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Quasimodo

Quasimodo and Esmeralda
Quasimodo and Esmeralda
Quasimodo is a central character from French author Victor Hugo's 1831 novel Notre Dame de Paris. Against Hugo's wishes, most English translations of the work have renamed it The Hunchback of Notre Dame, making Quasimodo the title character.

Quasimodo is a tragic protagonist in the story and is a type of noble savage.

Character

Quasimodo was born with physical deformities, which Hugo describes as a huge wart that covers his left eye and a severely hunched back. He is found abandoned in Notre Dame (on the foundlings' bed, where orphans and unwanted children are left to public charity) on a Quasimodo Sunday, the first Sunday after Easter, by the archdeacon Claude Frollo, who adopts the baby and brings him up to be the bell-ringer of the cathedral. Due to the loud ringing of the bells, Quasimodo also becomes deaf.

Looked upon by the general populace of Paris as a monster, Quasimodo later falls in love with the beautiful Gypsy girl Esmeralda and rescues her when she is entangled in a murder. Quasimodo does not, however, earn love or compassion by the end, the main theme of the book being the cruelty of social injustice. Quasimodo also murders his former benefactor, Frollo, who has sealed Esmeralda's doom in hopes of quelling his lust for her, by pushing him off the cathedral. He later goes to the mass grave where the bodies of the condemned are dumped and dies clutching Esmeralda's body; years later, their skeletons are found intertwined.

Quasimodo's name can be considered a pun. Frollo finds him on the cathedral's doorsteps on Quasimodo Sunday and names him after the holiday, the Latin, quasimodo, meaning "almost like". Possibly Hugo hoped to subtly evoke a visceral reaction from readers that the hunchback was "almost like" a human being.

In the novel, he symbolically shows Esmeralda the difference between himself and the handsome, yet superficial Captain Phoebus with whom the girl is infatuated. He places two vases in her room: one is a beautiful crystal vase, yet broken and filled with dry, withered flowers; the other a humble pot, yet filled with beautiful, fragrant flowers. Esmeralda takes the withered flowers from the crystal vase and presses them passionately on her heart.http://www.readprint.com/chapter-5898/Victor-Hugo

A small sculpture of Quasimodo can be found on Notre Dame, on the exterior of the north transept along the Rue de Cloître Notre Dame.

Adaptations

Many film adaptations of The Hunchback of Notre Dame have been made, which take various degrees of liberty with the novel. In the 1996 Disney animation, for example, Quasimodo is neither one-eyed nor deaf, and is capable of fluent speech. Among the actors who have played him over the years are:

Actor Version
Henry Vorins 1905 adaptation
Henry Krauss 1911 Adaptation
Glen White 1917 adaptation
Booth Conway 1922 adaptation
Lon Chaney, Sr. 1923 Adaptation
Charles Laughton 1939 Adaptation
Anthony Quinn 1956 Adaptation
Warren Clarke 1977 Adaptation
Anthony Hopkins 1982 Adaptation
Tom Burlinson (voice) 1986 Adaptation
Tom Hulce (voice) 1996 Disney Adaptation
Mandy Patinkin The Hunchback (1997 film)
Garou 1997-2002, musical

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