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All’s Well that Ends Well – Longman Dictionary

All’s Well that Ends Well meaning, definition, what is All’s Well that Ends Well: an expression which some people use to s…: Learn more.

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Source: www.ldoceonline.com

Date Published: 5/20/2021

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All’s Well That Ends Well – Wikipedia

All’s Well That Ends Well is a play by William Shakespeare, published in the First Folio in 1623, where it is listed among the comedies.

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Source: en.wikipedia.org

Date Published: 12/11/2021

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“All’s well that ends well” nghĩa là gì? – Journey in Life

Harriet is currently playing in theaters. Critics have been particularly impressed with Erivo’s performance in the lead role, so all’s well …

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all’s well that ends well ​Definitions and Synonyms

Definition of ALL’S WELL THAT ENDS WELL (phrase): saying that bad situation has ended well.

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Source: www.macmillandictionary.com

Date Published: 7/18/2022

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All’s well that ends well Definition & Meaning – Merriam-Webster

—used to say that a person can forget about how unpleasant or difficult something was because everything ended in a good way We almost dn’t make it here, …

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Source: www.merriam-webster.com

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Từ điển Thành ngữ Anh-Việt – Nguyễn Minh Tiến biên soạn

À, vâng, tiền hung hậu kiết mà. – The groom was late for the wedding, but everything worked out all right. All’s well that ends well! * Chú rể đã đến trễ …

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All’s Well That Ends Well | Royal Shakespeare Company

All’s Well That Ends Well … Helena is convinced that she and wealthy Bertram are #CoupleGoals. He’s not so sure. Helena will go to any length to bring her …

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Source: www.rsc.org.uk

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All’s Well That Ends Well – Folger Shakespeare Library

Shakespeare’s All’s Well That Ends Well is the story of its heroine, Helen, more so than the story of Bertram, for whose love she yearns.

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Source: shakespeare.folger.edu

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Two Steps From Hell - All Is Hell That Ends Well (SkyWorld)
Two Steps From Hell – All Is Hell That Ends Well (SkyWorld)

주제에 대한 기사 평가 all’s well that ends well

  • Author: Two Steps From Hell
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  • Date Published: 2012. 10. 31.
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All’s Well that Ends Well

all’s well that ends well all’s well that ends well

SATISFIED used to say that a difficult situation has ended with a good result. It is the title of a humorous play by William Shakespeare about the relationship between the two main characters, Helena and Bertram.

All’s Well That Ends Well

Play by Shakespeare

All’s Well, that Ends Well from the The first page offrom the First Folio of Shakespeare’s plays, published in 1623.

All’s Well That Ends Well is a play by William Shakespeare, published in the First Folio in 1623, where it is listed among the comedies. There is a debate regarding the dating of the composition of the play, with possible dates ranging from 1598 to 1608.[1][2]

Bertram is compelled to marry Helena. Bertram refuses to consummate their marriage. He goes to Italy. In Italy he courts Diana. Helena meets Diana. They perform the bed trick.

The play is considered one of Shakespeare’s “problem plays”, a play that poses complex ethical dilemmas that require more than typically simple solutions.[3]

Characters [ edit ]

King of France

Duke of Florence

Bertram, Count of Roussillon

Countess of Roussillon, Mother of Bertram

Lavatch, a Clown in her household

Helena, a Gentlewoman protected by the Countess 000

Lafew, an old Lord

Parolles, a follower of Bertram

An Old Widow of Florence, surnamed Capilet

Diana, Daughter of the Widow

Steward of the Countess of Roussillon

Violenta (ghost character) and Mariana, Neighbours and Friends of the Widow

A Page

Soldiers, Servants, Gentlemen, and Courtiers

Synopsis [ edit ]

Helena, the low-born ward of a French-Spanish countess, is in love with the countess’s son Bertram, who is indifferent to her. Bertram goes to Paris to replace his late father as attendant to the ailing King of France. Helena, the daughter of a recently deceased physician, follows Bertram, ostensibly to offer the King her services as a healer. The King is sceptical, and she guarantees the cure with her life: if he dies, she will be put to death, but if he lives, she may choose a husband from the court.

The King is cured and Helena chooses Bertram, who rejects her, owing to her poverty and low status. The King forces him to marry her, but after the ceremony Bertram immediately goes to war in Italy without so much as a goodbye kiss. He says that he will only marry her after she has carried his child and wears his family ring. Helena returns home to the countess, who is horrified at what her son has done, and claims Helena as her child in Bertram’s place.

