Don Pedro and Claudio
In the street
don pedro and claudio
nothing ;D kabooom
Shakespeare's favourite character name is Antonio. He used it in no less than five different plays, and you haven't said which one. It can't be the Merchant from the Merchant of Venice or the sea-captain from Twelfth Night, since neither of them has a brother. So cross them out. The Antonio from The Tempest is the brother of Prospero, but is not the kind of person who would console Prospero even if he needed consoling. In The Two Gentlemen of Verona, Antonio is Proteus's father, and has a brother, and the brother is sad and needs consoling, because Antonio says to his servant Panthino, "Tell me, Panthino, what sad talk was that, wherewith my brother held you in the cloister?" However, we do not see Antonio speak to his brother about his sadness. That leaves the Antonio in Much Ado about Nothing. He has a brother, called Leonato, who suffers grief because his only daughter Hero has been traduced by her fiancé Claudio. He is pretending to suffer a greater grief because they are pretending that Hero died of the shame. The traducing and the pretence that Hero is dead takes place in the extremely long Act IV Scene 1. Any consoling must come after. Act IV Scene 2 is all about Dogberry, but O look! Act V Scene 1 starts off with Antonio and Leonato. And Antonio's first line in that scene is "If you go on thus, you will kill yourself, and 'tis not wisdom thus to second grief against yourself." In other words, if Leonato spends so much time grieving that he kills himself, he will cause even more grief. In yet other words, Antonio is advising Leonato not to be so violent in his grief.
Leonato.
In the street
don pedro and claudio
Don Pedro and Claudio both publicly accused Hero, who is Leonato's daughter and Antonio's niece, of being loose and sleeping around. They did this in the meanest and cruellest way imaginable, right in the middle of her wedding to Claudio, after which Claudio refused to go through with the wedding.
Antonio has two nieces, Hero, who is Leonato's daughter, Leonato being Antonio's brother, and Beatrice. Beatrice's relationship to Antonio is never specifically named, but since she is Leonato's niece (that is made explicit), she must be either Antonio's daughter or niece. He cannot be her father, as people go around proposing marriage to her without the least thought for him. Presumably she is an orphan, daughter of a sister or brother of Leonato and Antonio.
Don Pedro and Don John are brothers. Leonato is Hero's father. Hero and Beatrice are cousins. Antonio and Leonato are brothers.
He believes Don Pedro is courting Hero for himself.
She has two uncles, Leonato and his brother Antonio.
nothing ;D kabooom
Leonato's brother Antonio says in the first scene that Don Pedro and Claudio were in the war. Beatrice asks after Benedick, who was in the war with them.
To do anything Leonato asks.
Shakespeare's favourite character name is Antonio. He used it in no less than five different plays, and you haven't said which one. It can't be the Merchant from the Merchant of Venice or the sea-captain from Twelfth Night, since neither of them has a brother. So cross them out. The Antonio from The Tempest is the brother of Prospero, but is not the kind of person who would console Prospero even if he needed consoling. In The Two Gentlemen of Verona, Antonio is Proteus's father, and has a brother, and the brother is sad and needs consoling, because Antonio says to his servant Panthino, "Tell me, Panthino, what sad talk was that, wherewith my brother held you in the cloister?" However, we do not see Antonio speak to his brother about his sadness. That leaves the Antonio in Much Ado about Nothing. He has a brother, called Leonato, who suffers grief because his only daughter Hero has been traduced by her fiancé Claudio. He is pretending to suffer a greater grief because they are pretending that Hero died of the shame. The traducing and the pretence that Hero is dead takes place in the extremely long Act IV Scene 1. Any consoling must come after. Act IV Scene 2 is all about Dogberry, but O look! Act V Scene 1 starts off with Antonio and Leonato. And Antonio's first line in that scene is "If you go on thus, you will kill yourself, and 'tis not wisdom thus to second grief against yourself." In other words, if Leonato spends so much time grieving that he kills himself, he will cause even more grief. In yet other words, Antonio is advising Leonato not to be so violent in his grief.
Hero is Leonato's daughter. Leonato is played by Richard Briers.