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The Rover or The Banish'd Cavaliers is a play in two parts written by the English author Aphra Behn. It was a very popular Restoration comedy. Behn had famously worked as a spy for Charles II against the Dutch. However, Charles was slow to pay her for her services and slow to meet his promises, if he ever paid her at all, and Behn sought to make money first with her poetry, and then with plays and novels. The Rover appeared on the stage in 1677, and it was popular enough that a second part appeared in 1681. The play appeared for a long run, enabling Behn to make a fair income from it (the author received the proceeds from the box office every third night the play ran). Character listMEN
WOMEN.
Anne Marshall played Angellica Bianca in the original 1677 production; Elizabeth Barry was Helena. PlotBehn's work should always be read with an eye toward her contemporary political world. She was a Royalist, and her works frequently treat Puritans and democracy roughly. The subtitle "Banish'd Cavaliers" is a reference to the world of exile that the cavalier forces experienced during the interregnum. Behn based her play on Thomas Killigrew's Thomaso, or The Wanderer (1664). It features multiple plots, dealing with the amorous adventures of a group of Englishmen in Naples at Carnival time. The "rover" of the play's title is Willmore, a rake and naval captain, who falls in love with a young woman named Hellena, who has set out to experience love before her brother sends her to a convent. Complications arise when Angellica Bianca, a famous courtesan who falls in love with Willmore, swears revenge on him for his betrayal. In another plot, Hellena's sister Florinda attempts to marry her true love, Colonel Belvile, rather than the man her brother has selected. The third major plot of the play deals with the provincial Blunt, who becomes convinced that a girl has fallen in love with him but is humiliated when she turns out to be a prostitute and a thief. Contemporary feminist scholars often focus on the play's many instances of women vulnerable to rape, and the tragic results of Angellica's being jilted by Willmore. They see in these plot elements a protest against the powerlessness of women in Behn's time. Willmore (who may have been a parallel to Charles II or John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester) proved to be an extremely popular character, and four years later Behn wrote a sequel to the play. King Charles II was himself a fan of The Rover, and received a private showing of the play. Scene breakdown and summaryAct IScene 1 Scene 2 Florinda, Hellena, and Valeria (their cousin) enter dressed like Gypsies, and promise to tell the men's fortunes. Willmore and Hellena flirt with one another; Hellena reveals she is destined to be a nun, to which Willmore replies “There’s no sinner like a young saint.” Hellena agrees to meet Willmore again later, presumably for a sexual liaison; he swears to love only her. Meanwhile, Lucetta, a "jilting wench," begins to seduce Blunt. Florinda reads Belvile’s palm and begins to set up a meeting with him when she sees her brother approaching. She hastily gives him a letter and runs off with Hellena and Valeria. Pedro merely passes by. Florinda's letter contains instructions for Belvile to come to her garden at ten that night and carry her off. Blunt sneaks off with Lucetta. The other men, who think of Blunt as a foolish provincial, realize that he has all their money with him, and hope that he does not come to harm. Frederick informs his friends of a new courtesan in Naples: Angellica Bianca. Act IIScene 1 Angellica's servants hang up a portrait of her outside of her house. The Englishmen are astounded by her beauty but leave when they realize they do not have the money to buy her--one thousand crowns a month. Don Pedro enters and sees the picture and the price. He has the money and runs off to fetch it. Angellica laments that no one has taken her up because of the high price, but when she learns of Don Pedro and Don Antonio, both of whom are rich, she decides to pursue them, then goes back inside. Pedro soon enters from one side of the stage, and Antonio enters from the other; both men are masked. Antonio is also struck by Angellica's portrait and wonders out loud if he could get away with sleeping with Angellica and still marry Florinda. At the mention of Florinda, Pedro recognizes Antonio. Angellica enters and bows to Antonio, who removes his mask and confirms his identity. Antonio tries to pay for Angellica, but Pedro steps up and declares that he was there first. They fight. Willmore and Blunt enter and break them up. Pedro challenges Antonio to a duel the next day over Angellica. Antonio accepts; Pedro exits. Meanwhile, Willmore sees a smaller picture of Angellica and tries to steal it. Antonio tells him to put it back. Willmore refuses, saying that Antonio has the money to pay for the real thing. Angellica enters just in time to see another fight break out: soon all the Spaniards are fighting Willmore and Blunt. Belvile and Frederick enter and join their English comrades. Angellica asks Willmore to speak with her inside. Willmore goes, despite Belvile and Frederick's fears that Angellica is angry with him. Scene 2 Act IIIScene 1 Hellena, who has seen and heard everything Willmore said, comes out of hiding and pretends as if nothing has transpired. As Willmore begins to flirt with her again, Angellica enters, masked, and sees Willmore betraying the vows he made to her. Hellena finally reveals her face to Willmore, who praises her beauty. This is the last straw for Angellica. She orders one of her servants to find out who Hellena is and storms out. Hellena asks what Willmore was doing in Angellica's house; he denies that anything transpired. Hellena then attacks him, quoting