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King Lear (Theatre)

 King Lear (Theatre)
type
TVTItem
 King Lear (Theatre)
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King Lear (Theatre)
 King Lear (Theatre)
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KingLear
 King Lear (Theatre)
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As the play is Older Than Steam and most twists in Shakespeare's plots are now widely known, all spoilers on this page are unmarked.A tragedy by William Shakespeare, though the story is older than that, first found in the Historia Regum Britanniae (the tragic ending isn't, though).Lear, the elderly king of Britain, decides to step down from the throne and potentially divide his kingdom into three parts among his daughters, Goneril, Regan and Cordelia. But before he officially seals the deal, he declares that the largest share will go to the daughter who loves him best. Much butt-kissing ensues — all except from the youngest, Cordelia. Despite being Lear's favorite and having the most love for her father, Cordelia doesn't resort to flattery, declaring that she has been a dutiful daughter towards Lear, and that her sisters' love for their father may be half-heartedly insincere because they have husbands; Cordelia further says that her husband will share half the burden and duties. The senile King Lear is so enraged by her declaration that he banishes her as well as his own close friend the Earl of Kent who speaks in her defense. Cordelia's share is divvied up between her elder sisters and Lear announces his retirement, though he insists on keeping one hundred knights, the respect and title of a king, and free room and board at his daughters' homes.It doesn't take long before Lear wears out his welcome. His daughters, resentful and wary from the outset, quickly tire of the knights causing a ruckus, not to mention the lavish expense of keeping them on staff. Lear flips his lid once more and, rather than compromising with his daughters, he stubbornly denounces them. When Goneril and Regan double down by refusing to take in his knights, Lear, too, refuses their shelter, and is caught out in a thunderstorm while both his followers and his sanity desert him. He is left with only his Fool, the disguised Earl of Kent, Edgar, and Gloucester (after he's ousted from his estate by his bastard son Edmund) to care for him.A closely related subplot follows another family, that of the Earl of Gloucester, another of Lear's close friends. His younger son, the illegitimate bastard Edmund, tricks Gloucester into thinking his legitimate son Edgar is plotting to kill him. Gloucester is duped, and Edgar goes on the run, disguising himself as Tom O'Bedlam, a homeless madman, to escape capture. Edgar falls in with his godfather Lear, while Edmund, resentful of the world who judges him simply because he was born a bastard, decides to show everyone what a bastard he can be and seduces not just one but both of Lear's elder daughters. With a few deft moves, he goes from inheriting nothing to being potentially the most powerful man in Britain.And then the kingdom is attacked by Cordelia's new hubby, the King of France ... hilarity does NOT ensue.King Lear is an extremely powerful play, and for quite some time was unpopular with critics and audiences because it made what was once a traditional Happily Ever After Fairy Tale ending massively depressing instead. Honest children are punished while villains prosper, the good characters suffer through madness and despair and are forced to extreme measures merely to survive, a king is forced to face his own sins, and one character is tortured brutally on-stage. The kingdom is left a shattered mess, and, if done right, so is the audience. The ending is so depressing that it was fully rewritten in 1681, so Cordelia survives and marries Edgar; the revision was more popular than the original for over a hundred years. After World War II and the horrors people saw in it, the original story of Lear made a comeback. Today, it is considered one of Shakespeare's great tragedies, along with Hamlet, Macbeth, and Othello.The play has been adapted several times for the screen, but no adaptation is more famous than the one that moves it to Japan, changes the daughters into sons, and adds a whole bunch of other stuff, Ran. See also Shakespeare Unwrapped, an Irish Edutainment show that dramatizes the play with a Younger and Hipper cast.It's also been adapted into literature, such as Jane Smiley's 1991 novel A Thousand Acres, itself adapted into a movie. A reimagining of the story from the perspective of the Fool was written by Christopher Moore.Lastly, a single line from this play had inspired Robert Browning to write a poem, "Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came". That poem had in turn become the inspiration for The Dark Tower series by Stephen King.
 King Lear (Theatre)
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DBTropes
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_113480b7
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Canon Foreigner
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_113480b7
comment
Canon Foreigner: In relation to the source material by Geoffrey of Monmouth, the Earl of Gloucester, his sons Edgar and Edmund, and the Earl of Kent were neither present in the Historia Regum Britanniae nor had any specific analogues.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_11cac491
type
Tragedy
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_11cac491
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Tragedy: This is one of Shakespeare's classic four tragedies. Lear's actions bring nothing but doom and misery upon those around him, and his Fatal Flaw is the cause of most of them.
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Villain's Dying Grace
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_1207d30
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Villain's Dying Grace: A complete My God, What Have I Done? moment from Edmund as he dies allows the King to be rescued. However, they were too late to save Cordelia.
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Anyone Can Die
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_1237828f
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A lot of productions will portray Cornwall's death sadly, if his and Regan's marriage is shown to be a happy one. It does mark the start of Anyone Can Die.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_14beeefd
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Darker and Edgier
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_14beeefd
comment
Darker and Edgier: Compared to the legend it was based on. Not only did Shakespeare alter the ending so that Lear and Cordelia both die, he also introduced the subplot of Gloucester and his sons, which contributes further to the darker tone.
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Does This Remind You of Anything?
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_14ed6ab7
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Does This Remind You of Anything?: Regan's response to Gloucester's Eye Scream is often portrayed as... excitable to say the least.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_14fdbb05
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Mirth to Power
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_14fdbb05
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Mirth to Power: The Fool, of course. His jokes and clowning often have a pretty scratching criticism of Lear and his conduct attached to them.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_15b09af9
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Heel–Face Door-Slam
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_15b09af9
comment
Heel–Face Door-Slam: Edmund uses his last breath to repeal his death sentence upon Cordelia. She has already been hanged before the order gets there.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_15b2cab3
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Tempting Fate
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_15b2cab3
comment
Tempting Fate: Edgar, after he's wrongly accused and has to disguise himself as a homeless madman, tries to console himself by saying that he has reached Rock Bottom and things can only get better for him. Immediately after, he meets his father who has just been blinded.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_15f42962
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Parents in Distress
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_15f42962
comment
Parents in Distress: As soon as old Gloucester's eyes are gouged out, Edgar seeks him out and helps him meet with Lear in Dover. When Lear is wandering the countryside in the midst of a Sanity Slippage, Cordelia sends soldiers to rescue her father, so the doctors can treat him.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_19851b86
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The Sociopath
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_19851b86
comment
The Sociopath: Regan through and through. She casts her aged father out into the storm, tortures Gloucester and murders one of her own servants. She seems to adore violence, as does her husband.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_19d06ef7
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A Father to His Men
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_19d06ef7
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A Father to His Men: When Lear exiles Cordelia, Kent attempts to appease Lear by declaring his steadfast loyalty to him:
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_19d06ef7
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_1dfd19f9
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Papa Wolf
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_1dfd19f9
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Papa Wolf: Lear kills the hangman that was hanging Cordelia.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_1e7487cd
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Breaking the Fourth Wall
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_1e7487cd
comment
Breaking the Fourth Wall: The Fool. After a silly prophetic speech:
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_1e7487cd
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_20f689e9
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Adaptational Villainy
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_20f689e9
comment
Adaptational Villainy: Edmund is made even worse as he attempts to abduct and rape Cordelia and dies without repealing his order to hang her.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_24321e44
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Only Sane Man
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_24321e44
comment
Only Sane Man: Kent is the one who calls Lear out on the ridiculousness of dividing the kingdom and banishing his youngest daughter. He's also sane enough to realise that Lear will still need him once his daughters are in power. Also, The Fool, who is ironically far more wise than any other character.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_259d5879
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Anachronism Stew
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_259d5879
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Anachronism Stew: King Lear is a legendary Brythonic monarch said to have reigned in the 800s BC. All the terminology used in the play however is either contemporary to Shakespeare's time or only a few centuries before that. Lampshaded by the Fool, who, after parodying Merlin's Prophecy, notes that Merlin hasn't been born yet. Shakespeare was no stranger to anachronism, but this play absolutely runs with it. The legendary King Leir of Britain is supposed to have lived around the 8th century BC. At that time, there was no "King of France", "Duke of Cornwall", "Duke of Albany", "Duke of Burgundy, "Earl of Gloucester" or "Earl of Kent". Nor, for example, was there a St Mary Bethlehem (Bedlam) Hospital, from which Edgar takes his madman's identity. One of the most egregious anachronisms is when Kent professes "to eat no fish", implying that he is declaring himself to be a Protestant and not a Catholic - centuries before even the most rudimentary Christianity existed. Note also that the usage of this trope is true to the source material. In fact, many of the anachronisms listed above originated in the Historia Regum Britanniae.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_28a5213a
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Small Name, Big Ego
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_28a5213a
comment
Small Name, Big Ego: Cornwall - a mere Duke - stocks the king's messenger for speaking out of turn. To put it from a modern perspective, it's the equivalent to humiliating someone like an ambassador. This also comes back into play when Cornwall ties up and tortures Gloucester in his own household.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_2a6bf668
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Inadequate Inheritor
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_2a6bf668
comment
Inadequate Inheritor: The play opens with Lear dividing the kingdom amongst his daughters based on their professions of love, which proves to be a mistake when the actions of Goneril and Regan betray their words, and Cordelia goes out to seek Lear and nurse him from insanity to health. The elder Gloucester's naivety leads him to hastily believe Edmund's forged letter, which wrongfully portrays Edgar as scheming against his father, and Gloucester foolishly makes Edmund the chief heir.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_2af6bbeb
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Break the Haughty
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_2af6bbeb
comment
Break the Haughty: The entire play does this to Lear: from a haughty king to a broken man who ends up having a Death by Despair. Gloucester. Observe how his behaviour changes after he becomes blind. The final scene is a big one for Goneril. Her affair with Edmund is exposed, Albany finally stands up to her, she's reduced to poisoning her own sister and her lover is killed in front of her. Cornwall thinks he's doing this to Kent-disguised-as-Caius. He's just caught what he thinks is a servant fighting, who then mouths off to a Duke.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_2af6bbeb
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_2cac89cf
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The Ingenue
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_2cac89cf
comment
The Ingenue: Cordelia is a classic example, in contrast to her two scheming sisters. Notably Regan and Goneril have a sexual aspect to them (as they both have affairs with Edmund), whereas Cordelia's marriage is depicted as a loving one. She does however prove to be Silk Hiding Steel.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_2d4a6d8c
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Sophisticated as Hell
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_2d4a6d8c
comment
Sophisticated as Hell: Kent's speech to Oswald before he brawls with him:
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_2dae4381
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My Master, Right or Wrong
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_2dae4381
comment
My Master, Right or Wrong: Ironically, the primary motivation for Kent and Oswald. Kent disguises himself to protect Lear even after being exiled for calling him on his bullshit; meanwhile, Oswald works for Goneril — who appears to be something of a Reasonable Authority Figure towards her servants — rather than her father and his small army, and is quite clear that his responsibility is to keep her household running according to her wishes.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_2dae4381
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_2dd7a113
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French Jerk
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_2dd7a113
comment
French Jerk: Averted. The King of France is by far the more decent of Cordelia's suitors and proves a good and loyal husband to her. Although if you want to get technical, Burgundy is a region of France too - and he refuses to marry Cordelia when she's disinherited.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_304f9e0b
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Flowery Insults
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_304f9e0b
comment
Flowery Insults: In Act II, Scene 2 Kent insults Oswald as "Thou whoreson zed! thou unnecessary letter!"
