Mistress Ford
A resident of Windsor,
Mistress Ford is married to Ford and is a friend of Mistress Page. When she and
Mistress Page receive a seductive letter from Falstaff, they decide to lead him
on and ruin him. In the meantime, Mistress Ford hopes to prove to her husband
that she is entirely faithful, so that he will get over his oppressive
jealousy.
A resident of Windsor,
Mistress Page is married to Page and is a friend of Mistress Ford. When she and
Mistress Ford receive a seductive letter from Falstaff, they decide to lead him
on and ruin him. Meanwhile, Mistress Page and her husband disagree about who
should marry their daughter, Anne Page. She favors Caius, but her husband
favors Slender; Anne herself likes neither. However, both must learn the lesson
to listen to the romantic desires of their daughter.
Falstaff is a knight, but he is also
a scoundrel and occasionally a thief. In Henry IV, Part I , he was a
drinking buddy of the young Prince Henry. Falstaff is boisterous, lively, cowardly,
funny, and mischievous; he is one of Shakespeare's most beloved creations,
appearing in several of his plays. In Wives, outside his element in the
countryside, Falstaff thinks he can get away with seducing married women in
order to gain access to their husbands' cash. Hence he launches a plan to
seduce Mistress Page and Mistress Ford. However, they are cleverer than he is
and, on three separate occasions, cause him to be humiliated, beaten, or dunked
in a river.
Husband of Mistress Ford.
Ford is very jealous of his wife. When he learns that Falstaff intends to try
to seduce his wife, he is sure she'll fall for Falstaff and shame him. Hence he
puts on a disguise, calls himself Brooke, and goes to the Garter Inn to find
out about Falstaff's plans and his wife's responses. During the play, he must
learn to let go of his jealousy, which he eventually manages to do.
Husband of Mistress Page. Page is not jealous
of his wife, so when he hears about Falstaff's plan, he doesn't think she's
likely to find Falstaff interesting. In comparison to Ford, his easygoing
attitude makes him look like a wonderful husband, but he has other problems. He
and his wife disagree about who should marry their daughter Anne, and neither
are able to choose the suitor she likes, namely Fenton. He must learn that he
should listen to his daughter's opinions.
Sir Hugh Evans is the local
clergyman. He's Welsh, so he speaks in an accent that the other English
citizens find very amusing. They make fun of him constantly for it; finally he
and Caius band together to humiliate the Host after he makes fools of them.
The local doctor, Caius is
Mistress Quickly's master. He is French, so he suffers the same humiliation as
Evans because of his accent and broken English. He hopes to marry Anne Page,
and Mistress Page favors him, but Page doesn't, and their conflicting
schemes--combined with the fact that Anne does not like him--disrupt his
marriage plans. He and Evans also make plans to get back at the Host for making
fun of them.
Daughter of Page and Mistress
Page, Anne is sought for marriage by an array of idiots, including Caius and
Slender. Yet she chooses Fenton and tricks her parents by managing to elope
with him. She defends her own choice and returns triumphant to show up her
parents, who were too busy debating their own preferences to listen to her.
A suitor for Anne Page's hand, Page
denies his suit because he fears that Fenton's interest is purely financial,
being high-born but poor. Fenton admits he felt this way at first, but once he
got to know Anne, he fell in love with her. She likes him best, and the two
marry at the end.
The third suitor for Anne Page's
hand, Slender is urged on by Shallow, but he is unable to speak anything but
nonsense to Anne. Page favors him as a good match for his daughter, but Anne
does not, and in the end he doesn't get to marry her.
Shallow - Shallow is a figure of the law, but
nevertheless a foolish character of misplaced authority. He urges Slender to
try to seduce Anne Page, even speaking for him at times.
Caius's servant, Mistress Quickly is
everyone's messenger. She goes to Falstaff at the behest of Mistress Page and
Mistress Ford, and she speaks to Anne Page on behalf of all three of her
suitors. Yet she prefers Fenton and supports his suit most readily. Mistress
Quickly chronically misunderstands or mishears other people, hearing sexually
charged conversations where there are none.
One of Falstaff's men, Bardolph
takes over as the bartender of the Garter Inn in order to pay for Falstaff's
entourage's room and board.
One of Falstaff's men, Nim wants to
stay honest, and he refuses to deliver Falstaff's seductive letters to Mistress
Page and Mistress Ford. Instead, he and Pistol decide to let the husbands know
of Falstaff's scheme.
One of Falstaff's men, Pistol wants
to stay honest, and he refuses to deliver Falstaff's seductive letters to
Mistress Page and Mistress Ford. Instead, he and Nim decide to let the husbands
know of Falstaff's scheme.
Host of the Garter Inn, the Host makes
fun of Evans and Caius's broken and accented English, so they decide to get
back at him by tricking him. Their ploy results in the loss of three of the
Host's horses.
Page's son, he meets Evans, who
gives him an impromptu Latin lesson which Mistress Quickly entirely mishears as
sexual innuendo.
Slender's servant.
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