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1!!As the play is OlderThanSteam and most twists in Shakespeare's plots are now [[ItWasHisSled widely known]], all spoilers on this page are [[Administrivia/SpoilersOff unmarked]].
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3%% Administrivia/ZeroContextExample entries are not allowed on wiki pages. All such entries have been commented out. Add context to the entries before uncommenting them.
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5[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/5389bc0a_1b0d_487f_b554_bc62d8e5cde4.jpeg]]
6%% Two Gentlemen of Verona by 19th century artist Alfred Elmore
7%%[[caption-width-right:350:some caption text]]
8''Two Gentlemen of Verona'' is one of Creator/WilliamShakespeare's earliest comedies, and perhaps even his earliest play period. The two gentlemen in the title, Proteus and Valentine, are sent by their fathers to the imperial court at Milan, where they both fall in love with the emperor's daughter Sylvia. Unfortunately, Proteus was already in love with his childhood friend Julia. Proteus contrives to have Valentine banished by the emperor (or Duke, the play is just a bit inconsistent) so he can have Sylvia all to himself, but she is repulsed by his treachery. Meanwhile Julia has come to Milan disguised as a boy to try to reunite with Proteus, and Valentine has become the leader of a band of lovable rogues.
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10''Two Gents'' is a controversial play for many reasons, not the least of which is Proteus' attempted rape of Sylvia near the end and his ''very'' quick forgiveness. Many see it as one of Shakespeare's weaker plays, and the hasty ending seems to indicate a fledgling playwright. However, a lot of the tropes Shakespeare would use several times over throughout the course of his career first show up here: the clownish servant, the girl disguised as a boy, etc.
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12In 1971, [[TheMusical a rock musical adaptation of this play]] was successfully produced on Broadway with a book by John Guare and Mel Shapiro, lyrics by Guare, and music by [[Theatre/{{Hair}} Galt MacDermot]], and won the 1972 Tony Award for Best Musical (beating out both ''Theatre/{{Follies}}'' and ''Film/{{Grease}}'').
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14Has nothing to do with [[Theatre/RomeoAndJuliet that other play]], which is also set in Verona.
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16!!Tropes featured in ''Two Gentlemen of Verona'' include:
17* AbsenceMakesTheHeartGoYonder: It doesn't take long for Proteus to forget his vows of eternal love to Julia after he sees Sylvia.
18* AdaptationalVillainy: Proteus is much more villainous than his counterparts from the two stories on which ''The Two Gentlemen'' is based: Felix from ''Diana Enamorada'' and Titus from ''Literature/TheDecameron'' (Day 10, story 8). Felix is likewise a false lover but neither betrays a best friend (there being no Valentine counterpart) nor attempts rape, while Titus remains loyal to and honest with his best friend Gisippus despite being in love with the same woman (although the two of them do conspire to pull a BedTrick on her, which is essentially rape by deception.)
19* AmbiguouslyGay: Despite the play's basically heterosexual LoveDodecahedron, it's not hard for Valentine and Proteus to come off as this to modern viewers. In Shakespeare's day, male friendship was seen as a higher ideal than romantic love between a man and a woman.
20* ArrangedMarriage: Sylvia's father wants her to marry Tyrio, and banishes Valentine when he learns that Valentine's in love with her.
21* ArtisticLicenseGeography: Averted. While the gentlemen and their servants take a ship to get from Verona to Padua (or Milan, the script says both at different times), and all three cities do not have access to the sea, the three cities did have access to an extensive network of canals linking Verona to Padua and Milan. Some of these canals [[http://www.gwu.edu/~ieresgwu/assets/docs/CanalsofMilan.pdf are still around today]], though their transportation uses have been replaced by modern transportation methods.
22%%* BetaCouple: Valentine and Sylvia.
23* CanineCompanion: With all the dysfunctional relationships going on elsewhere, Launce's love for his dog Crab is widely regarded as the purest love in the entire play.
24%%* CloudCuckoolander: Launce.
25* CoupledCouples: The original couples of Valentine and Sylvia and Proteus and Julia end up together by the end of the play.
26* DeusExMachina: The finale, in which all the play's conflicts are resolved because the people who were perpetuating them simultaneously get bored of doing so.