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_319e4a2f
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Even Evil Has Standards
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_319e4a2f
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Even Evil Has Standards: One of Cornwall's servants finds the gouging of Old Gloucester's eyes excessively brutal:
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_33d5b7f2
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Adapted Out
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Adapted Out: Neither the King of France nor the Fool appear.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_34889673
type
Gender Flip
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_34889673
comment
An Irish theatre company called Thirteenth Floor did a version in 2017 where The Fool is entirely a figment of Lear's imagination, also giving him a Gender Flip to imply that it's the ghost of his dead wife. Very little had to be changed, aside from the other characters not being able to see her. Ironically The Fool continued to appear in the background after her final line.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_34dcfc96
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Kick the Dog
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_34dcfc96
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Kick the Dog: After Gloucester is blinded, Regan orders the servants to throw him out into the storm. It should also be said that all this happened within Gloucester's own home.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_34e2157
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Deliberate Injury Gambit
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_34e2157
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Deliberate Injury Gambit: Edmund cutting himself to frame Edgar for assaulting him. "I have seen drunkards do more than this in sport."
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_371fdcd1
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Royal Bastard
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_371fdcd1
comment
Royal Bastard: Edmund is the illegitimate son of the Earl of Gloucester.
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Murder the Hypotenuse
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_373e2b9f
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Murder the Hypotenuse: In this version, both Goneril and Regan secretly poison each other.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_375bb8f2
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Good Is Dumb
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_375bb8f2
comment
Good Is Dumb: Edgar is the saintly, legitimate child of Gloucester. Thus he's easy for Edmund to manipulate and wrap around his little finger. Exaggerated in the "How Sharper Than a Serpent's Tooth" parody, where Edgar is depicted by a ventriloquist's dummy resembling Mortimer Snerd with Edmund portrayed by a dummy styled like Charlie McCarthy.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_37c0711c
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Betrayal by Offspring
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_37c0711c
comment
Betrayal by Offspring: Lear wrongly believes Cordelia to have done this. Regan and Goneril actually do as does Edmund to his father, Gloucester.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_3cb68bd3
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Cut His Heart Out with a Spoon
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_3cb68bd3
comment
Cut His Heart Out with a Spoon: Kent threatens to "tread [Oswald] into mortar and daub the walls of a jakes* an outhouse with him."
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_40b711d5
type
Hair-Contrast Duo
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_40b711d5
comment
Hair-Contrast Duo: It's not uncommon for productions to cast actresses with the same hair colour to play Goneril and Regan, and a contrasting colour for Cordelia. A planned film in the late 2000s would have had the evil sisters played by blondes Gwyneth Paltrow and Naomi Watts while brunette Keira Knightley would have played Cordelia.
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_40c57041
type
Manipulative Bastard
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_40c57041
comment
Manipulative Bastard: Quite literally in the case of Edmund, the illegitimate son of the Earl of Gloucester. Throughout the play, he uses just about every character he meets in order to heighten his own power, no matter what the cost.
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 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_40c57041
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_40cc0c7e
type
Bittersweet Ending
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_40cc0c7e
comment
Bittersweet Ending: Even though most of the leading characters are dead, among the survivors are two decent men (Albany and Edgar - the latter now Earl of Gloucester) who are likely to be just rulers of the kingdom.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_40cc0c7e
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_40cc0c7e
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_40cc0c7e
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_4127eb1
type
Shut Up, Hannibal!
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_4127eb1
comment
Shut Up, Hannibal!: Albany rebukes the villainess Goneril with this, after Edmund loses to a disguised Edgar:
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_4127eb1
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_4127eb1
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_4127eb1
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_423f5a19
type
Killed Offscreen
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_423f5a19
comment
Killed Offscreen: Even though we never see Old Gloucester's death, it is reported in Act V, Scene 3, when Gloucester learns that his companion has been none other than Edgar himself, and when Edgar tells him the details of his flight, exile, and wanderings, Gloucester can rest easy now that he knows he and Edgar have been reconciled. Cornwall, who was wounded but barely alive at the end of Act 3, is reported dead in Act IV, Scene II:
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_423f5a19
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_423f5a19
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_423f5a19
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_424d15ad
type
Love Hurts
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_424d15ad
comment
Love Hurts: Pretty much all the conflicts from this play spawn from love that is not understood, expressed, or requited.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_424d15ad
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_424d15ad
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_424d15ad
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_443f9d8a
type
Ask a Stupid Question...
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_443f9d8a
comment
Ask a Stupid Question...: Invoked by the Fool when Kent asks why Lear has fewer men than before:
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_443f9d8a
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_443f9d8a
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_443f9d8a
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_44989f6f
type
"Could Have Avoided This!" Plot
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_44989f6f
comment
"Could Have Avoided This!" Plot: The entire tragedy is set in motion by Lear's completely avoidable decision to disown Cordelia and give the kingdom to Regan and Goneril. He realizes as early as scene 4 that this was a terrible mistake, but by then it's too late.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_44989f6f
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_44989f6f
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_44989f6f
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_44fc28e8
type
Honor Before Reason
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_44fc28e8
comment
Honor Before Reason: Rather than stroking her father's ego, Cordelia refuses to take part in the love test. Of course as her father's favourite she may have thought he'd appreciate her honesty.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_44fc28e8
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_44fc28e8
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_44fc28e8
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_45d22aad
type
Sweet and Sour Grapes
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_45d22aad
comment
Sweet and Sour Grapes: Cordelia refuses to stroke Lear's ego like her two sisters. Although this earns her no favour with her father, his disinheriting her results in the shallow Burgundy abandoning his offer of marriage (to Cordelia's own pleasure it's implied). And France is so enchanted with her virtue that he marries her dowerless - and makes her his Queen. So Cordelia gets to rule a whole kingdom, as opposed to having to deal with a divided share and her senile father.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_45d22aad
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_45d22aad
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_45d22aad
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_471a505f
type
Four Is Death
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_471a505f
comment
Four Is Death: The first scene of the fourth act confirms the first Character Death.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_471a505f
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_471a505f
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_471a505f
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_47fea76b
type
Butt-Monkey
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_47fea76b
comment
Butt-Monkey: Poor, poor Oswald. In almost every appearance he is abused either verbally, physically, or both. Old Gloucester, when Edmund steals his property and Cornwall gouges his eyes out. Kent, who is put in the stocks by Cornwall and Regan for beating up Oswald.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_47fea76b
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_47fea76b
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_47fea76b
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_48c99e19
type
Death by Adaptation
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_48c99e19
comment
Death by Adaptation: Lear and Cordelia. In all of Shakespeare's literary and historical sources, they survive the conflict and return to power, leaving Lear to die a natural death and pass the throne to Cordelia. (Eventually, she is imprisoned and Driven to Suicide, but not until long after the play's events are over.)