to him what he had just said about Angellica. She makes Willmore promise never to see Angellica again. Meanwhile, Florinda and Valeria are testing Belvile’s loyalty to Florinda by trying to seduce him while he doesn’t know who they are. He stands firm. The women exit, but Florinda leaves Belvile with a jewel (most likely a locket of some sort) so that he “may repent the opportunity you have lost by your modesty.” Belvile recognizes Florinda’s picture in the locket and resolves to rescue her that night, with Willmore and Frederick's help. Scene 2 Scene 3 Scene 4 Scene 5 Scene 6 Antonio enters, hoping that his page has paid Angellica so he can sleep with her. Willmore sees this and starts a fight with Antonio. Antonio falls, wounded; Willmore believes he has killed Antonio and runs off. Belvile runs in, fearing that it is Willmore who has been hurt. Soldiers enter and arrest Belvile, believing him to be the murderer. Antonio finds his strength and orders Belvile taken to his house. Act IVScene 1 Scene 2 Just then, Willmore and Frederick enter, see Belvile and greet him. The surprise makes Belvile drop his mask. Pedro now refuses to allow the wedding, since it was Antonio’s fight, not Belvile’s. He drags Florinda away, accusing her of trying to trick him. Belvile, furious at being thwarted yet again, turns on Willmore and chases him away. Angellica enters with her servants Moretta and Sebastian, furious that Willmore loves Hellena. Sebastian runs after Willmore to bring him back. Angellica accuses Willmore of having another woman. Willmore, as usual, attempts to charm her back. Hellena enters disguised as a man. She decides to interfere, approaching Angellica pretending to be one of Hellena's servants. She tells a story about a young girl who fell in love and was left standing at the altar because her lover came to Angellica. Then she reveals the lover to be Willmore. Angellica is moved by the story, Willmore is only excited and impatient to find out who the woman in question is. Suddenly, Willmore recognizes Hellena and figures out what’s going on. He turns to Angellica and starts describing Hellena as a Gypsy, ugly, a monkey, etc. He tells Hellena to go back to her mistress and tell her “till she be handsome enough to be loved, or I dull enough to be religious, there will be small hopes of me.” Angellica is outraged and sends Willmore away. Willmore exits with an aside in which he says he plans to try to win Hellena back. Scene 3 Frederick comes in and relates Blunt’s misadventures to Belvile and Pedro. They all go off to find him. Florinda reenters, still being chased by Willmore. Then Hellena arrives and sees Willmore pursuing this "unknown" woman. She sends a page to find out where they go. Scene 4 Scene 5 Act VScene 1 Florinda runs in, still masked and pursued by Pedro. She is saved when Valeria arrives and persuades Pedro to leave by telling him that Callis knows where Florinda is hiding. Once he is gone, Florinda removes her mask. Valeria tells Belvile and Florinda to get married quickly, before Pedro returns. Frederick and Valeria decide to get married as well. Belvile sends a boy to fetch a priest. Frederick and Blunt realize that they almost raped Florinda and apologize, returning the ring. Belvile, Florinda, Valeria, and Frederick exit to get married; Blunt goes off to see a tailor. Willmore stays behind to guard against Pedro’s return. Angellica enters, pointing a pistol at Willmore; she rages at him while threatening him with the gun. Willmore offers to pay her for her services; she refuses. As she prepares to kill him, Don Antonio enters with his arm in a sling. He takes the gun from Angellica, then recognizes Willmore as the man who stole Angellica’s picture. He offers to shoot Willmore. Pedro enters. Angellica decides to let Willmore live, and leaves. Don Pedro asks why Don Antonio missed the duel; Antonio tells him what happened, and leaves in a huff. Pedro decides to give Florinda to Belvile in revenge. Willmore informs him that the marriage has already occurred. Pedro exits. Hellena enters, still in boy’s clothes, and banters with Willmore, who wants to sleep with her but not marry her. Hellena finally convinces him to wed her. Pedro, Belvile, Florinda, Frederick, and Valeria enter. They learn of Willmore and Hellena’s engagement and Pedro approves, tired of fearing for his sister's honor (virginity). Blunt enters in a Spanish habit, looking ridiculous. Music plays and masquers from Carnival come in dancing. The play ends with vows of love between Hellena and Willmore. Behn's sourceBehn based The Rover on Thomas Killigrew's comedy Thomaso, or The Wanderer, a two-part, ten-act closet drama first printed in 1664.[1][2][3] In a postscript to the published play, Behn claims that the plot was her own, but that "hints" were taken from Killigrew's work. Here, however, Behn was being "disingenuous about her indebtedness to Thomaso,"[4] since in reality "Almost the whole of the plot, as well as many details, were borrowed" from Killigrew's work.[5] Behn is widely credited with a vast improvement in Killigrew's "indulgent and inert"[6] drama. "Behn is right to claim that her play is wittier, and literary history has endorsed her belief in her work."[7] Selected quotes
Selected modern performancesThe Rover has gained notoriety as a viable modern stage play despite a long absence from the Western stage. Despite adaptations by the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1986 (Swan Theatre) and 1987 (Mermaid Theatre in London), where the play's setting was altered to take place in the West Indies, most performances of the script in the past 25 years have been by experimental or smaller troupes. Other noted productions include:
References
Performance: Chinese Culture University, Taipei, 2008 External links
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