A Midsummer Night's Dream: Characters
Robin Goodfellow (Puck) — A type of fairy called a “puck,” Puck is Oberon’s faithful servant, but is also mischievous and enjoys nothing more than playing tricks and causing trouble. He has all sorts of magical abilities, from changing shape, to turning invisible, to assuming different people’s voices, to transforming a man’s head into an ass’s head. He is not, however, beyond making a mistake, as his mix-up between Demetrius and Lysander makes clear.
Nick Bottom — A weaver who’s supreme confidence in his acting skill convinces the other laborers to give him the lead role of Pyramus in their version of Pyramus and Thisbe. In fact, Bottom is a seriously incompetent actor who understands neither his lines nor theater in general. All this makes him a profoundly funny character. Because he has no idea he’s incompetent, he never ceases to make long, overly dramatic speeches filled with incorrect references and outright absurdities. Even when Puck transforms his head into an ass’s head, Bottom fails to realize it and takes it as unsurprising when Titania falls in love with him. Yet though Bottom is certainly extremely foolish and self-important, he means well.
Hermia — The daughter of Egeus and the beloved of Lysander and Demetrius (at least at the beginning of the play). She is strong-willed, believes in her right to choose her husband based on love, and is fiercely loyal. When crossed, Hermia can become a downright vixen. Hermia is beautiful and has dark hair, though she’s small in stature and somewhat sensitive about it.
Helena — She loves Demetrius, and at one time he returned her love. But before the play begins, he fell in love with Hermia and left Helena in despair. Because of Demetrius’s abandonment of her, Helena lacks self-confidence and self-respect, going so far as to tell Demetrius that she’ll love and follow him even if he treats her like his dog. She’s also a bit conniving and desperate, willing to betray her friend Hermia’s confidence in order to try to win back Demetrius’s love. Physically, she’s tall and blond.
Lysander — An Athenian nobleman who loves Hermia. In many ways, he is the model of a constant lover. He risks death under Athenian law by coming up with the plan to elope into the woods with Hermia, and only strays from his loyalty to Hermia under the influence of the love juice. When the effect of the spell is removed, he returns to his true love.
Demetrius — An Athenian nobleman who also loves Hermia. Unlike Lysander, Demetrius is an inconstant lover. Before the events of the play, he wooed Helena, then rejected her and pursued Hermia. He can be cruel at times, as when he threatens to abandon Helena in the forest, and there’s no indication he would ever have come to return Helena’s love without the influence of the love potion.
Oberon — The King of the Fairies and Titania’s husband. Oberon is willful and demands obedience from his subjects, including his wife. When he’s angry, he’s not above using magic and plots to manipulate and humiliate in order to get his way. Yet at the same time he also seems to like using magic to fix problems he sees around him, particularly those having to do with love. He’s had numerous extra-marital affairs.
Titania — The Queen of the Fairies and Oberon’s wife. Titania is strong willed and independent, willing to fight her husband for control of the changeling boy. She is also powerful. Her fight with her husband causes nature to act strangely, and her fairies always follow her commands. She is not, however, immune to the power of the juice from the love-in-idleness flower. As a lover, she is doting, though jealous. It also seems that, like her husband, through the years she’s had many an extra-marital amorous affair.
Theseus — The Duke of Athens and the fiancé and later the husband of Hippolyta, Theseus is a strong and responsible leader who tries to be fair and sensitive. Though it is his duty to uphold the law, and he does so when both Lysander and Demetrius love Hermia, as soon as the lovers sort themselves out, he overrules Egeus’ demand that Hermia marry Demetrius and let the lovers decide for themselves whom to marry. He also treats the laborers decently, despite the fact that their play is atrocious. Though a fearsome warrior (he captured Hippolyta, an Amazon queen, in battle), he is devoted to making her happy. Theseus is, however, extremely literal-minded, and gives little credence to the “fantasies” the lovers recount of their night in the forest.
Hippolyta — The Queen of the Amazons and Theseus’s fiancé, she is both a fearsome warrior and a loving woman. She also has good common sense and is willing to disagree with Theseus’s assessments of events and to calm him down when he can’t wait for their marriage.
Egeus — Hermia’s father, Egeus is an overbearing and rigid man who cares more about what he wants than his daughter’s desires. He is so vain and uncaring, he is willing to let his daughter die if she won’t do as he tells her.
Peter Quince — A carpenter and the director and main writer of the laborer’s version of Pyramus and Thisbe. In Pyramus and Thisbe, he plays the Prologue.
Francis Flute — A bellows-mender who plays the part of Thisbe in Pyramus and Thisbe.
Tom Snout — A tinker who plays the part of Wall in Pyramus and Thisbe.
Snug — A joiner who plays the part of Lion in Pyramus and Thisbe.
Robin Starveling — A tailor who plays the part of Moonshine in Pyramus and Thisbe.
Philostrate — The Master of Revels for Theseus, he’s in charge of arranging entertainments for the court.
Peaseblossom — One of Titania’s fairies.
Cobweb — One of Titania’s fairies.
Mote — One of Titania’s fairies.
Mustardseed — One of Titania’s fairies.
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