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_48c99e19
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_48c99e19
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_48c99e19
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_48d9e12d
type
Funetik Aksent
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_48d9e12d
comment
Funetik Aksent: Edgar, disguised as a peasant, when he duels with Oswald:
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_48d9e12d
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_48d9e12d
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_48d9e12d
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_4b316d47
type
Break the Cutie
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_4b316d47
comment
Break the Cutie: Poor Cordelia, who is disowned, spurned by a suitor then when she reunites with her father is later captured and executed. Edgar too - an innocent, seemingly good-hearted young man who gets manipulated by his brother, must hide out in the wilderness and discover his father with his eyes gouged out.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_4b316d47
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_4b316d47
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_4b316d47
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_4c3a0f69
type
You Know What You Did
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_4c3a0f69
comment
You Know What You Did: Gloucester chooses to believe his embittered bastard son's claims that Edgar is a traitor, thus kicking off the subplot.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_4c3a0f69
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_4c3a0f69
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_4c3a0f69
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_4e3d253b
type
Downer Ending
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_4e3d253b
comment
The Gloucester family as well: Edgar is Nice - he constantly acts selflessly and bears no ill will towards his father for apparently hating him. Edmund is Mean - he betrays both his half-brother and his father and is ultimately solely responsible for the play's Downer Ending. Gloucester is In-Between - he readily believes Edmund's initial lies and disinherits Edgar with very little encouragement but, after learning of Edmund's treachery and losing his eyes, repeatedly expresses sincere regret for his actions and is implied to have fully reconciled with Edgar before he dies.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_4e3d253b
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_4e3d253b
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_4e3d253b
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_50b05d30
type
Disproportionate Retribution
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_50b05d30
comment
Disproportionate Retribution: King Lear disowns Cordelia for not flattering him as much as her sisters. Oswald, who gets beaten up by Kent when he is sent by Goneril with letters for Regan:
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_50b05d30
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_50b05d30
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_50b05d30
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_5296dbd4
type
Face/Heel Double-Turn
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_5296dbd4
comment
Face/Heel Double-Turn: In the first act of the play, Lear is set up as the unsympathetic one, while Goneril and Regan appear to be more sympathetic. Then the two sisters' evil deeds come to the forefront, and Lear is treated in such a way that Break the Haughty is in full play.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_5296dbd4
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_5296dbd4
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_5296dbd4
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_52aa0c4a
type
The Caligula
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_52aa0c4a
comment
The Caligula: Lear, although he doesn't really begin to lose it until after he's been forced out of what little power he's still hanging onto.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_52aa0c4a
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_52aa0c4a
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_52aa0c4a
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_53f5119f
type
The Dragon
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_53f5119f
comment
The Dragon: Cornwall, who helps Edmund take over his father's estate and oversees the torture session where old Gloucester has his eyes plucked out.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_53f5119f
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_53f5119f
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_53f5119f
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_55232afa
type
Politically Incorrect Hero
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_55232afa
comment
Politically Incorrect Hero: Lear has very demeaning views about women.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_55232afa
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_55232afa
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_55232afa
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_55cd4012
type
"Everybody Dies" Ending
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_55cd4012
comment
"Everybody Dies" Ending: This play has one heck of a body count. But it's a Shakespearian tragedy, so it was to be expected. By the end of it only Edgar, Albany and Kent are left alive. Even then it's hinted that Kent may kill himself too.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_55cd4012
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_55cd4012
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_55cd4012
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_58d31a8b
type
Body Motifs
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_58d31a8b
comment
Body Motifs: The play is littered with references to eyes. These explore the nature of truth and our understanding of it - Lear is blind to the love of the only daughter who actually cares for him, Gloucester loses his sight for his loyalty to the crown, while Kent and Edgar must disguise themselves to aid it.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_58d31a8b
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_58d31a8b
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_58d31a8b
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_5963b221
type
Eviler than Thou
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_5963b221
comment
Eviler than Thou: Edmund's ruthless pragmatism generally gets the better of Regan and Goneril's more personal vendettas. They even end up falling in love with him, allowing him to manipulate them.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_5963b221
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_5963b221
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_5963b221
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_5abc8612
type
Unholy Matrimony
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_5abc8612
comment
Unholy Matrimony: Regan and Cornwall are the two most bloodthirsty characters in the play, and they seem to feed off each other's evilness. And this seems to make for a happy marriage.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_5abc8612
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_5abc8612
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_5abc8612
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_5fd14ab3
type
Sacred Hospitality
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_5fd14ab3
comment
Sacred Hospitality: Lampshaded by Gloucester before Cornwall gouges out his eyes. "I am your host:/ With robbers' hands my hospitable favours/ You should not ruffle thus."
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_5fd14ab3
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_5fd14ab3
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_5fd14ab3
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_5ff56a1f
type
Long List
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_5ff56a1f
comment
Long List: Kent gives Oswald a list of what he knows him for - "A knave; a rascal; an eater of broken meats; a base, proud, shallow, beggarly, three-suited, hundred-pound, filthy, worsted-stocking knave; a lily-liver'd, action-taking, whoreson, glass-gazing, superserviceable, finical rogue; one-trunk-inheriting slave; one that wouldst be a bawd in way of good service, and art nothing but the composition of a knave, beggar, coward, pander, and the son and heir of a mongrel bitch." - also doubling as a Pre Ass Kicking One Liner.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_5ff56a1f
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_5ff56a1f
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_5ff56a1f
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_60194b82
type
Spanner in the Works
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_60194b82
comment
Spanner in the Works: If Edgar had been caught and killed, or just remained in hiding, Edmund would have become ruler of at least half, if not all, of Britain. Instead, Edgar accidentally stumbled upon his blinded father Gloucester, who he then saved from Goneril's henchman Oswald. And Oswald just happened to be carrying a letter that implicates Edmund and Goneril in a scheme, giving Edgar a chance to challenge Edmund in public.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_60194b82
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_60194b82
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_60194b82
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_619985d7
type
Sacrificial Lion
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_619985d7
comment
Sacrificial Lion: Cornwall dies at the end of the third act to show that Anyone Can Die.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_619985d7
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_619985d7
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_619985d7
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_62434fe2
type
Sanity Slippage
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_62434fe2
comment
Subverted since Lear is in the midst of his own Sanity Slippage, and Edgar is no fool, but merely Obfuscating Insanity as Tom O'Bedlam.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_62434fe2
featureApplicability
-0.3
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_62434fe2
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_62434fe2
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_629fa757
type
Perfectly Arranged Marriage
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_629fa757
comment
Perfectly Arranged Marriage: France is so enchanted by Cordelia's virtue that he marries her when she is disinherited. Their married life isn't shown, but she seems to be happy. An evil version in Regan and Cornwall, who work extremely well together as villains.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_629fa757
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_629fa757
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_629fa757
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_635e1bff
type
Sycophantic Servant
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_635e1bff
comment
Sycophantic Servant: Oswald to Goneril.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_635e1bff
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_635e1bff
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_635e1bff
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_63d861f8
type
Even Evil Has Loved Ones
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_63d861f8
comment
Even Evil Has Loved Ones: Regan and Cornwall, the two nastiest characters, also appear to have a pretty happy marriage.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_63d861f8
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_63d861f8
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_63d861f8
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_66755d29
type
Author Avatar
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_66755d29
comment
Author Avatar: The Fool does not exist in the other versions besides Shakespeare's. Like many of Shakespeare's other such characters he's the Only Sane Man, provides a lot of social commentary and is able to call his master out without being punished.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_66755d29
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_66755d29
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_66755d29
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6977c45e
type
Purple Prose
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6977c45e
comment
Purple Prose: Kent waxes very eloquent before engaging in a swordfight with Oswald:
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6977c45e
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6977c45e
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_6977c45e
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6a0f3c49
type
Beardness Protection Program
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6a0f3c49
comment
Beardness Protection Program: Kent shaves off his distinctive beard when he disguises himself as a servant. Some adaptations and productions will have him go even further and give himself a haircut too. Edgar doesn't really do this later in the play, only disguising himself with rags and dirt on his face.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6a0f3c49
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6a0f3c49
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_6a0f3c49
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6b05b601
type
Jerkass Has a Point
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6b05b601
comment
Jerkass Has a Point: Edmund calls out the blatantly unfair way society treats bastard children, the foolishness of those who blindly trust in fate or luck, and the tendency of people to blame their troubles on anyone but their own actions.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6b05b601
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6b05b601
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_6b05b601
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6d332aea
type
Driven to Suicide
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6d332aea
comment
Driven to Suicide: Goneril stabs herself offstage after Edmund gets fatally wounded by Edgar. At the end, Kent implies that he intends to joins Lear after the latter dies. Gloucester intends to jump off a cliff, but Edgar prevents this.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6d332aea
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6d332aea
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_6d332aea
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6d89ad1a
type
The Ophelia
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6d89ad1a
comment
The Ophelia: Lear himself becomes a male example. After he's cast out of Regan's household, he slowly goes mad and is found running around on the moors wearing flowers and babbling a Madness Mantra.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6d89ad1a
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6d89ad1a
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_6d89ad1a
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6e70b12b
type
Nominal Importance
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6e70b12b
comment
Nominal Importance: Subverted with the nameless servant who, outraged at Cornwall's blinding of Gloucester, mortally wounds him. Even if he is quickly killed in turn by Regan.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6e70b12b
