both sets of
twins and explains that she is Egeon's long-lost wife. Antipholus of Ephesus reconciles with Adriana; Egeon is pardoned by the Duke and
reunited with his spouse; Antipholus of Syracuse resumes his romantic pursuit of Luciana, and all ends happily.
The Comedy of Errors is one of Shakespeares earliest plays, and is considered by many an apprentice play, an attempt on Shakespeares part to
get used to the idea of playwriting by tackling a less complex play-world. However, while lacking the depth of a Hamlet, say, Shakespeare inserts
multiple threads and layers into Comedy which are entirely lacking in his original Roman sources. This not only made the play more exciting and
interesting for Elizabethan audiences, but also reveals his genius in crafting full characters even at this early point.
The Plautus plays Shakespeare uses to inspire Comedy are relatively simple farces. Characters are simple types: there is a seductive courtesan, a
lecherous husband, a shrewish wife, an accepting servant, etc. These characters rigid and unflinching natures force them into all types of
identity mistakes, or errors. Shakespeare clearly uses this basic format as the start of Comedy, where exaggerated characters face error after
error.
However, into this mix Shakespeare adds elements of the medieval-Renaissance courtly romance. Romances bring love and Christianity into
play. Thus, during the traditional farce, there are two very serious love stories the relationship between Antipholus of Ephesus and Adriana,
and the relationship between Antipholus of Syracuse and Luciana. One of these ends in the traditional romance fashion, with a pending
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marriage between S.Antipholus and Luciana. The E.Antipholus and Adriana marriage remains more vague, but is radically transformed from the
one-key farce marriage by this romantic influence.
Shakespeare also adds Egeon and Emilia, characters who could (and did) walk out of mediaeval romance. Egeons quest to find his family, and
Emilia, an abbess who literally plays deus ex machina by letting Christianity save the day, are entirely out of place within farce. The play thus
contains a very powerful genre tension, appealing to two immensely popular Elizabethan theater styles simultaneously. The presence of this
tension allows Shakespeare to start to explore a more complex world than Plautuss simple farce logic can support. With Egeon comes the
Ephesus-Syracuse conflict, which creates a dark, political backdrop to the plays humor. S.Antipholuss presence in turn becomes dangerous as
much as we can laugh at the jugglers of Ephesus, we cant forget they pose a real threat to Antipholus. The twin Antipholuses and Dromios
also possess a type of intellectual understanding and depth lacking totally in farce. All four twins are seriously concerned and frightened by the
sudden loss of their identities as much as it is a source of humor, it is a source of crisis as well. Even at this early stage, we see Shakespeare
pushing basic Plautine construction to its limits, creating not stock characters but full humans who struggle to define their own identities in an
inhospitable world.
DeusExMachina
(dey-uhs eks mah-kee-nah):
Latin for God out of the machine, a Deus Ex
Machina is a plot device in which a seemingly
unsolvable problem is abruptly solved with
the contrived and unexpected intervention
of some new character, ability, or object.
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In the Elizabethan period, plays served a very different function than they do
today. Playgoing was primarily a social experience. Audiences went to plays to
interact with each other in a large-scale social setting; the play itself was just
part of the whole. Most plays were staged in massive open-air amphitheaters,
which allowed them to play out more like sports games than works of art. The
audience was equally as visible as the stage, and what happened in the
audience was often just as important as what happened onstage.
Playgoing was considered a crude, almost sinful entertainment, often likened
to going to a whorehouse. Playhouses in London were completely shut down
in 1642 for breeding frivolity in a harsh political climate. Full-fledged brawls,
either between audience members or the audience and the actors, shut down
a number of performances. These events, which we would now call external
or incidental to the play, defined the playgoing experience. The negative
connotation of playgoing was rarely due to the plays being presented, but
instead by how audience members interacted with each other.
A speculative rendering of the Globe Theatres interior.
