Puck (Shakespeare)
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Puck (Shakespeare)
Appearances in the playThe audience is introduced to Puck in Act II Scene I when one of Titania's fairies encounters Puck and says:
Puck replies,
This exchange between Puck and the fairy helps the audience get to know Puck before the action starts happening so that they see how mischievous and playful he is. Puck is Oberon's servant and is sent by Oberon, who is angry with Titania the fairy queen, to fetch the flower that has been hit by one of cupid's arrows, and is told to apply its juice to the eyelids of Titania, so that when she wakes up, she will fall in love with the next creature that she sees. Oberon also orders Puck to use the love juice to mend the love problems occurring between the Athenian lovers who also happen to be running about in the forest. He mistakenly administers the charm to the sleeping Lysander instead of Demetrius. Puck provides Nick Bottom with a donkey's head so that Titania will fall in love with a beast and forget her attachment to the Changeling Boy, allowing Oberon to take the child from her. (Oberon does so successfully.) Later, Puck is ordered by Oberon to fix the mistake he (Puck) made, by producing a dark fog, leading the lovers astray within it by imitating their voices, and then applying more of the flower to Lysander's eyes, which will reverse the effect. The four lovers are then made to believe that they simply dreamt everything that took place in the forest (hence the play's title A Midsummer Night's Dream). At the end of the play Puck makes a speech directly to the audience:
Puck apologizes to the audience for anything that might have offended them and suggests that they pretend it was a dream. This monologue directly addresses the audience and ties them in to the play. During the midpoint of the play, Puck delivers one of his most memorable lines, and in turn, offers a metacritical comment on both the play and on lovers in real life: "Lord, what fools these mortals be!" -------A Midsummer Nights Dream Act 3, scene 2, 110?115 Other appearances
The Figure of Puck on New York City's Puck Building.
Portrayals of Puck in A Midsummer Night's DreamFilm
Theater
High School Productions with now Famous People
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