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* UnintentionallyUnsympathetic: In ''My Prince'', "[[AffectionateNickname the Maestro]]" forbids his pupils to act in professional theatres before they finish studying. After he realizes that most of them disobey him and have contracts in minor troupes, he angrily refuses to teach them any longer, and they (including Lida) secretly have a MyGreatestFailure feeling about this and regret quarrelling with him. However, the students in question are adults, several of them – including Lida – with their own families to support, so they simply can't afford to just take the acting courses and forget about income. To many readers, "the Maestro"'s demands seem outright tyrannical.

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* UnintentionallyUnsympathetic: In ''My Prince'', "[[AffectionateNickname the Maestro]]" forbids his pupils to act in professional theatres before they finish studying. After he realizes that most of them disobey him and have contracts in minor troupes, he angrily refuses to teach them any longer, and they (including Lida) secretly have a MyGreatestFailure feeling about this and regret quarrelling with him. However, the students in question are adults, several of them – including Lida – with their own families to support, so they simply can't afford to just take the acting courses and forget about income. To many readers, "the Maestro"'s demands can seem outright tyrannical.
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* UnintentionallyUnsympathetic: In ''My Prince'', "[[AffectionateNickname the Maestro]]" forbids his pupils to act in professional theatres before they finish studying. After he realizes that most of them disobey him and have contracts in minor troupes, he angrily refuses to teach them any longer, and they (including Lida) secretly have a MyGreatestFailure feeling about this and regret quarrelling with him. However, the students in question are adults, several of them – including Lida – with their own families to support, so they simply can't afford to just take the acting courses and forget about income. To many readers, "the Maestro"'s demands seem outright tyrannical.

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