twelfth night
The handwriting looks like Olivia's. Malvolio says, "By my life, this is my lady's hand! These be her very Cs, her Us and her Ts, and thus makes she her great Ps. It is, in contempt of question, her hand." If there was any lingering doubt, Malvolio thinks he recognizes Olivia's style: "Her very phrases!"
maybe like the yellow pants or something
Every production is different: if you said false beard (for Feste), a ring (for Olivia to give to Viola), money, a money bag, luggage (for Sir Andrew to pack), swords (for Viola, Sir Toby, Sir Andrew, Sebastian and Antonio), a letter (for Malvolio) and a Shakespearean guitar (for Feste to play while singing), that might work.
some people must work hard to achieve to get what their destiny requires them of getting while some are born knowing what to do; such as the rich and the poor. The rich are born set with money for life while the poor must work to get anywhere
Everyone will have a different answer to this, because people have different senses of humour. The comedies are not funny all the way through--there are scenes which are very serious and painful in almost all of them. Certain scenes, however, are hilarious. These include the scene in Twelfth Night where Malvolio reads the forged letter, the scenes in Much Ado where Benedick and Beatrice eavesdrop, the scene in Merry Wives where Mrs. Ford and Mrs. Page discover that Falstaff has sent them copies of the same love letter, the scene in Comedy of Errors where Dromio describes his twin brother's wife, and the amateur play in Midsummer Night's Dream.
Rohit Rama
In Act II scene V, Maria writes the letter and then drops it on the garden path for Malvolio to see.
Malvolio was created in 1602.
Malvolio is the steward of Olivia's household in William Shakespeare's play "Twelfth Night." He is a highly self-important and puritanical character who imposes strict rules on the other characters.
the basic moral i guess is that you shouldn't be pompous like malvolio or your friends will play a trick.
Both in love with Olivia. Neither marry at the end of the play.
If music is the food for love, forever let it play!
Malvolio is a Puritan. He is humourless and disapproving. He is also extremely vain.
Personally, I believe that although Malvolio deserved his fate to begin with, he is respected (in a strange way) when he does not use this as a difference in personality. But, I do not think he should be pitied; despite him being the only sad/worse off character in the end.
Malvolio
This quote from Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night" suggests that greatness can arise in various ways - through birth, personal effort, or unexpected circumstances. It encourages people to not fear achieving greatness, as it can come to them in different forms. The message is to be open to the opportunities and paths that could lead to greatness.
The abnormal behavior of Malvolio in the forest made Olivia think that he was suffering from midsummer night madness.