This Act 5, Scene 4 is really not understandable for reasonable people.
Listening to Valentine, Proteus apologized.
And what happens? Valentine gives Silvia for thanks to his apology.
Whaaaaaat???!!!
And Julia says this. And she swoons.
Swoon means one faints out of extreme emotion. That’s what we have to act.
But how?
How are we going to go through extreme emotion safely on stage?
Part of us must be really take control over the character. By doing so, let the character go.
Very very difficult.
There are many safe ways to make extreme emotions. If you do not know the safe way, you and the people around you would be in danger (mentally, physically, socially).
So, have a proper acting coach during the rehearsal of this kind of scene.
🎭 The private wound is deepest: O time most accurst, ‘Mongst all foes that a friend should be the worst!
— Valentine, Two Gentlemen of Verona 5-4
[ACTING TIPS]
Valentine, hiding in the woods to see Silvia is about to be raped by his best-friend Proteus, jumped out to stop him.
He means that this is the most hideous time to know his friend is in fact the very enemy.
There are so many ways to play this scene. He speaks some lines before saying this, which means he cannot shout all the time. He appears with shouting, maybe. But after this, I would try “how am I to tell what I feel”.
It is not just cascading his awful feeling.
It is a way to make Proteus understand and see things more clearly so that he could gain his proper mind back.
In fact, after this line, Proteus says sorry, and it feels too easy for me to grasp the change in his mind.
If I make the audience feel the same, the play is not successful.
That’s why I think I need much more time and varied skills to make Proteus really feel sorry, right after Valentine speaks the whole lines.
However, another way of acting and directing is to make Proteus really a villain and he never feel truly sorry and just give a “sorry” word as if it is a true word for Valentine. Yes, a type of LOKI.
Valentine, the true Love of Silvia, who has been bannished from Milan by Silvia’s father the Duke of Milan, is now the big boss of vagabonds in the woods.
We have the same kind of proverb in Japanese: Where you live becomes your ideal place.
I will play this either with sadness, or with contempt, but never forget my Love, and terribly missing her.
🎭 Turio: I’ll after, more to be revenged on Eglamour Than for the love of reckless Silvia.
Proteus: And I will follow, more for Silvia’s love Than hate of Eglamour that goes with her.
Julia: And I will follow, more to cross that love Than hate for Silvia that is gone for love.
— Turio, Proteus, Julia, Two Gentlemen of Verona 5-2
[ACTING TIPS]
What is happening here?
Silvia, locked in the high tower of her father’s castle, finally escaped with the help of Sir Eglamour.
Knowing the fact, these three characters decided to follow her into the woods.
Wow!
I love it!! “Following the loved one who is not in love with you, into the woods” scheme is repeated in The Midsummer Night’s Dream.
It’s fun to play with the echoing phrases of “I’ll after”.
Turio’s love toward Silvia is already known, so he can declare his action.
Proteus has hidden his love toward Silvia to Turio, but already revealed to Sebastian (who is Julia), so he can declare his action to Sebastian.
Julia has not revealed her true state, so she alone share her thought only toward the audience.
It would be fun to see that on stage.
This kind of stage movement in action may be thought as a director’s work, but when the actors all have this director’s eye, this is easily done without the director.
🎭 Julia as Sebastian: Alas, how love can trifle with itself!
— Julia, Two Gentlemen of Verona 4-4
[ACTING TIPS]
Julia, disguised as Sebastian, has ben talking with Silvia. Silvia showed her sympathy toward Julia, saying “I understand how you love her.”
With that comment, Julia realizes how good a person Silvia is. But she is her rival. And she says this after Silvia left here.
In The Twelfth Night, Viola disguised as Cesario also has sympathy toward Olivia, her rival.
Very similar situation.
Since this is a soliloquy, I don’t have to hide anything. I will speak my real and true feeling to share with my audience since they are my other self.