featureApplicability
-0.3
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_6e70b12b
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_6e70b12b
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_70af5e15
type
Anthropic Principle
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_70af5e15
comment
Anthropic Principle: The play has been criticized for the implausibility of a king divesting himself of his kingdom without any contingency plan to support his own status. That, however, is the necessary condition for the whole rest of the story to develop.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_70af5e15
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_70af5e15
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_70af5e15
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_72852a93
type
Henpecked Husband
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_72852a93
comment
Henpecked Husband: The Duke of Albany is rather mild-mannered compared to his evil wife Goneril, and goes along with her plans out of fear. He eventually can't stand it and pulls a Heel–Face Turn.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_72852a93
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_72852a93
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_72852a93
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_72e0023f
type
Invoked Trope
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_72e0023f
comment
Similarly, the servant who ends up killing Cornwall. He's not even given a name and only appears (dialogue-wise) in one scene...but it's a scene where he is the only person willing to defend Gloucester, challenges his own master to a duel, fatally wounds him and only dies himself because Regan steps in to kill him on Cornwall's behalf, thus almost singlehandedly setting off the body count as well as invoking Anyone Can Die.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_72e0023f
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_72e0023f
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_72e0023f
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_7453bc5b
type
Spared by the Adaptation
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_7453bc5b
comment
Spared by the Adaptation: Lear, Cordelia and Gloucester all survive.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_7453bc5b
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_7453bc5b
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_7453bc5b
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_7464705c
type
Arc Words
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_7464705c
comment
Arc Words: "Nothing"
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_7464705c
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_7464705c
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_7464705c
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_76ecc890
type
Brave Scot
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_76ecc890
comment
Brave Scot: Double subverted with Albany - which is what Scotland used to be called, implying the character to be Scottish - who is at first weak and submissive. But then he stands up to everyone and is one of the few characters left alive by the end.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_76ecc890
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_76ecc890
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_780a078e
type
Self-Made Orphan
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_780a078e
comment
Self-Made Orphan: Edmund doesn't actually kill his father, but he's totally complacent as even worse things are done to him; his own father's estate is the place of Gloucester's demise, with Regan and Cornwall sending him out of the room so he won't witness the gruesome gouging of his father's eyes. This makes Edmund very much an Evil Prince.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_780a078e
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_780a078e
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1.0
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_780a078e
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_786bf97f
type
Real Life Writes the Plot
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_786bf97f
comment
Real Life Writes the Plot: 17th century audiences found the play's ending so depressing that a happier one was created - where Cordelia survives and marries Edgar. After World War II, the original ending made a comeback. It's been theorised that the reason The Fool disappears after Act III is because the same actor would have played Cordelia as well, and she comes back into the plot shortly afterwards.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_786bf97f
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_786bf97f
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_786bf97f
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_7c0bfb83
type
Obviously Evil
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_7c0bfb83
comment
Obviously Evil: Edmund is the illegitimate son and the line from Gloucester telling us this is meant to be a clue in that he's the villain.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_7c0bfb83
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_7c0bfb83
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1.0
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_7c0bfb83
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_7c862b8a
type
Chronic Backstabbing Disorder
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_7c862b8a
comment
Chronic Backstabbing Disorder: This trope is shared between Edmund, Regan and Goneril. Edmund tries to play the two off against one another, while they both sexually pursue him in order to harness his raw ambition for their own benefit. Their interactions become increasingly more fractured towards the end of the play as the three Chessmasters try to outdo one another.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_7c862b8a
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_7c862b8a
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_7c862b8a
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_7c9dcc1
type
THeUnfavorite
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_7c9dcc1
comment
The Unfavorite: Edmund, to Gloucester. As Gloucester's illegitimate son and Edgar's younger half-brother, his bastardly status motivates him to scheme against Edgar and deceive his father:
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_7c9dcc1
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_7c9dcc1
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_7c9dcc1
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_805deb6e
type
Small Role, Big Impact
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_805deb6e
comment
Small Role, Big Impact: Cornwall appears in only five scenes (besides a non-speaking part in the first scene) yet he is the one who does the gouging out of Gloucester's eyes. His death also marks the start of the sisters turning on each other - as they both want to marry Edmund. Similarly, the servant who ends up killing Cornwall. He's not even given a name and only appears (dialogue-wise) in one scene...but it's a scene where he is the only person willing to defend Gloucester, challenges his own master to a duel, fatally wounds him and only dies himself because Regan steps in to kill him on Cornwall's behalf, thus almost singlehandedly setting off the body count as well as invoking Anyone Can Die.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_805deb6e
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1.0
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_805deb6e
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_8145958b
type
Seemingly Profound Fool
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_8145958b
comment
Seemingly Profound Fool: Lear finds himself in awe of Tom O'Bedlam's profound wisdom when they take shelter from the storm: Subverted since Lear is in the midst of his own Sanity Slippage, and Edgar is no fool, but merely Obfuscating Insanity as Tom O'Bedlam.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_8145958b
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_8145958b
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_82a631b8
type
Present-Day Past
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_82a631b8
comment
Shakespeare was no stranger to anachronism, but this play absolutely runs with it. The legendary King Leir of Britain is supposed to have lived around the 8th century BC. At that time, there was no "King of France", "Duke of Cornwall", "Duke of Albany", "Duke of Burgundy, "Earl of Gloucester" or "Earl of Kent". Nor, for example, was there a St Mary Bethlehem (Bedlam) Hospital, from which Edgar takes his madman's identity. One of the most egregious anachronisms is when Kent professes "to eat no fish", implying that he is declaring himself to be a Protestant and not a Catholic - centuries before even the most rudimentary Christianity existed.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_82a631b8
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_82a631b8
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_82a631b8
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_83a30cd3
type
Middle Child Syndrome
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_83a30cd3
comment
Middle Child Syndrome: Present within Regan's characterization. As Cordelia is the clear favourite, and Goneril has some status as the oldest sister, a lot of Regan's actions come from trying to match what Goneril does.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_83a30cd3
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_83a30cd3
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_8605f0c0
type
Promoted to Love Interest
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_8605f0c0
comment
Promoted to Love Interest: Edgar/Cordelia in the 1681 rewrite (Cordelia's original husband, the King of France, naturally doesn't exist in this version).
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_8605f0c0
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_8605f0c0
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_8605f0c0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_863fa679
type
What Happened to the Mouse?
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_863fa679
comment
What Happened to the Mouse?: In one of the oldest and most famous examples of this trope, The Fool abruptly disappears from the play between Acts 3 and 4. The reigning explanation is that the Fool shared an actor with Cordelia, as he disappears right around the time she reenters the narrative. Different productions handle this in different manners, e.g. Playing it straight, sticking to the script and offering no explanation. Offering some vague clue, enabling the production to stay true to the script but also offering the audience a degree of closure; for example, in The Film of the Play adaptation starring Ian Holm, the Fool is shown having trouble breathing in the scene just after the thunderstorm, suggesting hypothermia. This, coupled with the fact that the actor playing the Fool is obviously well into his sixties, implies that the Fool has died between acts. Being blatant about it: the recent Royal Shakespeare Company run with Ian McKellen had an execution scene that served to explain his disappearance and emphasise the growing cruelty of Britain under Regan and Goneril. The Fool's last words were made into his "Merlin prophecy" in Act 3 Scene 2, making for some fun thoughts of terror. (Lear does say, "And my poor fool is hanged," in the final scene, but it's not clear exactly what this means.) The Fool's final appearance is often given some symbolic overtone. In addition to the example already given, the Drury Lane Theatre's 2005 production had the Fool tap Tom O'Bedlam/Edgar on the shoulder as he walked off the stage for the last time, passing O'Bedlam his Jester's baton. O'Bedlam was left staring at the baton in his hands with a confused look on his face, then he spouted some inane gibberish and followed the rest of the cast. From that point on, every time O'Bedlam appeared on stage (until he reveals himself as Edgar at the end), he carried the baton with him. Many interpret The Fool's disappearance as being due to his redundancy as comic relief and holy fool once O'Bedlam appears - note that the Fool has few lines in his final scenes, starting from when Tom O'Bedlam is first introduced - and this "passing of the baton" acknowledged that. In the parody version "How Sharper than a Serpent's Tooth" by Richard Nathan, the play ends with the Fool bounding back onstage and saying, "Hey, everyone, I'm back! Did I miss anything?" Currently the most popular explanation seems to involve Lear killing the Fool during one of his mad moments, such as the 2014 National Theatre production starring Simon Russell Beale, where the Fool ended up being beaten to death by Lear with a bit of pipe in the final scene of Act 1. An Irish theatre company called Thirteenth Floor did a version in 2017 where The Fool is entirely a figment of Lear's imagination, also giving him a Gender Flip to imply that it's the ghost of his dead wife. Very little had to be changed, aside from the other characters not being able to see her. Ironically The Fool continued to appear in the background after her final line. The Manga Shakespeare graphic novel combined Cordelia and the Fool with the latter being a disguise of the former. Thus Cordelia's death is also the Fool's. Even though the King of France is often mentioned but never seen onstage after Act I, Scene 1, he leaves his marshal, Monsieur Le Far, in charge of his armies, returning to France soon afterwards, with no further mention made of him after his forces lose and Cordelia's death leaves him a widower.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_863fa679
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_863fa679
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_88933ad4
type
Parental Favoritism
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_88933ad4
comment
Parental Favoritism: Lear makes clear that Cordelia is his favorite daughter. And he's surprised when the other two treat him so badly. When she's out of the picture, he tries this with the remaining daughters.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_88933ad4
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_88933ad4
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_88933ad4
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_895ec17
type
Only in It for the Money
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_895ec17
comment
Only in It for the Money: The main condition the Duke of Burgundy insists on is that Lear offers the dowry that Cordelia originally had. After Lear tells him that her worth has fallen and asks if he will take her as she is without dowry, Burgundy rejects the offer and Cordelia rejects his proposal since respects of fortune are his love.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_895ec17
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_895ec17
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1.0
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_895ec17
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_89a17726
type
Spell My Name with an S
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_89a17726
comment
Spell My Name with an S: Lear himself is a recipient of this. In Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae, the king's name was spelled with an "i" as "Leir".
