A Midsummer Night’s Dream - Play Summary

preview_player
Показать описание

A Midsummer Night’s Dream is a comedy written by Shakespeare in the 1590s, around the same time the playwright wrote Romeo and Juliet. With several interweaving storylines, the play takes place on the eve of a wedding between Athenian nobleman, Theseus, and Amazonian queen, Hippolyta, on Midsummer’s Eve. This night is traditionally celebrated and commonly associated with temporary insanity and transformation.

The play opens as Theseus, the Duke of Athens, prepares the city for a large festival to mark his imminent marriage to Hippolyta, the queen of the Amazons.

He is interrupted when Egeus, another nobleman, enters accompanied by his beautiful daughter, Hermia; the man she loves, Lysander; and the man Egeus wants Hermia to marry, Demetrius. Egeus begs Theseus to invoke the ancient Athenian right to either force his daughter to marry Demetrius or have the right to kill her. Instead, Theseus declares that Hermia can either marry Demetrius or join a nunnery.

Next, Lysander convinces Hermia to sneak into the woods to marry him the following night. She agrees. But Hermia’s friend Helena is envious of Demetrius’ affection for Hermia. Lysander tells Helena of his and Hermia’s secret plan to elope. In turn, Helena decides to tell Demetrius about this plan, thereby sabotaging Demetrius’s engagement to Hermia.

Meanwhile, in the forest, a mischievous servant sprite, Robin Goodfellow or “Puck,” witnesses a quarrel between the king and queen of the fairies, Oberon and Titania. Titania has possession of a “changeling boy," whom Oberon wants for himself. When Titania leaves, Oberon vows to get revenge on her, ordering Puck to find some pansies, the juice of which has the magical power to make a person love the first thing he or she sees upon waking up. Oberon plans to drop the juice into Titania’s eyes while she sleeps so that she will fall in love with an animal when she awakes.

Meanwhile, Peter Quince and a group of local artisans plan to perform a tragedy about two fictional star-crossed lovers, Pyramus and Thisbe, for Theseus and Hippolyta’s wedding. Nick Bottom, a weaver acting in the play, is overeager and wants to play several roles at once, but Quince tells him to play only Pyramus. Puck stumbles upon the actors’ rehearsal and decides to transform Bottom’s head into that of a donkey.

Later, finding Titania asleep in the forest, Oberon drops the pansy juice into her eyes. Titania awakes to see Bottom and immediately falls in love with him.

Meanwhile, Demetrius and Helena argue after she has told Demetrius about Hermia’s plan to elope with Lysander, in the hopes that Demetrius will give up on Hermia and fall in love with her. But Demetrius insists he does not love Helena, only Hermia. Oberon overhears this and decides to make Demetrius fall in love with Helena, telling Puck he will drop the pansy juice into the eyes of an "Athenian man” in the woods.

Lysander and Hermia decide to rest. Puck enters and mistakes the sleeping Lysander for the Athenian man Oberon mentioned, dropping the juice into Lysander’s eyes instead of Demetrius’s. Abandoned by Demetrius, Helena spots Lysander and shakes him awake to see if he is dead or asleep. Opening his eyes, Lysander immediately declares his love for Helena and chases her deeper into the woods.

Then, Helena accidentally wakes a sleeping Demetrius, whose eyes Oberon has charmed with pansy juice in an attempt to fix the situation. Opening his eyes, Demetrius joins Lysander in falling in love with Helena. Hermia arrives and accuses Helena of stealing Lysander from her, while Helena is convinced the others are mocking her.

Upset with the mess Puck has made, Oberon orders the sprite to fix the situation by making Lysander and Hermia fall in love again and changing Bottom’s donkey head back to a human one. Oberon lovingly wakes Titania, who believes her love for Bottom was just a dream.

On a crisp morning stroll, the soon-to-be-married Hippolyta and Theseus arrive with Egeus at the place where Hermia, Lysander, Helena, and Demetrius are asleep. Waking up, the four recount their hazy memories of the previous night. Lysander declares his love for Hermia, while Demetrius says he is in love with Helena. Seeing this, Theseus declares that he will go against Egeus’ wishes and allow the two couples to marry as part of his own wedding that day.

Meanwhile, believing his memories of the night were a dream, Bottom and the other actors rush to the wedding. They perform the play so haphazardly that the guests believe it is a farce, instead of a tragedy. Then, Puck breaks the fourth wall by addressing the audience directly, and in a final twist, suggests that what we have been watching might have been a dream too.
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

I'm reading this at school and completely confused, thank you for this!

dakotadanger
Автор

William Shakespeare books are known to be complicated even this one but thanks to you it more easier for me because I am having a literature exam tomorrow

adefemiolugbenga
Автор

why is this so weird, like i dont even remember who is who

aaushh
Автор

I’m reading this at school and I was confused but thanks to you I understand it now good video ❤️

idk_tube
Автор

Watched this play at Shakespeare in the park last night and managed to follow about 25% of the plot... had no idea what to expect... should have read a summary prior...

ordoabchao
Автор

Came here just to literally know who Oberon truly is in Fate

brilleangeloagtarap
Автор

WE ARE GOING TO DO THIS PLAY AT SCHOOL AND AND I HAVE PUCK'S ROLE 😭😭😨 Gotta get sassy 💋

gabrielarias
Автор

We are doing this as an act in our English lesson
So thank you for explaining me!!

kapelsu
Автор

I'm currently reading this at school. This is gonna a great help

kwesiafful
Автор

Thanks for making me to understand this story. It was just good.

mamagnasheriff
Автор

I'm sorry...I forgot to thank you the first day I watched your video...😅..It may be short but direly helpful especially for the students who don't have any first hand knowledge about this famous play..It really did help me a lot...Thank you !!!

PRANJALKUMARDAS-txyt
Автор

Now summarize The Absolutely True Diary of a Part Time Indian / A Raisin in the Sun / Huckleberry Finn! Holes!

kaiumeda
Автор

This helped me so much I’m doing this for my GCSE’s for drama and I didn’t understand it one bit

crystalrosee.
Автор

William Shakespeare plays are be far the dumbest things i have ever read or seen, the way he writes and speck is so nuts poor people back then and now for watching it. sad

klasv
Автор

I'm going to be Helena while performing this in a theatre in London soon, my teacher sent us the link to this to help us understand the play and it was very helpful, thank you! It didn't completely water down the play and instead made it incredibly understandable for dumb people like myself

tuchaosborne
Автор

I finally understand this book, thank you so much!

stuartfamily
Автор

TFSTrunks: "Who's that?"
TFSPiccolo: "That's the Athenian"
T: "No it's not"
TFSTien: "So you're saying that's not the Athenian whose eyes you wanted anointed?"
T: "No, I don't even.."
TFSKrillin: "But you _said_ two Athenians, right?"
T: "Yes, but that's not one of them!"
TFSVegeta: _"Why didn't you tell us what they looked like then!"_
T: "I only ever met the two!"
V: *"WELL LOOK AT THAT, SO DID WE!"*
TFSGoku: "If we saiyans have offended, think but this, and all is mended..."

tzisorey
Автор

Legends watching this before an literature Exam, This is there for me 7th grade finals

RandomDudeOnline
Автор

How many pages are there in the original version of "A Midsummer Night's Dream" published in the year 1590?

ma_chaine
Автор

oh my word i was struggling with the book ( we're writing a test tomorrow about it ) and this video helped me understand everything in the book! i appreciate it

AnganathiNonyongo