Olivia's suitors are Duke Orsino (also called Count Orsino in the play) and Sir Andrew Aguecheek (drinks with Olivia's uncle, Sir Toby Belch)
Twelfth Night (Epiphany)
Three olives is a brand of vodka.
Penelope told the suitors that she would weave a tapestry, and once she was finished, she would marry one of the suitors. Penelope weaved during the day, but secretly undid her work at night.
Three Suitors and a Dog - 1913 was released on: USA: 7 February 1913
As you like it Macbeth Much a do about nothing Richard the third Romeo and Juliet Twelfth Night
No. They are two different plays. They do both feature girls who dress up like boys but so do three other Shakespeare plays. Perhaps you are misled because Twelfth Night does have the alternate title "What You Will" which means sort of the same thing as "As You Like It".
"Three Suitors, One Husband" is a play by playwright Alexander Ostrovsky. The characters in the play include the protagonist Liza, her three suitors— Porphyry, Yaroslav, and Karandyshev— and her obnoxious guardian Efremov. The plot revolves around Liza's attempts to navigate the suitors and secure a happy marriage.
The cast of Three Suitors and a Dog - 1913 includes: Joyce Peyton Ruth Roland as Ethel
The question is actually faulty; there is no Shakespeare play that takes place between dusk on Jan 5 and dawn on Jan 6. The question comes from an episode of The Weakest Link, but they flat out made a mistake. The answer is supposed to be Twelfth Night, because the real life Twelfth Night (i.e. the twelfth day of Christmas, and the day which marks the start of Epiphany) is indeed dawn on Jan 5 to dusk on Jan 6. However, the play is not set on Twelfth Night at all (nowhere in the play does it say what time of year it is, and the play takes place over the course of three months), the only reason it's called that is because it was originally written to be performed at a Twelfth Night celebration. Whoever came up with that question obviously just assumed that a play called Twelfth Night must be set on Twelfth Night, but didn't know anything about the play and didn't bother to check.
julliette
In Homer's "The Odyssey," Penelope had been putting off the suitors for about three years. She cleverly delays the suitors by claiming she must finish weaving a burial shroud for her father-in-law, Laertes. Each night, she secretly unravels her work, maintaining the ruse and holding off the suitors until Odysseus returns.
He marries her about three and a half minutes after meeting her. It's doubtful that he could have acquired any depth of love in that time.