In Italy, Bertram is a successful warrior and also a successful seducer of local virgins. Helena follows him to Italy, befriends Diana, a virgin with whom Bertram is infatuated, and they arrange for Helena to take Diana’s place in bed. Diana obtains Bertram’s ring in exchange for one of Helena’s. In this way Helena, without Bertram’s knowledge, consummates their marriage and wears his ring.

Helena fakes her own death. Bertram, thinking he is free of her, comes home. He tries to marry a local lord’s daughter, but Diana shows up and breaks up the engagement. Helena appears and explains the ring swap, announcing that she has fulfilled Bertram’s challenge; Bertram, impressed by all she has done to win him, swears his love to her. Thus all ends well.

There is a subplot about Parolles, a disloyal associate of Bertram’s: Some of the lords at the court attempt to get Bertram to know that his friend Parolles is a boasting coward, as Lafew and the Countess have also said. They convince Parolles to cross into enemy territory to fetch a drum that he left behind. While on his way, they pose as enemy soldiers, kidnap him, blindfold him, and, with Bertram observing, get him to betray his friends, and besmirch Bertram’s character.

Sources [ edit ]

The decameron containing an hundred pleasant nouels. Wittily discoursed, betweene seauen honourable ladies, and three noble gentlemen, printed by A copy of Boccaccio’s, printed by Isaac Jaggard in 1620.

The play is based on the tale of Giletta di Narbona (tale nine of day three) of Boccaccio’s The Decameron. F. E. Halliday speculated that Shakespeare may have read a French translation of the tale in William Painter’s Palace of Pleasure.[4]

Analysis and criticism [ edit ]

There is no evidence that All’s Well That Ends Well was popular in Shakespeare’s own lifetime and it has remained one of his lesser-known plays ever since, in part due to its unorthodox mixture of fairy tale logic, gender role reversals and cynical realism. Helena’s love for the seemingly unlovable Bertram is difficult to explain on the page, but in performance, it can be made acceptable by casting an extremely attractive actor and emphasising the possibility of a homosexual relationship between Bertram and the “clothes horse” fop, Parolles: “A filthy officer he is in those suggestions for the young earl.” (Act III Sc5.) [5] This latter interpretation also assists at the point in the final scene in which Bertram suddenly switches from hatred to love in just one line. This is considered a particular problem for actors trained to admire psychological realism. However, some alternative readings emphasise the “if” in his equivocal promise: “If she, my liege, can make me know this clearly, I’ll love her dearly, ever, ever dearly.” Here, there has been no change of heart at all.[6] Productions like London’s National Theatre in 2009 have Bertram make his promise seemingly normally, but then end the play hand-in-hand with Helena, staring out at the audience with a look of “aghast bewilderment” suggesting he only relented to save face in front of the King.[7] A 2018 interpretation from director Caroline Byrne at the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse, London, effects Bertram’s reconciliation with Helena by having him make good his vow (Act 2 Scene 2) of only taking her as his wife when she bears his child; as well as Bertram’s ring, Helena brings their infant child to their final confrontation before the king.[8]

A 1794 print of the final scene

Many critics consider that the truncated ending is a drawback, with Bertram’s conversion so sudden. Speculative explanations have been given for this. There is (as always) possibly missing text. Some suggest that Bertram’s conversion is meant to be sudden and magical in keeping with the ‘clever wench performing tasks to win an unwilling higher born husband’ theme of the play.[9] Some consider that Bertram is not meant to be contemptible, merely a callow youth learning valuable lessons about values.[10] Contemporary audiences would readily have recognised Bertram’s enforced marriage as a metaphor for the new requirement (1606), directed at followers of the Catholic religion, to swear an Oath of Allegiance to Protestant King James, suggests academic Andrew Hadfield of the University of Sussex.[11]

Many directors have taken the view that when Shakespeare wrote a comedy, he did intend there to be a happy ending, and accordingly that is the way the concluding scene should be staged. Elijah Moshinsky in his BBC Television Shakespeare version in 1981 had his Bertram (Ian Charleson) give Helena a tender kiss and speak wonderingly. Despite his outrageous actions, Bertram can come across as beguiling; the 1967 RSC performance with Ian Richardson as Bertram by various accounts (The New Cambridge Shakespeare, 2003 etc.) managed to make Bertram sympathetic, even charming. Ian Charleson’s Bertram was cold and egotistical but still attractive.