27%%* EasilyForgiven: Proteus at the end of the play.
28* FirstGirlWins: Proteus ends up realizing he's in love with Julia after all, and the ending implies that they're about to get married.
29* HeterosexualLifePartners: Proteus and Valentine, as well as their respective servants, Launce and Speed.
30* IronicName: Speed. (Not entirely ironic. He's said to "have a quick wit"..."And yet I was last chidden for being too slow.")
31* IWillWaitForYou: Julia for Proteus. Until she gets tired of waiting and goes after him.
32%%* TheJeeves: Speed.
33* LongDistanceRelationship: The one between Proteus and Julia doesn't work out so well...
34* LoveMakesYouEvil: Proteus, big-time. After falling in love with Silvia, he betrays his friend Valentine in order to get rid of the competition.
35%%* {{Malaproper}}: Launce.
36* MeaningfulName:
37** Valentine is the patron saint of lovers, a romantic lover and love-interest of Silvia.
38** Proteus was named after a sea monster of mythology who could change its shape, indicating Proteus' inconstancy and treacherousness.
39** A possible one for Silvia, whose name means "spirit of the forest". The forest is where Valentine is banished, and she determinedly follows him there.
40** The servant Speed is said to have a "quick wit". Doubles as an ironic name, since he's constantly running late and "chidden for being too slow".
41** Crab the dog is probably named, not after the animal, but after a "crab-apple", commonly referred to simply as a "crab"--appropriate, since Launce calls him "the sourest-natured dog that lives".
42* MisterMuffykins: The "little jewel" of a dog that Proteus attempted to send to Silvia is implied to have been this; Launce contemptuously refers to it as a "squirrel". It's stolen from Launce by a bunch of marketplace delinquents, at which point he attempts to give his own dog, Crab, to Silvia, the logic being that Crab is [[BiggerIsBetter ten times bigger than the other dog and therefore superior.]]
43* TheMourningAfter: Eglamour apparently vowed perpetual chastity after the lady he loved died.
44* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: Proteus' response toward the end of the play, after realizing just how far he's fallen.
45* NearRapeExperience: Proteus' threatened rape of Sylvia in the finale is interrupted by Valentine.
46* NiceToTheWaiter: Valentine, the NiceGuy, treats his servant, Speed, as a friend. Proteus treats his own servant, Launce, like dirt, and appropriately he turns out to be a heel.
47%%* NobleFugitive: The bandits, and eventually Valentine as well.
48%%What makes them noble?
49* OneSteveLimit: Averted with Sir Eglamour, the Milanese friend of Silvia, who has the same name as the suitor of Julia who's mentioned briefly in act 1.
50* ThePiratesWhoDontDoAnything: We never see the bandits in the forest actually engage in banditry.
51%%* PungeonMaster: Launce, and to a lesser extent Speed.
52%%* SadClown: Launce.
53%%-->"Nay, it will be this hour ere I have done weeping."
54%%* ServileSnarker: Speed.
55%%--> '''Proteus:''' Beshrew me, but you have a quick wit.
56%%--> '''Speed:''' And yet it cannot overtake your slow purse.
57* SparedByTheAdaptation: Silvia is partly based on Celia from ''Diana Enamorada'' who (absent a Valentine counterpart) falls in love with the Julia equivalent's page-boy persona and then dies of grief upon discovering that she cannot have "him".
58* SpellMyNameWithAnS:
59** So...is it "Lance" or "Launce"?
60** For that matter, we've got either "Thurio," "Turio," or "Tyrio."
61%%* StalkerWithACrush: Proteus to Sylvia.
62* StrippingTheScarecrow: In the musical version, Julia and Lucetta sing about getting their SweetPollyOliver costumes from a scarecrow.
63* SweetPollyOliver: Julia dresses up as a man and calls herself "Sebastian".
64* UrineTrouble: In a monologue, Launce recounts a few humiliating experiences of this kind with Crab.
65--> Nay, I remember the trick you served me when I took my leave of Madam Silvia: did not I bid thee still mark me and do as I do? when didst thou see me heave up my leg and make water against a gentlewoman's farthingale? didst thou ever see me do such a trick?
66* TheWomenAreSafeWithUs: When he is made captain of the outlaws, Valentine commands that they do no "outrages" to women.

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