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_89a17726
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_89a17726
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1.0
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_89a17726
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_8b97cb5d
type
Symbolic Mutilation
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_8b97cb5d
comment
Symbolic Mutilation: Gloucester. There are numerous references to eyes and him in the text. He can't see the truth about his sons Edgar and Edmund, due to Edmund though he is quite gullible. Eventually he gets his eyes torn out.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_8b97cb5d
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_8b97cb5d
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_8b97cb5d
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_8dbec56b
type
Cast Speciation
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_8dbec56b
comment
Cast Speciation: Goneril and Regan are both the two evil sisters who plot against their father. In order to differentiate them, Regan is The Sociopath who is far more outwardly violent. She's also noted to be the The Corrupter who inspires wickedness in others. Goneril meanwhile is far more Machiavellian in her actions and is a Bitch in Sheep's Clothing to Lear for most of the play.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_8dbec56b
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1.0
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_8dbec56b
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_8f612013
type
Token Good Teammate
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_8f612013
comment
Token Good Teammate: The Duke of Albany to Edmund, Reagan and his wife Goneril.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_8f612013
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_8f612013
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_8f612013
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_90d44f44
type
Karmic Death
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_90d44f44
comment
Karmic Death: Lear dies after having to watch his beloved youngest daughter be hanged, the same daughter he disinherited at the start and caused the entire mess in the first place. Regan spends the whole play attacking other people, and manipulating them into doing unspeakably horrible things. She ends up outwitted by her sister and poisoned.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_90d44f44
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_90d44f44
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9203bf6
type
Arc Number
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9203bf6
comment
Arc Number: Three: Lear has three daughters. There are three in Gloucester's family - himself, Edgar and Edmund. Characters frequently travel in groups of three - Lear, Kent and the Fool; Cornwall, Regan and Goneril. There are three survivors by the end.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9203bf6
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9203bf6
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_9203bf6
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_93b4b6e4
type
Stock Punishment
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_93b4b6e4
comment
Stock Punishment: Kent, disguised as a servant, is put in the sticks for insulting and beating up Oswald. When the Fool sees this, he mocks him for it.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_93b4b6e4
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_93b4b6e4
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_95d67d24
type
Get Thee to a Nunnery
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_95d67d24
comment
Get Thee to a Nunnery: 'Pillicock sat on Pillicock hill,' ''I cannot conceive you' (though it is a bit more like verbal irony in I.1.11)
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_95d67d24
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_95d67d24
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9633f14b
type
Badass Bystander
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9633f14b
comment
Badass Bystander: In Act 3 Scene 7 one of Cornwall's servants defies and fatally wounds him, trying to save Gloucester.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9633f14b
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9633f14b
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_9633f14b
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_970c790a
type
Big Bad
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_970c790a
comment
Big Bad: Edmund of Gloucester; a significant portion of Edmund's subplot involves him being involved in a love triangle between Goneril and Regan, with Edmund turning against his own father, attempting (and failing) to kill Goneril's husband Albany, and ultimately seizing Lear and Cordelia and sending them off to the dungeon, only to meet his demise at the hand of Edgar his half-brother, who is disguised as a mysterious knight.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_970c790a
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_970c790a
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_970c790a
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_98576799
type
Throw the Dog a Bone
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_98576799
comment
Throw the Dog a Bone: Poor Cordelia, disowned by her father and rejected by her shallow suitor from Burgundy. Then the King of France falls for her and values her more than any material dowry.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_98576799
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_98576799
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_98576799
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_98f2361a
type
FairyTaleMotifs
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_98f2361a
comment
Fairy Tale Motifs: The challenge to say how much they love him is straight out "Love Like Salt" fairy tales, such as "Cap o' Rushes". In the tales, however, the girls say something the father misinterprets; Cordelia's flat denial is new.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_98f2361a
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_98f2361a
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_99298c71
type
Better to Die than Be Killed
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_99298c71
comment
Better to Die than Be Killed: Goneril kills herself once she's exposed for her crimes, knowing execution is probably the only route for her, after poisoning Regan.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_99298c71
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_99298c71
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_99298c71
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9bcd82c0
type
Took a Level in Badass
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9bcd82c0
comment
Took a Level in Badass: Edgar begins the story a naive, loyal, dutiful son and brother, and is even frequently interpreted by modern productions to be a bit of a bookworm. However, when Edmund makes a fugitive of him, not only does Edgar set out to save his father and godfather (Lear), but he kills Oswald in combat, nurses his father's wounds and tricks him out of suicidal depression, uncovers his brother's treachery, and defeats said brother, fatally wounding him. Edmund might be a Chessmaster, but Edgar isn't bad at thinking on his feet. The Duke of Albany, who is described as "mild" and "milk-livered" but turns out to be one of the only characters willing to stand up to Regan or Goneril.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9bcd82c0
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_9bcd82c0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9c5e78d0
type
Kill the Cutie
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9c5e78d0
comment
Kill the Cutie: Cordelia will never get a break, unless you count her reconciliation with Lear before her execution.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9c5e78d0
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9c5e78d0
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_9c5e78d0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9c73b5b2
type
Let Them Die Happy
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9c73b5b2
comment
Let Them Die Happy: As he's dying, Lear convinces himself that he sees Cordelia moving - dying believing that his beloved daughter is still alive.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9c73b5b2
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9c73b5b2
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_9c73b5b2
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9d12bbc1
type
Foreshadowing
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9d12bbc1
comment
Foreshadowing: It's common to put in some hints of Goneril's attraction to Edmund in the eye gouging scene, as their next scene together reveals their affair.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9d12bbc1
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1.0
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_9d12bbc1
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9e1e14ea
type
Ambition Is Evil
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9e1e14ea
comment
Ambition Is Evil: Edmund, Regan and Goneril all have high ambitions, making them the main Antagonists.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9e1e14ea
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9e1e14ea
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_9e1e14ea
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9f62723d
type
Get Out!
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9f62723d
comment
Get Out!: After Kent has a heated argument with Lear: Lear also dismisses Cordelia without a cent or acre to her name when her profession of love is not as elaborate as that of her elder sisters.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_9f62723d
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1.0
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_9f62723d
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_a09f3a65
type
Sibling Triangle
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_a09f3a65
comment
Sibling Triangle: Edmund seduces Lear's daughters Goneril and Regan. When Goneril finds out her rival is her sister, she poisons her drink.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_a09f3a65
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_a09f3a65
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_a09f3a65
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_a1b141f4
type
My God, What Have I Done?
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_a1b141f4
comment
My God, What Have I Done?: In his brief moments of clarity, Lear regrets all the problems he has caused for the other characters. A more charitable interpretation would say that Goneril's suicide is done out of remorse over the evil things she's done.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_a1b141f4
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_a1b141f4
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_a2b38d3b
type
Eye Scream
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_a2b38d3b
comment
Eye Scream: After learning that Gloucester is still loyal to Lear, Cornwall has him arrested and his eyes put out.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_a2b38d3b
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_a2b38d3b
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_a2b38d3b
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_a3458bf2
type
More Deadly Than the Male
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_a3458bf2
comment
More Deadly Than the Male: The females are the ones who do the direct killing in the play - Regan killing the servant that stabs Cornwall and Goneril poisoning her sister. By contrast, the males usually kill via executions.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_a3458bf2
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_a3458bf2
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_a737743c
type
Caged Bird Metaphor
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_a737743c
comment
Caged Bird Metaphor: Lear uses this simile before he and Cordelia are to be jailed:
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_a737743c
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_a737743c
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_a737743c
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_a7aef9ff
type
Obfuscating Stupidity
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_a7aef9ff
comment
Obfuscating Stupidity: The Fool. Despite being, well, a Fool, he is one of the wisest characters of the play. Edgar, while disguised as Tom O'Bedlam, also engages in this in order to keep his identity hidden.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_a7aef9ff
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_a7aef9ff
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ab5eea65
type
Dramatic Irony
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ab5eea65
comment
Dramatic Irony: Gloucester speaks in shock about the behaviour of Lear's own daughters towards him - not realising that Edmund is plotting against him too.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ab5eea65
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ab5eea65
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_ab5eea65
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ac09dc0f
type
Alas, Poor Villain
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ac09dc0f
comment
Alas, Poor Villain: Edmund repents on his deathbed, lamenting that he was born inherently evil, because he was illegitimate. A lot of productions will portray Cornwall's death sadly, if his and Regan's marriage is shown to be a happy one. It does mark the start of Anyone Can Die.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ac09dc0f
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ac09dc0f
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_ac09dc0f
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_acf33d00
type
Nice Job Fixing It, Villain
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_acf33d00
comment
Nice Job Fixing It, Villain: After Old Gloucester's eyes are gouged out, Cornwall makes the mistake of letting him live instead of killing him on the spot, which proves to be a fatal mistake, since Old Gloucester finds his way to Lear's camp after Cornwall's death:
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_acf33d00
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1.0
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_acf33d00
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ad9fbc1e
type
Pyrrhic Victory
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ad9fbc1e
comment
Pyrrhic Victory: The defeat of the villain seems worthless when contrasted with how many good people have died.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ad9fbc1e
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ad9fbc1e
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1.0
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_ad9fbc1e
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ae853f28
type
Parody
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ae853f28
comment
In the parody version "How Sharper than a Serpent's Tooth" by Richard Nathan, the play ends with the Fool bounding back onstage and saying, "Hey, everyone, I'm back! Did I miss anything?"