One character that has been admired is that of the old Countess of Roussillon, which Shaw thought “the most beautiful old woman’s part ever written”.[6] Modern productions are often promoted as vehicles for great mature actresses; examples in recent decades have starred Judi Dench and Peggy Ashcroft, who delivered a performance of “entranc[ing]…worldly wisdom and compassion” in Trevor Nunn’s sympathetic, “Chekhovian” staging at Stratford in 1982.[6][12][13] In the BBC Television Shakespeare production she was played by Celia Johnson, dressed and posed as Rembrandt’s portrait of Margaretha de Geer.

It has recently been argued that Thomas Middleton either collaborated with Shakespeare on the play, or revised it at a later time.[2][14] The proposed revisions are not universally accepted however.

Performance history [ edit ]

No records of the early performances of All’s Well That Ends Well have been found. In 1741, the work was played at Goodman’s Fields, with a later transfer to Drury Lane.[15] Rehearsals at Drury Lane started in October 1741 but William Milward (1702–1742), playing the king, was taken ill, and the opening was delayed until the following 22 January. Peg Woffington, playing Helena, fainted on the first night and her part was read. Milward was taken ill again on 2 February and died on 6 February.[16] This, together with unsubstantiated tales of more illnesses befalling other actresses during the run, gave the play an “unlucky” reputation, similar to that attached to Macbeth, and this may have curtailed the number of subsequent revivals.[15][17]

Henry Woodward (1714–1777) popularised the part of Parolles in the era of David Garrick.[18] Sporadic performances followed in the ensuing decades, with an operatic version at Covent Garden in 1832.[19]

The play, with plot elements drawn from romance and the ribald tale, depends on gender role conventions, both as expressed (Bertram) and challenged (Helena). With evolving conventions of gender roles, Victorian objections centred on the character of Helena, who was variously deemed predatory, immodest and both “really despicable” and a “doormat” by Ellen Terry, who also—and rather contradictorily—accused her of “hunt[ing] men down in the most undignified way”.[20] Terry’s friend George Bernard Shaw greatly admired Helena’s character, comparing her with the New Woman figures such as Nora in Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll’s House.[6] The editor of the Arden Shakespeare volume summed up 19th century repugnance: “everyone who reads this play is at first shocked and perplexed by the revolting idea that underlies the plot.”[21]

In 1896, Frederick S. Boas coined the term “problem play” to include the unpopular work, grouping it with Hamlet, Troilus and Cressida and Measure for Measure.[22]

References [ edit ]

Bibliography [ edit ]

Evans, G. Blakemore, The Riverside Shakespeare , 1974.

, 1974. Fraser, Russell (2003). All’s Well That Ends Well . The New Cambridge Shakespeare (2 ed.). Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-53515-1 .

Lawrence, W. W., Shakespeare’s Problem Comedies , 1931.

, 1931. Price, Joseph G., The Unfortunate Comedy , 1968.

, 1968. Schoff, Francis G., “Claudio, Bertram, and a Note on Interpretation”, Shakespeare Quarterly , 1959.

, 1959. Styan, J. G., Shakespeare in Performance series: All’s Well That Ends Well, 1985.

All’s well that ends well Definition & Meaning

used to say that a person can forget about how unpleasant or difficult something was because everything ended in a good way

All’s Well that Ends Well

all’s well that ends well all’s well that ends well

SATISFIED used to say that a difficult situation has ended with a good result. It is the title of a humorous play by William Shakespeare about the relationship between the two main characters, Helena and Bertram.

All’s well that ends well Definition & Meaning

QUIZ

SHALL WE PLAY A “SHALL” VS. “SHOULD” CHALLENGE?

Should you take this quiz on “shall” versus “should”? It should prove to be a quick challenge!

Question 1 of 6

Which form is commonly used with other verbs to express intention?

Review: All’s Well That Ends Well at The RSC

This isn’t a sponsored post.

BrumHour was invited to see All’s Well That Ends Well by The RSC.

By David Fox twitter.com/DavidFoxTheatre

Review: All’s Well That Ends Well at The RSC

“Love all, trust a few, do wrong to none” William Shakespeare

Directed by Blanche McIntyre

All’s Well That Ends Well is the latest production to hit the stage at The RSC’s Royal Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon. A Shakespearean comedy given a modern twist – and a play that I am less familiar with, so was very interested to see.

