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Prospero ( ) is a fictional character and the of William Shakespeare's .


Character
Twelve years before the play begins, Prospero is usurped from his position as the rightful Duke of Milan by his brother Antonio, who puts Prospero and his three-year-old daughter Miranda to sea on a "rotten carcass" of a boat to die. Prospero and Miranda survived and found exile on a small island inhabited mostly by spirits. Prospero learned sorcery from books, and uses it to protect Miranda.

Before the play begins, Prospero freed the magical spirit Ariel from entrapment within "a cloven pine". Ariel is beholden to Prospero after he is freed from his imprisonment inside the pine tree. Prospero then takes Ariel as a slave. Prospero's sorcery is sufficiently powerful to control Ariel and other spirits, as well as to alter weather and even raise the dead: "Graves at my command have waked their sleepers, oped, and let 'em forth, by my so potent Art." - Act V, scene 1.

On the island, Prospero becomes master of the monster Caliban, the son of a malevolent witch named , and forces Caliban into submission by punishing him with magic if he does not obey.


Prospero's speech
The Tempest is believed to be the last play Shakespeare wrote alone. In this play there are two candidate soliloquies by Prospero which critics have taken to be Shakespeare's own "retirement speech".

One speech is the "Our revels now are ended" or "Cloud-capp'd towers..." speech:

          Our revels now are ended: These our actors—,
          As I foretold you—, were all spirits and
          Are melted into air, into thin air;
          And, like the baseless fabric of this vision,
          The cloud-capp'd towers, the gorgeous palaces,
          The solemn temples, the great globe itself,
          Yea, all which it inherit, shall dissolve
          And, like this insubstantial pageant faded,
          Leave not a rack behind: we are such stuff
          As dreams are made on, and our little life
          Is rounded with a sleep. — ''The Tempest'', Act 4, Scene 1
     

The final and is the other candidate.

          Now my charms are all o'erthrown,
          And what strength I have's mine own,
          Which is most faint: now, 'tis true,
          I must be here confined by you,
          Or sent to Naples. Let me not,
          Since I have my dukedom got
          And pardon'd the deceiver, dwell
          In this bare island by your spell;
          But release me from my bands
          With the help of your good hands:
          Gentle breath of yours my sails
          Must fill, or else my project fails,
          Which was to please. Now I want
          Spirits to enforce, art to enchant,
          And my ending is despair,
          Unless I be relieved by prayer,
          Which pierces so that it assaults
          Mercy itself and frees all faults.
          As you from crimes would pardon'd be,
          Let your indulgence set me free.
     


Portrayals

Stage
Portrayals of Prospero in Royal Shakespeare Company productions include:

Portrayals of Prospero at the include:

Portrayals of Prospero for the New York Shakespeare Festival include:

Portrayals of Prospero for the Globe Theatre include:

Portrayals of Prospero for the Stratford Shakespeare Festival include:

  • William Hutt (1962, 1976, 1999, 2005)
  • (1982), videotaped and broadcast on television in 1983
  • (1992)
  • Christopher Plummer (2010), videotaped and broadcast on television
  • (2018)

Other stage portrayals of Prospero include:


Film and television
Prospero-esque characters have included:
  • 's film Tempest (1982) starring as "Philip Dimitrius", who is an exile of his own cynical discontent, ego and self-betrayal and who abandons America for a utopian "kingdom" on a secluded Greek isle.
  • The 1998 TV movie The Tempest, set in a Mississippi bayou during the American Civil War, based on Shakespeare's play and starring as "Gideon Prosper", a Prospero-esque plantation owner who has learned voodoo from his slaves.