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ae853f28
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ae853f28
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1.0
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_ae853f28
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_b4c406a6
type
Death by Despair
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_b4c406a6
comment
The entire play does this to Lear: from a haughty king to a broken man who ends up having a Death by Despair.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_b4c406a6
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_b4c406a6
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_b4c406a6
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_b52355aa
type
Dying for Symbolism
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_b52355aa
comment
Dying for Symbolism: Oswald dying at Edgar's hands marks the true loss of whatever innocence he had left. It's after this that Edgar also Took a Level in Badass. Earlier the death of Cornwall symbolises the kingdom starting to collapse under the power struggle. It's only after this that Edmund pits the two sisters against each other, and Cordelia leads the French army to battle.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_b52355aa
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_b52355aa
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_b52355aa
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_b6c60ed5
type
A Mistake Is Born
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_b6c60ed5
comment
A Mistake Is Born: The first scene is the Earl of Gloucester talking with the Earl of Kent about his bastard son, and how he was a mistake... with the bastard son right there. Is it any wonder Edmund is a Bastard Bastard?
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_b6c60ed5
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_b6c60ed5
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_b6c60ed5
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_b7c53a22
type
Blood Knight
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_b7c53a22
comment
Blood Knight: Cornwall needs very little persuasion to torture Gloucester.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_b7c53a22
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_b7c53a22
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_b7c53a22
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_b9b5af3e
type
The Film of the Play
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_b9b5af3e
comment
Offering some vague clue, enabling the production to stay true to the script but also offering the audience a degree of closure; for example, in The Film of the Play adaptation starring Ian Holm, the Fool is shown having trouble breathing in the scene just after the thunderstorm, suggesting hypothermia. This, coupled with the fact that the actor playing the Fool is obviously well into his sixties, implies that the Fool has died between acts.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_b9b5af3e
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_b9b5af3e
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_b9b5af3e
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_bc00493f
type
Precision F-Strike
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_bc00493f
comment
Precision F-Strike: Kent delivers one to Oswald when listing his bad qualities:
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_bc00493f
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_bc00493f
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1.0
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_bc00493f
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_be94b160
type
SmiteMeOhMightySmiter
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_be94b160
comment
Smite Me, O Mighty Smiter: The storm scene is the archetypal example — thunder, lightning and all. Because of Lear's rather unwound state, however, he alternates between cursing nature, asking nature to smite Goneril and Regan, and thanking nature for not being as inhumanely cruel as Goneril and Regan.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_be94b160
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_be94b160
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1.0
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_be94b160
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_bf9163d9
type
Blonde, Brunette, Redhead
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_bf9163d9
comment
Blonde, Brunette, Redhead: The Laurence Olivier TV movie - Cordelia (blonde), Regan (brunette) and Goneril (redhead).
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_bf9163d9
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_bf9163d9
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1.0
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_bf9163d9
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c00484eb
type
Accent Relapse
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c00484eb
comment
Accent Relapse: When Edgar is in disguise as 'Poor Tom', he momentarily slips out of his faked accent. Gloucester even remarks that for a moment he spoke more eloquently than normal.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c00484eb
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c00484eb
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_c00484eb
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c1cef253
type
Nice, Mean, and In-Between
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c1cef253
comment
Nice Mean And In Between: Lear's three daughters. Cordelia is the kind-hearted, generously honest Nice one. Regan is the manipulative, blood-thirsty sociopathic Mean one. Goneril is In-Between - not necessarily nicer than Regan but less outwardly vicious and implied to feel some remorse and regret over what's happened. The three daughters' husbands count as well. The King of France is Nice - he marries Cordelia even when she is disinherited. The Duke of Cornwall is Mean - he stocks Kent and gouges Gloucester's eyes out. The Duke of Albany is In-Between - turning a blind eye to a lot of the worse deeds in the play before finally taking action. The Gloucester family as well: Edgar is Nice - he constantly acts selflessly and bears no ill will towards his father for apparently hating him. Edmund is Mean - he betrays both his half-brother and his father and is ultimately solely responsible for the play's Downer Ending. Gloucester is In-Between - he readily believes Edmund's initial lies and disinherits Edgar with very little encouragement but, after learning of Edmund's treachery and losing his eyes, repeatedly expresses sincere regret for his actions and is implied to have fully reconciled with Edgar before he dies.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c1cef253
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1.0
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_c1cef253
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c32ff031
type
Xanatos Gambit
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c32ff031
comment
Xanatos Gambit: Most of Edmund's scheming involves letting two people (his father and his brother, Goneril and Regan) destroy each other while remaining in the trust of both of them.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c32ff031
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c32ff031
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_c32ff031
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c335b9ec
type
Irony
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c335b9ec
comment
Irony: As part of his Break the Haughty, Lear expresses sympathy for a poor homeless beggar. Said beggar is actually a prince in disguise.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c335b9ec
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c335b9ec
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1.0
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_c335b9ec
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c33ba0a8
type
Chuck Cunningham Syndrome
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c33ba0a8
comment
Chuck Cunningham Syndrome: The Fool vanishes from the play after Act 3, Scene 6, and his whereabouts are never accounted for. Many speculate that the character probably was meant to have died and that the scene explicitly stating or depicting this was lost. His final line about "Going to bed at noon," has been interpreted as foreshadowing his demise. Another theory is that the Fool and Cordelia may have been depicted by the same actor in the original production, necessitating the disappearance of one when the other reenters the play. Some productions have Lear, while mad, accidentally killing him. Since he is a comic character, The Fool's disappearance may very well indicate the play's shift to the subsequent tragedies that befall Cornwall and his servant, Oswald, Gloucester, Goneril, Regan, Edmund, Cordelia, and Lear. After taking Cordelia as his wife, the king of France is mentioned, but never seen again after Act I, Scene I.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c33ba0a8
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c33ba0a8
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_c33ba0a8
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c3448a6f
type
Informed Attribute
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c3448a6f
comment
Informed Attribute: It's said that the two sisters' husbands - Albany and Cornwall - dislike each other. They share no scenes together - apart from the first where they don't interact - and this never factors into the plot.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c3448a6f
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c3448a6f
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_c3448a6f
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c3c18143
type
Hope Spot
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c3c18143
comment
Hope Spot: Lear eventually reunites with Cordelia and obtains her forgiveness. At the end, after Edmund has been vanquished, Lear still hopes (in vain) that Cordelia might be alive if she is still breathing:
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c3c18143
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c3c18143
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_c3c18143
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c41a5bac
type
Neutral No Longer
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c41a5bac
comment
Neutral No Longer: Albany was neutral in the sense that he neither condoned nor protested against the scheming of the others. By the fourth act, he's on the side of good and ends up as one of the few survivors.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c41a5bac
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c41a5bac
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_c41a5bac
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c6a83b97
type
Rapid-Fire Descriptors
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c6a83b97
comment
Rapid-Fire Descriptors: The famed "longest insult in Shakespeare", from Kent to Oswald has tons of adjectives.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c6a83b97
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c6a83b97
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 King Lear (Theatre)
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_c6a83b97
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c868a42a
type
Freudian Excuse
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c868a42a
comment
Freudian Excuse: Edmund's resentment towards his legitimate brother and his father is understandable, even if it doesn't excuse his murderous actions. It certainly doesn't help that Gloucester makes jokes about Edmund's illegitimacy right in front of his face. Edmund's monologues often focus on how society sees him as a low status bastard in spite of being as capable as his legitimate elder brother.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c868a42a
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_c868a42a
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 King Lear (Theatre)
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_c868a42a
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ca9c252f
type
This Is Something He's Got to Do Himself
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ca9c252f
comment
This Is Something He's Got to Do Himself: By the end of the play, Edgar duels his brother by himself while the other characters sit and watch. Though Albany does scream "save him" to prevent Edgar from outright killing him.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ca9c252f
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ca9c252f
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_ca9c252f
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_cbe3d017
type
Damned by Faint Praise
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_cbe3d017
comment
Damned by Faint Praise: After Goneril and Regan have given Lear such eloquent and showy praise, Cordelia's profession of love for her father lacks flattery, and Lear feels greatly slighted by it:
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_cbe3d017
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_cbe3d017
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d001c42c
type
Anti-Villain
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d001c42c
comment
Anti-Villain: The Duke of Albany. From his point of view, all he is doing is defending Britain from an invasion of France. He knows damn well that Edmund is an untrustworthy bastard and that neither his wife nor sister-in-law are much better, but he feels forced to work with them by circumstance in case the French are here to conquer, which pits him against Cordelia and Lear. This changes near the end when he discovers Goneril's letter intended for Edmund which is an attempted plot on Albany's life, which leads Albany to arrest Edmund and Goneril.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d001c42c
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d001c42c
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_d001c42c
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d2ddb362
type
ReasonYouSuckSpeech
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d2ddb362
comment
"Reason You Suck" Speech: Several. Kent delivers a truly epic one to the sycophantic, prevaricating Oswald. Albany delivers one to Goneril, telling her that karma will get her in the end. She laughs it off but it's ultimately played straight. Most of the Fool's joking taunts of Lear are barely disguised versions of this.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d2ddb362
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d2ddb362
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_d2ddb362
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d39e327f
type
What the Hell, Hero?
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d39e327f
comment
What the Hell, Hero?: Even though he's the king, multiple characters speak out against Lear's behavior when he makes his big mistake: disowning Cordelia.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d39e327f
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d39e327f
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_d39e327f
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d503c4e2
type
The Simple Gesture Wins
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d503c4e2
comment
The Simple Gesture Wins: Tragically subverted with Cordelia's blunt declaration of love, which is what sets up the series of events leading to the Downer Ending in the first place.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d503c4e2
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d503c4e2
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 King Lear (Theatre)
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_d503c4e2
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d61c0620
type
Joker Jury
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d61c0620
comment
Joker Jury: Played with; while taking refuge from the rain in one of old Gloucester's farmhouses, Lear conducts a trial in absentia with Edgar (disguised as Tom O'Bedlam) as judge, with the disguised Kent and the Fool also in attendance. to arraign Regan and Goneril (who are not present).
