26/04/2026
“If you will not murder me for my love, let me be your servant.” ❤️🩹
As we reach the end of our series, let us return the spotlight 🔦 to a character who does not quite get – but does deserve – a happy ending of his own. Meet Antonio, the steadfast sea captain of Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night!
Having “many enemies” (2.1.44) in the court of Orsino, Duke of Illyria, Antonio is most known for the risks he takes out of love for Sebastian, his companion whom he harbors “love at first sight”-like feelings for (“and to his image, which methought did promise / most venerable worth, did I devotion” (3.4.381–382)). Notably, Antonio develops these feelings of intense devotion towards Sebastian both with, and without, his real name or elite status. Even when Sebastian reveals that he is of noble birth to Antonio, he chooses to stay with him, offering to be his bondservant (much to Sebastian’s disapproval), his love unwavering.
It is this unrequited love that motivates Antonio’s actions, up to the very end. His love pushes him to follow Sebastian, to subject himself to danger and arrest just to be with the man he loves. He mistakes a disguised Viola, Sebastian’s twin sister, for Sebastian himself (while the real Sebastian is rescued from a duel by Olivia, whom he eventually falls for). When Viola denies having ever known Antonio, he, understandably, feels fury and anguish – in his eyes, he has been abandoned by the one person he loved “without retention or restraint” (5.1.79). Until the real Sebastian’s arrival, Antonio is put into a position in which he finds himself alone, as he begins to doubt the past three months that he and Sebastian shared. And though they do reunite, Antonio ultimately remains an outsider, a ‘fifth wheel,’ among the ‘resolved’ couples of Twelfth Night – with his last words in the play being a question: “Which is Sebastian?” (5.1.235). Afterwards, he is never heard from, or acknowledged, again.
Appearing in only four of Twelfth Night’s scenes, the character of Antonio remains one interpreted, and re-interpreted, by scholars and artists throughout the years. b, who played Antonio in The Public Theater’s Free Shakespeare in the Park production of Twelfth Night, depicts the sea captain as a “fluid” character defined by his grit and experience, “having seen more of the world” than the rest of the cast. Such knowledge, depth, and potential, still unexplored – but it is here that artists of the modern day, such as theatre actors (and fan fiction authors), find opportunity in the narrative gaps.
Twelfth Night’s subtitle, “What You Will,” encourages art and adaptation to give Antonio the voice he did not manage to get in the play’s ending. Glances, changes in expression, and line deliveries are all capable of telling complex and compelling stories, even when the script is followed word-for-word. As the character of Antonio is discussed and fleshed out more as time passes, we ought to recognize and appreciate this underrated sea captain and all his qualities: he embodies love, faith, and sacrifice, in every way that counts; he also represents a sense of freedom, amidst binaries and structure. Antonio’s story is not “doomed,” but instead unfinished, left for those who resonate with and relate to him to tie up loose ends, follow the captain’s lead, and reforge the path anew. ⛵
Works Cited
b []. “On playing Antonio in Twelfth Night.” Interview by Emily Rome. Instagram, uploaded by Shakespeare’s Shadows [], 30 Aug. 2025, https://www.instagram.com/reel/DN_KZADkeYD/.
Tosh, Will. “Sebastian and Antonio's hidden q***r lives (Excerpt: Straight Acting: The Hidden Q***r Lives of William Shakespeare by Will Tosh).” Folger Shakespeare Library, 17 Sept. 2024, https://www.folger.edu/blogs/shakespeare-and-beyond/sebastian-and-antonios-hidden-q***r-lives/.
Walton, Quintin. “Antonio's Lament: "Mightily Abused" in Twelfth Night.” Perpetua: The UAH Journal of Undergraduate Research, vol. 1, no. 1, Dec. 2016, pp. 17–28. https://louis.uah.edu/perpetua/vol1/iss1/3
Caption & pubmat: Ai Ignacio
Pubmat template: Ves Soriano