Gushing About Characters You Like (Sugar Wiki)/Theatre

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.


Examples of Gushing About Characters You Like (Sugar Wiki) in Theatre include:

Sometimes everything that you try isn't enough to change the world. Sometimes your greatest triumphs lead directly to your downfall. But when you open your heart to someone else, and you change each other, then whatever may come, you are unlimited.

    • I love Glinda. I don't know what it is about her, perhaps her "Happy hero on the outside, Depressed hero on the inside" thing that makes her a total woobie, but I love absolutely every song she's in simply because she's in it. So that definitely counts for something. But then again, she does have a lot of grace, a lot of charm and charisma, and she is, dare I say... popular.
  • Rent‍'‍s entire cast. Where to begin?
    • Mark, the very definition of the word "adorkable."
    • Roger, closed-off Woobie with a Voice of Gold.
    • Mimi. Yes, I know she's not the most popular, but I still love her "live for the moment" attitude!
    • Angel. She falls juuuust shy of being a Purity Sue, but if she is, she's the Mary Poppins kind, not the scary badfic kind.
    • Maureen. "Moo with me." THAT IS ALL.
    • Joanne, who gets special points for her part in "Take Me Or Leave Me." Something about seeing a nerd let her hair down like that is just...awesome.
    • Collins, for being the most honest version of Invisible to Gaydar I've ever seen portrayed in a play. You could seriously know someone like him.
    • Yes, even Benny, for being the bigger man and helping out the same people who'd been dicks to him the whole play so far.
      • Ditto for Benny, who definitely had the opportunity to act the bigger man after his so-called friends turn against him for... taking a practical, non-freezing-in-an-unpaid-attic route to get that media center.
  • How to Succeed In Business Without Really Trying: J. Pierrepont Finch.
  • Hairspray: Tracy Turnblad. A very bright, energetic, talented, and good-hearted girl who's willing to fight for her dreams and what she believes in. The fact that she's short and chubby isn't even an issue; in fact, she doesn't just make it look good, she's makes it look very good!
  • Hamlet, in Hamlet. Not many characters can go from Ax Crazy to honorable hero, to Anti-Hero, to Nietzsche Wannabe (before Nietzche even existed), to tragic hero, while still coming across as a realistic character. He does, and he does it in verse.
    • What about Horatio? He's a Nice Guy and is Hamlet's only true friend throughout the play. Hamlet himself makes speeches about how awesome he is, and in the end, after the prince dies in his arms, he decided to live on and honor his friend's memory by spreading the word. He's my definition of Undying Loyalty.
  • Katharina in The Taming of the Shrew. A modern, awesome role model, who is forced into a relationship with a guy who is, depending on the interpretation, either abusive and horrifying or sees her as a challenge to overcome. And she deals with it better than any modern viewer would expect - she doesn't run away, she doesn't pull a Romeo & Juliet, she even tries to stop the marriage. I just love her. <3
    • Well she was initially meant to be seen as a shrew who'd have to submit to her husband in the end in a case of old-time Values Dissonance, but I too admire how she handled things and made the most of her situation. And if we're going by the latter interpretation, than kudos to Petruchio too for not handling her in the abusive manner that one would fear he would.
    • In a similar vein, there's Kat from 10 Things I Hate About You. She's a snarky feminist who was hurt by her boyfriend and made herself stronger because of it. She never rolled over for him, saw to it that he didn't brag to his friends about them sleeping together, and vowed to always stand up for what she believed in. And in the end, when the guy she loved screwed her over, she tells him off via a Tear Jerker of a poem.
  • Brian Le Petit in Cirque Du Soleil's Mystere. A Screwy Squirrel through and through, but his sheer determination to stir up mischief and deflate pompousness leaves you with a lighter, warmer heart.
  • Galileo Figaro in We Will Rock You. Cursed with Awesome dreams of long forgotten songs and is, as he admits himself, mad because of them, implied to have had a terrible childhood, and shown to be hated because of something he can't control, and yet the kid is still idealistic, and hopeful. Face it, guy's a puppy dog
  • Puck from A Midsummer Night's Dream. Sure, he makes mistakes, but he's the one who makes hilarity ensue. Plus, he's adorably energetic in most portrayals and in some cases (one case) played by Stanley Tucci.
  • I absolutely adore Inspector Javert from Les Misérables in both the book and the musical. Not only does he have the most badass part in the musical, he's a fantastic snarker in the book. The entire scene when he arrests Patron-Minette at the Gorbeau House is an Awesome Moment.
    • "Would you like my hat?"
    • "You shall not go out by the window, you shall go out through the door. It is healthier."
    • To Madame Thénardier: "What a grenadier! You've got a beard like a man, mother, but I have claws like a woman."
  • Cyrano from Cyrano De Bergerac! Seriously, he's a walking Crowning Moment of Awesome, loyal to his few true friends, the epic repressed love for Roxane, the quite suffering, and the independence! He never sacrifices one iota of his freedom to get ahead in life or make money, or make people like him, and yet he's one of the most epic characters ever, so why wouldn't you???