- published: 08 Jan 2019
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Malvolio is the steward of Olivia's household in William Shakespeare's comedy, Twelfth Night, or What You Will. He is often portrayed as the main antagonist.
In the play, Malvolio is defined as a kind of Puritan. He despises all manner of fun and games, and wishes his world to be completely free of human sin, yet he behaves very foolishly against his unstoic nature when he believes that Olivia loves him. This leads to major conflicts with characters such as Sir Toby Belch, Sir Andrew Aguecheek, and Maria, mistress of the household.
Much of the play's humour comes from Maria, Feste, Toby Belch, and Andrew Aguecheek tormenting Malvolio with drinking, joking, and singing. Later in the play, Maria devises a way to have revenge upon Malvolio, and proposes it to Sir Toby, Sir Andrew and Feste. Maria composes a love letter in Olivia's handwriting, and leaves it so Malvolio will find it. Beforehand, Malvolio had been wishing to marry Olivia. The letter convinces Malvolio that Olivia loves him, and leads Malvolio to think that Olivia wishes him to smile, wear yellow stockings and cross garters. Olivia is in mourning for her brother's death, and finds smiling offensive, and yellow is "a colour she abhors, and cross garters a fashion she detests", according to Maria. When Malvolio is imprisoned for being a supposed lunatic after acting out the instructions in the letter, Feste visits him both as himself and in the guise of "Sir Topas the curate," and torments Malvolio by making him swear to heretical texts, for example, Pythagorean precepts. At the end of the play he vows, "I’ll be reveng’d on the whole pack of you" for his public humiliation, and Olivia acknowledges that he has "been most notoriously abused."
The company of Twelfth Night perform Act 2 Scene 5 with Adrian Edmondson as Malvolio in Christopher Luscombe's 2017 production of Twelfth Night with the Royal Shakespeare Company.
One of Shakespeare's best-loved comedies, Twelfth Night was 'blissfully reborn' (Telegraph) for the 2012/13 season at London's Globe Theatre, under the direction of Tim Carroll. The hilarious tale of misdirection and deception is performed here by an all-male cast, among whom we find Mark Rylance as Olivia and Roger Lloyd-Pack as Sir Anthony Aguecheek. The production also marks Stephen Fry's triumphant return to the stage as the pompous Malvolio, ridiculous in his yellow stockings. Samuel Barnett, Liam Brennan Paul Chahidi, John Paul Connolly Ian Drysdale, Johnny Flynn Stephen Fry, James Garnon Peter Hamilton Dyer, Colin Hurley Roger Lloyd Pack, Mark Rylance Jethro Skinner Ben Thompson Director: Tim Carroll Music: Claire Van Kampen Recorded live at Shakespeare's Globe, June 2012 ...
Suitable for pupils studying the text at GCSE level. Includes references to 1996 film version and a performance by the Filter theatre company in March 2014.
Shakespeare's greatest comedy featuring an outstanding all-star movie cast. This scene: Normally-puritanical head butler Malvolio (with a flawless, over-the-top performance by Oscar-winning Nigel Hawthorne) follows directions from a letter he believes is from Lady Olivia (Helena Bonham Carter, winner of 31 awards). He wears yellow stockings (a color Olivia hates) with ridiculous garters, smiles too broadly, and quotes lines from the letter, baffling Olivia with his inappropriate amorousness. Olivia dismisses Malvolio's odd behavior as some kind of "midsummer madness," and tells her waiting-gentlewoman Maria (Laurence Olivier Theatre Award-winner Imelda Staunton) to have Sir Toby Belch (Princess Bride's albino Mel Smith) to take care of Malvolio while Olivia woos the man she really loves. T...
Malvolio is the steward of Olivia's household in William Shakespeare's comedy, Twelfth Night, or What You Will. He is often portrayed as the main antagonist.
In the play, Malvolio is defined as a kind of Puritan. He despises all manner of fun and games, and wishes his world to be completely free of human sin, yet he behaves very foolishly against his unstoic nature when he believes that Olivia loves him. This leads to major conflicts with characters such as Sir Toby Belch, Sir Andrew Aguecheek, and Maria, mistress of the household.
Much of the play's humour comes from Maria, Feste, Toby Belch, and Andrew Aguecheek tormenting Malvolio with drinking, joking, and singing. Later in the play, Maria devises a way to have revenge upon Malvolio, and proposes it to Sir Toby, Sir Andrew and Feste. Maria composes a love letter in Olivia's handwriting, and leaves it so Malvolio will find it. Beforehand, Malvolio had been wishing to marry Olivia. The letter convinces Malvolio that Olivia loves him, and leads Malvolio to think that Olivia wishes him to smile, wear yellow stockings and cross garters. Olivia is in mourning for her brother's death, and finds smiling offensive, and yellow is "a colour she abhors, and cross garters a fashion she detests", according to Maria. When Malvolio is imprisoned for being a supposed lunatic after acting out the instructions in the letter, Feste visits him both as himself and in the guise of "Sir Topas the curate," and torments Malvolio by making him swear to heretical texts, for example, Pythagorean precepts. At the end of the play he vows, "I’ll be reveng’d on the whole pack of you" for his public humiliation, and Olivia acknowledges that he has "been most notoriously abused."
(Ha ha, ay man, what they call you man?)
[CHORUS:]
Hello I'm just a mellow fellow
Just give me a bud and a cigarello
And I'm a keep it ghetto
Cause I stick with it just like velcro
Cause I'm mellow [x9]
I'm just a mellow fellow
[VERSE 1:]
I'm real calm cool and collective
So when I walk in they know what to expect it's
B.o.B. in the session
Stand in and mister all this hate so it effect it
Now that's what I call interesting
I gotta gameplan but they can't intercept it
They can't do nothing but respect it
Because my flow is anorexic, sick, it's infected
(Haha yeah it's B.o.B. man, I'm just a mellow fellow stay real still like jello)
[CHORUS:]
Hello I'm just a mellow fellow
Just give me a bud and a cigarello
And I'm a keep it ghetto
Cause I stick with it just like velcro
Cause I'm mellow [x9]
I'm just a mellow fellow
[VERSE 2:]
Haha it's B.o. bellow
All about the green ain't worried bout yellow
What does that mean?
Hah jaknow me and bread go together like hansel and gretel
Well in the ghetto
The cycle is a merry go round so you curse when they cut off your umbilical
I remember when life used to be miserable
But since my [? ] changed I've been seeing miracles
(Haha yeah man real talk
Treat life good it treat you good back)
[CHORUS: x2]
Hello I'm just a mellow fellow
Just give me a bud and a cigarello
And I'm a keep it ghetto
Cause I stick with it just like velcro
Cause I'm mellow [x9]