Even when playgoing was not violent or criminal, it was still an
audience-centric experience. Audiences would eat, talk, laugh, yell, throw
things at the stage, try to converse with actors, and generally ignore every rule of theater decorum weve currently established. Going to a play
was less about seeing a work of art, and more about having a great time. If the play itself wasnt amusing, you were free to amuse yourself as
you saw fit. Playgoing 400 years ago was in many ways similar to going to a bar with live music today: if you enjoy the performance, then you
can watch, but if not, then there is nothing wrong with socializing.
Theater today is very different. Audiences come to see a specific show, and give it their undivided attention. Generally, audience participation
outside the guidelines of the specific production is frowned upon. However, theater today plays a very different social role than theater in the
seventeenth century. At the time, theater was the only form of public entertainment. It had a massive popularity, both among the educated
who loved hearing great poetry read out loud and the uneducated who could only experience great writing through theater. The playgoing
experience was, as a result, conditioned by the same strict social rules that governed daily life. The class-based stratification which drove every
interaction was as much in place at the open-air playhouse; the more you paid for tickets, the better seats you got, creating a physical
stratification within the audience.
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SHAKESPEARE COMPOSED THE COMEDY OF ERRORS EARLY IN HIS career, in 1593 or 1594; though whether it was his fourth, third, second, or
even first play is much in dispute. It was probably written around the same time as two other early comedies, The Taming of the Shrew and Two
Gentlemen of Verona. Because of its early date in the canon, The Comedy of Errors is often viewed as an apprentice play, a work derivative in
form, on which the young Shakespeare cut his teeth; this characterization, though, is also much disputed.
Notoriously little is known of Shakespeares life. He was born in Stratford-on-Avon in 1564, one of the eight children of John and Mary
Shakespeare. His father was a glover who became an alderman and later Chief Alderman of the town. Shakespeare probably attended the Kings
New School in Stratford, but he had no university education. In 1582, at the age of eighteen, Shakespeare married Anne Hathaway; their first
child, Susanna, was born six months later. The couple also had twins, Hamnet and Judith, in 1585. Hamnet, the only son, died when he was
eleven.
Nothing is known of Shakespeares life from the mid 1580s until 1592, when Robert Greenes reference to the upstart crow who fancies
himself the only Shakes-scene in the country places him in London with a burgeoning reputation as a playwright. During the plague years of
1592 and 1593, when the theaters were closed, Shakespeare wrote two long poems, Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece, both dedicated
to the young Earl of Southampton. His 154 sonnets probably date from this time as well. In 1594, Shakespeare joined the Lord Chamberlains
Men, one of Londons leading companies, re-named the Kings Men after James I became their patron. His role as principal playwright and
shareholder in the Globe Theatre made Shakespeare sufficiently wealthy to purchase considerable property in Stratford, where his wife and
children lived, and sufficiently respectable to secure a coat of arms in his fathers name.
Shakespeares early success was built on comedies, an occasional tragedy, including the popular Romeo and Juliet, and history plays. By 1959,
Shakespeare had turned to darker and more troubling material. Hamlet, Troilus and Cressida, Alls Well That Ends Well, and Measure for
Measure were written between 1599 and 1604. The latter three were often labeled problem plays by twentieth century critics because of their
admixture of comic and tragic elements. Less than a year elapsed between Measure for Measure and Othello, which initiated the period of
Shakespeares great tragedies. King Lear, Timon of Athens, Macbeth, Antony and Cleopatra, and Coriolanus followed in quick succession. Toward
the end of his career, Shakespeare focused on romantic comedies, including Pericles, Cymbeline, The Winters Tale, and The Tempest. His last
plays, Henry VIII and The Two Noble Kinsmen, were collaborations with John Fletcher.
After the Globe Theatre burned down in 1613, Shakespeare retired to Stratford, dying there on April 23, 1616. His work remained uncollected
until John Heminges and Henry Condell, two actors of his company, published the First Folio of his plays in 1623.
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