- Lovers (character)
Lovers are
stock character s whose efforts to get together, despite the blocking effect of other characters, constitute the plot of the story.The lovers are
eiron figures, and it has been noted that they often are coloress creatures, sometimes even ingenues next to the blocking figures, thealazon s who prevent their love, such as the "Senex iratus " or the "Bad fiancé ". [Northrop Frye , "Anatomy of Criticism ", p 44, ISBN 0-691-01298-9] TheInnamorati ofCommedia dell'arte represent this by going unmasked in the midst of the other characters. [John Rudlin, "Commedia dell'Arte: An Actor's Handbook", p 62, ISBN 0415-047706] Often, the lovers are incapable of resolving their own problems. The role of rescuing them is often atricky slave 's place. [Northrop Frye , "Anatomy of Criticism ", p 173, ISBN 0-691-01298-9]When the lovers' problems are at least partly internal to them, they have diverged from the stock characters. Florizel and Perdita in "
The Winter's Tale " are such lovers; Perdita's reluctance to be wooed by a man above her (apparent) birth is a trivial problem beside his father's rage at such a match. But in "Much Ado About Nothing ", Claudio and Hero's problems arise from Claudio's being gulled, but are not solved until Claudio shakes off the villain's influence, and so he is not the stock character; still less are Benedick and Beatrice these stock characters, where the obstacles to their love are entirely in their characters.Northrop Frye considered this plot, with colorless characters and all, a central portion of the myth of spring, comedy.When the romance is not the central plot element, the character with whom the hero is romantically involved is called the
love interest .References
External links
* [http://edweb.tusd.k12.az.us/dherring/ap/consider/frye/indexspring.htm analysis of Frye's Myth of Spring]
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