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d61c0620
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d61c0620
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_d61c0620
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d62dd556
type
The Chessmaster
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d62dd556
comment
The Chessmaster: Goneril plays off her father's ego in order to get one third of the kingdom, manipulates him into disbanding a good portion of his knights and enrages him so much that he runs off to be someone else's problem. She also poisons her sister when it becomes clear that the two won't be in cahoots much longer. Regan is able to inspire large amounts of cruelty in others, leading to Gloucester getting his eyes gouged out and Lear being driven out into the storm. She's outwitted by Goneril in the end, though. Edmund is the ultimate chessmaster, convincing his father that Edgar is plotting against him. He also pits Goneril and Regan against each other and effectively has control of everyone by the final act.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d62dd556
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d62dd556
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_d62dd556
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d8fea106
type
Naked Nutter
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d8fea106
comment
Naked Nutter: A couple of Lears - such as Ian Holm and Ian McKellen - strip naked completely (and even more take off some of their clothes) in the heath scene where they bemoan the "naked wretches" and the "unaccommodated man" literally, when Lear is abandoned by Regan and Goneril outside in the storm.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d8fea106
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d8fea106
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_d8fea106
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d9563969
type
Failed Attempt at Drama
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d9563969
comment
Failed Attempt at Drama: When Albany first stands up to Goneril - "you are not worth the dust which the wind blows in your face" - she just finds it funny, given his meek disposition.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d9563969
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d9563969
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_d9563969
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d9b4cc7f
type
Abdicate the Throne
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d9b4cc7f
comment
Abdicate the Throne: Lear's decision to abdicate his throne kicks the entire plot off.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d9b4cc7f
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d9b4cc7f
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_d9b4cc7f
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d9d8fd35
type
Battle Butler
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d9d8fd35
comment
Battle Butler: The disguised Earl of Kent becomes this to Lear. Oswald to a slightly lesser extent, as he actively tries to kill Gloucester when he's found with Edgar.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d9d8fd35
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_d9d8fd35
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_d9d8fd35
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_db39ccfd
type
Battle Couple
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_db39ccfd
comment
Battle Couple: Regan and Cornwall blind Gloucester together.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_db39ccfd
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_db39ccfd
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_db39ccfd
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_dc057cf3
type
Adaptation Name Change
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_dc057cf3
comment
Adaptation Name Change: Lear's eldest daughter was Gonorilla according to record. It's changed to Goneril. The youngest daughter was also Cordeilla, as opposed to Cordelia.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_dc057cf3
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_dc057cf3
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_dc057cf3
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_dce448d
type
Reduced to Ratburgers
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_dce448d
comment
Reduced to Ratburgers: Introducing himself in his "Poor Tom" alter-ego, Edgar rambles on about how he subsists on amphibians, lizards, old rats and dead dogs.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_dce448d
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_dce448d
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_dce448d
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_dda99fa8
type
Despair Event Horizon
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_dda99fa8
comment
Despair Event Horizon: Lear crosses this twice; first on the heath, after realising his daughters have turned on him, and upon realising his folly in giving them all of his authority. The second time is when he staggers in during the final scene, carrying Cordelia's lifeless corpse. Both instances lead to madness, and the second to Death by Despair.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_dda99fa8
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_dda99fa8
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_dda99fa8
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_deecc9eb
type
Awful Wedded Life
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_deecc9eb
comment
Awful Wedded Life: Goneril and Albany, with Goneril getting involved in an affair with Edmund, while she sees Albany as rather mild-mannered, honest, and timid, in contrast to Goneril poisoning her sister Regan, and even writes letters to Edmund encouraging him to kill Albany. By the time Albany steps in to prevent Edmund's counter-claims to Goneril, he arrests his wife and Edmund as co-conspirators.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_deecc9eb
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_deecc9eb
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1.0
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_deecc9eb
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e1acc872
type
From Nobody to Nightmare
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e1acc872
comment
From Nobody to Nightmare: Edmund, as the illegitimate son of Gloucester, was unlikely to inherit any title or wealth. He goes on to exile his legitimate brother, inherit his father's Earldom by conspiring against him, and promises himself to both the Duchess of Cornwall and Albany to advance his position further. Had he not been killed by his brother Edgar, Edmund may have eventually schemed and murdered his way to become King of Britain.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e1acc872
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 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e1acc872
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_e1acc872
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e34ada78
type
Authority Equals Asskicking
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e34ada78
comment
Authority Equals Asskicking: Subverted, as the Earl of Kent is disguised as a servant when he kicks Oswald around.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e34ada78
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-0.3
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e34ada78
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_e34ada78
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e35ab565
type
Indy Ploy
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e35ab565
comment
Edgar begins the story a naive, loyal, dutiful son and brother, and is even frequently interpreted by modern productions to be a bit of a bookworm. However, when Edmund makes a fugitive of him, not only does Edgar set out to save his father and godfather (Lear), but he kills Oswald in combat, nurses his father's wounds and tricks him out of suicidal depression, uncovers his brother's treachery, and defeats said brother, fatally wounding him. Edmund might be a Chessmaster, but Edgar isn't bad at thinking on his feet.
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e35ab565
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_e35ab565
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e3b0cd87
type
Morality Pet
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e3b0cd87
comment
If you count Goneril and Regan as one entity then they fit when pitted against Cordelia. They are the two evil sisters who become the play's main antagonists, while Cordelia is the Morality Pet whose absence causes things to fall out of control.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e3b0cd87
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e3b0cd87
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_e3b0cd87
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e3cee2e7
type
Empathic Environment
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e3cee2e7
comment
Empathic Environment: A storm hits as the kingdom starts to unravel. The storm scene is the first time that Lear truly suffers Sanity Slippage.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e3cee2e7
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e3cee2e7
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_e3cee2e7
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e5fd8bc2
type
Hate Sink
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e5fd8bc2
comment
Hate Sink: Oswald is a manipulative liar, a sycophant, and a coward. While Lear's elder daughters and Edmund do many despicable things, they have their Villain Has a Point and Freudian Excuse moments as well as a certain grandeur and bravery behind their villainy. Oswald in contrast has nothing but the most base traits, as lampshaded by Kent and others.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e5fd8bc2
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e5fd8bc2
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_e5fd8bc2
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e8b295de
type
PlayedWith
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e8b295de
comment
Played With. Since he was born out of wedlock, Edmund is Edgar's half-brother. However, this doesn't stop Edmund trying to do away with and discredit Edgar in the pursuit for his father's title. Edgar finishes Edmund off in the final act, the religious Aesop being that the true child will always triumph over the bastard.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e8b295de
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e8b295de
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_e8b295de
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e979656a
type
Honor Thy Parent
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e979656a
comment
Honor Thy Parent: This trope very much informs the play's premise (and is deconstructed to some extent). Lear wishes to divide his kingdom between his three daughters, but before doing so asks them to declare publicly how much they love him. Goneril and Regan, who don't seem to actually care for Lear, oblige him and shower him with flattery. Cordelia, who actually does care for her father, refuses to make an oral exposé of her love, stating rather tactlessly that she loves Lear as much as her duty requires her to. Lear interprets Cordelia's words as coldness, becomes furious, disowns her, and divides the whole kingdom between the two other daughters, with the stipulation that he shall maintain the title of king and that he and his knights will be alternately supported by Goneril and Regan. These, however, find Lear's retinue annoying and both in turn insist that he dismiss some of his knights as a condition of their continued support. Disillusioned, Lear exiles himself into the wild, where he meets "Tom O'Bedlam", actually the young nobleman Edgar disguised as a madman. Lear, who is descending into a fit of madness himself, insists that nothing other than betrayal by his daughters could have made "Tom" so. The latter briefly repeats injunctions of stock wisdom, including "Obey thy parents." Lear is impressed, and considers him a wise philosopher. Ultimately, however, it's Cordelia who rescues Lear, and upon waking up in her care, he is very humble and conciliatory.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e979656a
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_e979656a
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_e979656a
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ea35fda5
type
Bastard Bastard
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ea35fda5
comment
Bastard Bastard: Edmund gets a lengthy soliloquy on why his bastard status causes him to be treated as a lesser man than his half-brother Edgar. Unlike most examples, his noble father the Earl of Gloucester acknowledges and loves Edmund, but that's not good enough—he wants to be the heir, and he'll do what it takes to make it happen.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ea35fda5
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ea35fda5
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_ea35fda5
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ead0869d
type
Acquitted Too Late
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ead0869d
comment
Acquitted Too Late: Edmund sends someone to pardon Lear and Cordelia's execution on his deathbed, but he's too late and Cordelia is hanged.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ead0869d
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ead0869d
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_ead0869d
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_eb8ec7c8
type
Jerkass
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_eb8ec7c8
comment
Lear, while not evil, is a temperamental, power-hungry Jerkass who thinks only of himself. Unlike most of Shakespeare's Tragic Heroes, he does see the error of his ways and becomes a genuinely good person by the end... but his transformation comes too late to prevent him from losing everything, including, ultimately, his life.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_eb8ec7c8
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_eb8ec7c8
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_eb8ec7c8
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_eba6a077
type
Cain and Abel
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_eba6a077
comment
Cain and Abel: Played With. Since he was born out of wedlock, Edmund is Edgar's half-brother. However, this doesn't stop Edmund trying to do away with and discredit Edgar in the pursuit for his father's title. Edgar finishes Edmund off in the final act, the religious Aesop being that the true child will always triumph over the bastard. If you count Goneril and Regan as one entity then they fit when pitted against Cordelia. They are the two evil sisters who become the play's main antagonists, while Cordelia is the Morality Pet whose absence causes things to fall out of control.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_eba6a077
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_eba6a077
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_eba6a077
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ee9877ea
type
Too Good for This Sinful Earth
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ee9877ea
comment
Too Good for This Sinful Earth: Cordelia, the most kind and virtuous character in the story, ends up being executed, mostly to make a point about how fleeting happiness is and how unjust the world can be at times.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ee9877ea
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ee9877ea
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1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_ee9877ea
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ef10a978
type
Two-Faced Aside
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ef10a978
comment
Two-Faced Aside: After Lear has left the throne room, Regan and Goneril, who have just made flowery professions of their love for their aging father, who fear his violent outbursts may get worse, decide to take precautionary measures to deprive the king emeritus of what little power he has left in his 100 knights with Goneril's staff ignoring him and Cornwall placing Kent in the stocks after he brawls with Oswald.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ef10a978
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ef10a978
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_ef10a978
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ef20dac5
type
Servile Snarker
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ef20dac5
comment