Helena, orphaned daughter of a poor physician is adopted by the Countess of Rossilion. She sets her sights on marrying the countess’s son, Bertram. However, he does not want to marry her – so flees, joins the army, and goes off to fight the wars in Italy. Desperate, Helena disguises herself and follows him.

All’s Well That Ends Well Claire Benedict and Rosie Sheehy – Photo by Ikin Yum (c) RSC

All’s Well… is known as one of Shakespeare’s ‘problem plays’. The ‘problem’ being that it does not conform to the traditional ideal of a romantic love story, features characters that can sometimes feel unsympathetic or even dislikeable and have morals that we may question. Billed as an ‘anti-rom-com’ at times has a dark undertone which I think is what makes the play so interesting – as an audience, we question our own feelings toward the situations and characters. Is Bertram right to reject Helena? Is Helena right to follow him? Would we see her as an obsessive stalker? Returning to the ‘problem’ of the play we ask ourselves if the ending is a happy one? Well… that is up to you to decide!

This production brings that action of Shakespeare right up to date, effectively using the backdrop to project social media profiles, YouTube footage, and Instagram bios to highlight characteristics, plot points, or story background. While the production was simplistic in its costume and set design – modern dress and a dome and curtain, with furniture to denote location – I was really impressed with the use of dramatic lighting, sound effects (which were incredibly loud!) and projection of ‘drone footage’ made for an effective end of act one battle scene!

All’s Well That Ends Well – Photo by Ikin Yum (c) RSC

As usual (and expected from the RSC) there were some fantastic performances. I really enjoyed the central performance of Helena and Bertram, played by Rosie Sheehy and Benjamin Westerby, with Sheehy particularly good at portraying Helena’s despair. Gravitas was brought to the play by excellent performances from Claire Benedict as The Countess, and Simon Coates as Lafew. The standout performance for me was Jamie Wilkes as Parolles – the loud-mouthed, dirty-minded braggart of a soldier (and Betram’s friend and companion). A kind of Bear Grills wannabe, convincing the world he is brave, but a coward underneath. His interaction with Lafew was particularly funny, and there were many laughs at his expense!

The RSC’s ‘All’s Well That Ends Well is a great production, timely in its subject matter, and thought-provoking in its presentation. Most importantly it was also very funny! A great night out at the theatre.

All’s Well That Ends Well is at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon, for a limited run until 8th October 2022 – book now via rsc.org.uk/alls-well-that-ends-well

“All’s well that ends well” nghĩa là gì?

Cuối cùng cũng được tung bông. Photo by Lili Kovac

“All’s well that ends well” = Kết cuộc tốt là tốt -> Kết thúc tốt đẹp dù có nhiều khó khăn, trở ngại – tiền hung hậu kiết

Ví dụ

All’s well that ends well but that 1989 season didn’t start on a high note, did it?

I do not know Mayor Vagramov but all’s well that ends well and I am glad he is able to resume his duties as mayor (bổn phận người thị trưởng).

Harriet is currently playing in theaters. Critics have been particularly impressed with Erivo’s performance in the lead role, so all’s well that ends well. As for Roberts, she’ll always have Erin Brockovich. You can read the full interview with Howard at Focus Features.

I’m not privy (riêng tư, bí mật) to Daniel’s motivation for writing the book, but Sikwane made it clear that his was not for any commercial gain. For the “all’s well that ends well” feel to the book, I can’t help but wonder why Daniel didn’t just wait for Kolisi to avail (giúp ích) himself and speak about his own life. On his own terms.

Bin Kuan

ALL’S WELL THAT ENDS WELL (phrase) definition and synonyms

Definition and synonyms of all’s well that ends well from the online English dictionary from Macmillan Education.

This is the British English definition of all’s well that ends well.View American English definition of all’s well that ends well.

Change your default dictionary to American English.

All’s well that ends well Definition & Meaning

used to say that a person can forget about how unpleasant or difficult something was because everything ended in a good way

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All’s Well That Ends Well

“Love all. Trust a few. Do wrong to none”

Helena is convinced that she and wealthy Bertram are #CoupleGoals. He’s not so sure.

After engineering their betrothal, Helena will go to any length to bring her idealised version of romance to life. But what happens when the reality of their relationship doesn’t match up to the fantasy? And do the ends always justify the means?

This offbeat anti-romcom from Director Blanche McIntyre explores the modern resonance of All’s Well That Ends Well, Shakespeare’s enduring dark comedy.

This production contains flashing lights and loud noises, including gunshot sound effects. If you need more detailed information about the performance, please see our Content Advisory.

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