Falstaff is a character in many plays by William Shakespeare. |
Falstaff is a character in many plays by William Shakespeare. Round and glorious, Shakespeare wrote the part for his second comedian, a fat man (Name?), who played at bold, baudy humor of a John Candy sort. Flush with flatuelent humor, Falstaff still managed to embody a kind of depth common to Shakespeare's tricky comedy. In the scene that describes his death in [Henry V]? (reference?) he is discovered by the barlady [Mistress Quickly]? who describes his body in terms that echo the description of the death of Socrates.
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He figures prominently in:
There is a LOT to say about him. Would someone like to start?
Giuseppe Verdi's last opera, an [opera buffa]?, is based on (...) and it's called also Falstaff?