Servile Snarker: When Lear arrives at Goneril's palace and the servants ignore him, Oswald's impudent speech to Lear treats him as an ordinary father instead of a king, and Lear immediately takes offense: As a more sympathetic example, The Fool's jests are mostly at Lear's expense, alluding to the folly of Lear's decision to favor his elder daughters and effectively hand over his kingdom and power to them. He does so with the false hope of talking some sense back into the old man.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ef20dac5
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ef20dac5
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_ef20dac5
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f1492605
type
Redemption Equals Death
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f1492605
comment
Redemption Equals Death: Lear, while not evil, is a temperamental, power-hungry Jerkass who thinks only of himself. Unlike most of Shakespeare's Tragic Heroes, he does see the error of his ways and becomes a genuinely good person by the end... but his transformation comes too late to prevent him from losing everything, including, ultimately, his life. Edmund repents at the very last minute and tries to order a pardon for Cordelia's execution. He dies shortly after his dying reconciliation with Edgar who bests him in battle.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f1492605
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f1492605
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_f1492605
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f64a9cf7
type
Earn Your Happy Ending
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f64a9cf7
comment
Earn Your Happy Ending: Lear regains his throne and Edgar and Cordelia are allowed to marry.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f64a9cf7
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f64a9cf7
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_f64a9cf7
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f6b2bfb7
type
Gold Digger
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f6b2bfb7
comment
Gold Digger: Cordelia has a suitor who drops his suit when her father disinherits her.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f6b2bfb7
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f6b2bfb7
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_f6b2bfb7
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f6e99f40
type
Youngest Child Wins
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f6e99f40
comment
Youngest Child Wins: As the play is based on fairy tale tropes, this one is present. Cordelia the youngest is the most moral person in the play, and she's her father's favourite. She ends up disowned and, despite pulling Big Damn Heroes to save her father, she still ends up hanged. Ian McKellen's version had Lear wearing two wedding rings, implying that Cordelia is a child of a second marriage.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f6e99f40
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f6e99f40
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_f6e99f40
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f7a2e62c
type
Fake Assisted Suicide
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f7a2e62c
comment
Fake Assisted Suicide: The blinded Earl of Gloucester asks a mad beggar (actually his son Edgar in disguise) to lead him to the cliffs of Dover so he can jump to his death. Edgar leads him across level land, claiming it is the clifftop; after Gloucester has harmlessly "jumped," Edgar assumes another persona and tells Gloucester that he has been spared miraculously and that the person who led him to the cliff appeared to be an evil spirit.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f7a2e62c
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f7a2e62c
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_f7a2e62c
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f97b5d33
type
Shoo Out the Clowns
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f97b5d33
comment
Shoo Out the Clowns: The Fool disappears after Act III, meaning the comic relief is absent. That's also when the bodies start piling up.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f97b5d33
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_f97b5d33
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_f97b5d33
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_fc45bac0
type
Wouldn't Hit a Girl
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_fc45bac0
comment
Wouldn't Hit a Girl: Albany says of much after discovering Goneril's affair with Edmund.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_fc45bac0
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_fc45bac0
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_fc45bac0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_fd7267dd
type
Master of Disguise
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_fd7267dd
comment
Master of Disguise: The Earl of Kent disguises himself as a servant after being banished by King Lear, and Edgar disguises himself as Tom O'Bedlam, a rustic peasant, and a masked knight after he is declared an outlaw by his father. Both of them are able to fool close friends and family (and each other) though it's quite possible the Fool sees through Kent's disguise, and Gloucester feels as if his son is close at hand when he hears the disguised Edgar's voice.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_fd7267dd
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_fd7267dd
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_fd7267dd
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_fe48cea2
type
Lady of War
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_fe48cea2
comment
Lady of War: Affairs in France force Cordelia's husband to remain behind when the French army comes to Lear's aid, and even though a conversation mentions the man assigned to lead in his absence, Cordelia is the only one shown to be in charge.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_fe48cea2
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_fe48cea2
featureConfidence
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Lear (Theatre) / int_fe48cea2
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ff7f34c5
type
Pet the Dog
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ff7f34c5
comment
Pet the Dog: Goneril seems to have some affection for her servant Oswald.
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ff7f34c5
featureApplicability
1.0
 King Lear (Theatre) / int_ff7f34c5
featureConfidence
1.0
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_ff7f34c5
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type
ItemName
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1.0
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King Lear (Theatre) / int_name
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itemName
King Lear (Theatre)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Cap o' Rushes
seeAlso
King Lear (Theatre)
 KingLear
seeAlso
King Lear (Theatre)
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
A Mistake Is Born / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
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Abdicate the Throne / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Accent Depundent / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
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Actor-Inspired Heroism / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Adaptational Alternate Ending / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Adaptational Diversity / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
All Women Are Lustful / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Amazingly Embarrassing Parents / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ambiguously Absent Parent / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Angrish / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Anthropic Principle / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Audience-Coloring Adaptation / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Bait the Dog / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Bastard Bastard / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Betrayal by Offspring / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Bridal Carry / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Bumbling Dad / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Caged Bird Metaphor / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Cain and Abel / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Calling the Old Man Out / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Cast Full of Crazy / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Character Title / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Characters Dropping Like Flies / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Cloudcuckoolander / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
"Could Have Avoided This!" Plot / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Court Jester / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Cross-Cast Role / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Death by Adaptation / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Death by Despair / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Died in Your Arms Tonight / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Dinner Theatre / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Divided We Fall / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Dying for Symbolism / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Even Evil Can Be Loved / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Eye Scream / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Fairytale Motifs / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Fake Assisted Suicide / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Fatal Flaw / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Fisher King / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Fix Fic / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Flowery Insults / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
For the Evulz / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Get Thee to a Nunnery / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Good Princess, Evil Queen / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gratuitous French / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gratuitous Iambic Pentameter / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gut Feeling / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Handy Helper / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Happily Failed Suicide / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Happy Harlequin Hat / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Heel–Face Door-Slam / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Heel–Face Turn / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Henpecked Husband / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Heroic Bystander / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Honor Thy Parent / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Hope Spot / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Horrible Judge of Character / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Hostile Show Takeover / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
I Like My X Like I Like My Y / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
I'm Dying, Please Take My MacGuffin / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
In the Style of / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Inadequate Inheritor / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Internal Reveal / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Irrevocable Message / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Irrevocable Order / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Jerkass Has a Point / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
King Incognito / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Lady Luck / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Leaning on the Fourth Wall / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Mad Oracle / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Manipulative Bastard / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Merciful Minion / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Middle Child Syndrome / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Mirth to Power / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Murder-Suicide / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Naked Nutter / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Not His Sled / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Obfuscating Insanity / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
One Degree of Separation / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ooh, Me Accent's Slipping / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Out of Focus / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Outliving One's Offspring / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Parental Favoritism / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Parental Incest / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Perfect Poison / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Playing Both Sides / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Please Wake Up / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Plot Parallel / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Politically Incorrect Hero / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Practically Different Generations / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Princeling Rivalry / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Public Domain Character / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Rage Against the Heavens / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Rapid-Fire Descriptors / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Redemption Equals Death / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Reduced to Ratburgers / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Revised Ending / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Riches to Rags / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Rock Bottom / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Role Called / int_9a6791aa
 Ron Halder
seeAlso
King Lear (Theatre)
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Royal Bastard / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Ruler Protagonist / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Seemingly Profound Fool / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Setting Update / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Shoo Out the Clowns / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Sibling Murder / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Signature Scene / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Small Role, Big Impact / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Smite Me, O Mighty Smiter / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Spear Carrier / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Spotlight-Stealing Squad / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Straw Nihilist / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Symbolic Mutilation / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
The Chessmaster / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
The Ingenue / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
The Lost Lenore / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
The Ophelia / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
The Simple Gesture Wins / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
The Thing That Would Not Leave / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
The Tower / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
The Un-Favourite / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Theatre is True Acting / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Then Let Me Be Evil / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Too Good for This Sinful Earth / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Tragic Mistake / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Two Lines, No Waiting / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Villain's Dying Grace / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
What You Are in the Dark / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Who Writes This Crap?! / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Word Salad Philosophy / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Wounded Gazelle Gambit / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
You Are Worth Hell / int_9a6791aa
 King Lear (Theatre)
hasFeature
Youngest Child Wins / int_9a6791aa
 kinglear
sameAs
King Lear (Theatre)