Each of the main characters in Much Ado About Nothing is the victim of deception, and it is because they are deceived that they act in the ways that they do. Although the central deception is directed against Claudio in an attempt to destroy his relationship with Hero, it is the deceptions involving Beatrice and Benedick which provides the play’s dramatic focus. Nearly every character in the play at some point has to make inferences from what he or she sees, has been told or overhears. Likewise, nearly every character in the play at some point plays a part of consciously pretending to be what they are not. The idea of acting and the illusion it creates is rarely far from the surface – Don Pedro acts to Hero, Don John acts the part of an honest friend, concerned for his brother’s and Claudio’s honour; Leonato and his family act as if Hero were dead, encouraged to this deception by, of all people, the Friar who feels that deception may be the way to get at truth; and all the main characters in the plot pretend to Benedick and Beatrice so convincingly that they reverse their normal attitudes to each other. In I.
1 Don Pedro offers to play Claudio and win Hero for him. This plan is overheard, and misreported to Antonio. His excited retailing of the false news of Don Pedro’s love for Hero to Leonato is, however, not without some caution: the news will be good as ‘the event stamps them; but the have a good cover, they show well outward’ (I. 2. 6).
The Essay on Hero Play Beatrice Claudio
... scene plotted by Don John, however, feeds the tragic element of the play, disturbing the equilibrium of all the characters: Hero, Claudio, Leona to, ... establish confusion, and the theme of deception of appearances is introduced. The theme of deception in the play is beneficiary both for the ... themselves thrown into, is no longer the result of an act of treason but more of a harmless farce. The cruel ...
Leonato shows a sense here that he could well do with later in the play: ‘Hath the fellow any wit that told you this’…
‘we will hold it as a dream’… ‘peradventure this be true’. Admittedly he does not question the ‘good sharp fellow’ who overheard, any more than he examines Dogberry’s prisoners as he should, but the caution of the two older men about what would be only too delightful for them to believe is in sharp contrast to the readiness with which they believe in Hero’s disgrace. The first introduction of the motif of overhearing is more important than it might seem at first sight. Eavesdropping is almost a full-time occupation in Messina: virtually everybody does it. Don Pedro and Claudio eavesdrop on the conversation between the supposed Hero and Borachio and draw the inferences that Don John’s lie prejudiced them to draw.
Benedick and Beatrice think they are eavesdropping on their friends’ conversation, not realising that it is being held deliberately to deceive them. Beatrice is trapped into listening to Ursula and Hero by Hero’s making Margaret pretend she has overheard a conversation about her (III. 1. 6).
The importance of the introduction of the idea of eavesdropping and mishearing in I. 2 is stressed by the scenes that immediately follow.
In I. 3 the theme of deceit is again signalled. Don John reveals his true nature as an unscrupulous schemer, and his malevolence towards his brother – hidden under an apparent reconciliation, which all but his cronies have to accept at face value. Antonio’s man was not the only one to overhear Don Pedro and Claudio: Borachio reports correctly what Don Pedro’s plan is. Don John’s love of vindictive mischief breaks out in the twisting of the “>true false.