A Dolls House
A Dolls House
A Dolls House
ACT 1
All start in a house very modest on Noruega in the century XIX for that age
with Nora and her husband Torvald, it’s Christmas and Nora comes home
with many gifts for her children and employees, Nora asks for more money
to buy more gift her husband bothering by this situation start to fight in
addition Nora eat macaroni her husband the punishment since she cannot
damage his figure because she only belongs to him as his doll then his
friend Cristine comes to visit, Nora begins to tell her secrets where she gets
all her money to travel but with a little manipulation and vanity telling her
secrets for example that money had given her many admirers when in fact
came from her father’s money manipulating Cristine dissing that she had
achieved it in that way revealing a bad character of Nora, Suddenly the
Christian Pope takes the Lord KroG and the Lord’s Doctor Torvald the Doctor
rank. Nora asks her husband if she can get a job at the bank, Torvald tells
him that he will stop him then Nora goes to play with the children Mr.
Torvald goes with his doctor, but Mr. Krog stays spying on Nora at a private
moment then Cristine begins to discuss medicine, but Torvald gives him a
lucrative potion that is believed with the range of flirting with Nora
whenever he wants. The whole truth is that Nora falsified the money of Echo
her father died before signing the check was a fraud that discovered her it
was the father of Krog told her that if she did not want to be exposed to her
husband had to convince him to leave her modest post in the It was the best
thing I’d gotten in years, though he does not do it for money he does it to
regain a place in society in this case the bourgeoisie which at this time was
the main thing and to end this scene Nora talk with her husband on a
masquerade what was very ironic since she was hiding something finally
Torvald said that the masks were for the hypocrites what he did not know is
that the wife was hiding something very big
ACT 2
It is Christmas day, and Nora has refused to see her children. She nervously
prepares for the upcoming costume party. She discusses Dr. Rank and her
loan problem with Christine, who drops by to help mend Nora's old, torn
costume. Christine leaves when Torvald enters, and Nora begs him to not
fire Krogstad. Angered, Torvald sends the dismissal letter immediately
instead of waiting until after the New Year. Alone, Nora agonizes over
Krogstad exposing the secret loan, thinking Dr. Rank may be able to help
when he shows up and reveals his impending death and feelings of love for
her. Krogstad drops by and demands to see Nora and, after they talk, drops
a letter divulging the loan and forgery into the locked letterbox outside
Torvald's office. Nora distracts Torvald from reading Krogstad's letter by
having him help her rehearse the tarantella for tomorrow night's dance.
Seeing that Nora is agitated, Christine offers to visit Krogstad to try to
convince him to take the letter back unread, but Krogstad is not at home
when she visits.
ACT 3
Christine reveals she still harbors love for Krogstad and wishes for them to
"join forces." Krogstad offers to recall his letter to Torvald and not expose
Nora's loan and forgery now that Christine wants to marry him, but Christine
tells him to leave the letter in the box. Krogstad waits for Christine outside
while she says goodnight to Torvald and Nora. Torvald, who is bored with
Christine, tells her he will not walk her home because she "[hasn't] any
great distance to go." Torvald, in a festive mood, acts romantically toward
Nora, but they are interrupted by Dr. Rank's visit, during which he lets Nora
know he is dying. Torvald reads Krogstad's letter, renounces Nora, then
reads Krogstad's new letter and forgives her. Nora, having been treated as a
"doll" by her father and then her husband, has never had to develop her
own opinions about religion, morality, and the law. By the end of the play,
she must develop them. Torvald lacks a general understanding of Nora's
desire for self-awareness and, point for point in their final conversation, he
tries desperately to define Nora's views on "sacred duties," "religion," and
"conscience" with his own. However, those days are over for Nora, who
replies, "But you neither think nor talk like the man I could bind myself to."
Nora and Torvald talk seriously about their marriage and Nora's intention to
end it. Nora tells Torvald he is no longer obligated to her, and they give their
wedding rings back to each other. Nora leaves, and Torvald cries out in
despair and hope.
FIN ODIO A CATLINA