Audio
Audio portrayals of Prospero include:


In popular culture
  • In the comic book series The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen by and Kevin O'Neill, Prospero appears as a founding member of the first such grouping in 1610, alongside his familiars Caliban and Ariel.
  • Paul Prospero, the protagonist of The Vanishing of Ethan Carter (2014), is named after Prospero.
  • In 's novel The Face in the Frost (1969), one of the protagonists is a wizard named Prospero ("and not the one you're thinking of") .
  • In and further fleshed out in The Horus Heresy series, several books take place on a planet called Prospero, home of Magnus the Red and his Thousand Sons Space Marine legion. The citizens of the planet are versed in sorcery and psychic powers, earning them the suspicion and ire of the rest of the Imperium of Man.
  • Melon Cauliflower, by New Zealand playwright Tom McCrory, is about a man Prospero, in his late sixties, who struggles to come to terms with the death of his wife and has mistreated his daughter Miranda.
  • "The Masque of the Red Death", by Edgar Allan Poe, is set at the manor of a Prince Prospero
  • In the television series by and / Paramount Pictures, Prospero appears briefly played by Lt. Cmdr. Data () during the beginning of Season 7 Episode 23 entitled "". He recites some lines of Prospero's speech before asking Captain Picard () to provide some insight into the character of Prospero and Shakespeare's The Tempest in general.
  • In the mobile game Star Trek Timelines a character was released in February 2017 called Prospero Data, recalling the character's appearance in the previously mentioned Star Trek: The Next Generation episode.
  • A good wizard named Prospero appears in Polish children's animated cartoon based on the books by Ewa Karwan-Jastrzębska.
  • Prospero is the main antagonist in season 2 of TV series The Librarians. This version of Prospero (Richard Cox) is a Fictional, a character brought to life by magic, and has become bitter over the way his story was written, as he feels it was made without his consent. After regaining his book and obtaining the Staff of , he imprisons the Librarians within his illusions, but his servant Ariel (an actual fairy rather than a character) rebels and frees them. Prospero subsequently begins to reshape the world in his image, while also possessing his creator Shakespeare in order to change the past. The Librarians destroy his staff and exorcise him from Shakespeare's body, banishing him back to his original story.
  • In episode 1 of the video game , the drama students of Blackwell Academy are seen rehearsing for their upcoming play, The Tempest. The character plays Prospero and the player character, Chloe Price plays Ariel briefly. The play itself occurs during episode 2.
  • In the manga series , a character with the name Perospero appears in chapter 834, partly inspired by Prospero. His mother, Charlotte Linlin also seems to be inspired by the character as she is the one to use magic to control everything on the Island with her soul.
  • The novels and television series The Expanse use several Shakespearean allusions, including "" in reference to monstrous human-alien hybrids, and correspondingly "Prospero Station", a research facility that was developing and controlling them.
  • In the national bestseller The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern, magician Hector Bowen, father of protagonist Celia Bowen, goes by the name of Prospero whilst performing.
  • In the season 30 episode of The Simpsons titled "I'm Just a Girl Who Can't Say D'oh", Sideshow Mel leaves a play Marge is directing to play Prospero and is replaced by Professor Frink.
  • In the strategy game Into the Breach: There is a possibility to gain a red colored robotic pilot named Prospero by default. This pilot has the special ability of giving the mech he pilots flight.
  • In the flight simulator , a major city of Cascadia, an allied nation to the protagonist, is named Prospero.
  • In the anime series , the main character's mother goes by the name Prospera Mercury. She has sent her daughter, Suletta Mercury, to a piloting school alongside a Gundam named Aerial.
  • Prospero's 'our revels now are ended' speech, is recited by to play out the final episode of Endeavour, the prequel to Inspector Morse.
  • In the 2023 dystopian novel The Ferryman by , the setting is an archipelago named Prospera. Prospero's speeches are quoted several times throughout the novel.
  • The novels Ilium/Olympos by feature Prospero as well as several other characters from The Tempest.
  • In the BBC television series Doctor Who, the Sycorax are an alien race who invade the Earth at Christmas. The Sycorax possess a science, similar to witchcraft, which allows them to use a blood sample to control all humans of the same blood type.
  • In the play Rough Magic by comic book author Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, Prospero is accidentally brought into the real world of New York City by the character Melanie, a with magical powers she is just learning to control.
    (2026). 9780822223320, Dramatists Play Service.
  • In , the Zombies character Dr. Monty recites a section of the Tempest. It has been largely implied the character of Monty was based on alchemist and esotericist , who in turn has been said to be the inspiration for Prospero.


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