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William "Bill" Sikes is a fictional character in the novel ''Oliver Twist'' by Charles Dickens. He is one of Dickens's most vicious characters and a very strong force in the novel when it comes to having control over somebody or harming others. He is portrayed as a rough and barbaric man. Sikes is a career criminal associated with Fagin, and an eventual murderer. He is violent and aggressive, prone to sudden bursts of extreme behaviour. He owns a bull terrier named Bull's Eye, whom he beats until the dog needs stitches. Dickens describes his first appearance: His prostitute girlfriend Nancy tolerates his violent and lawless behaviour, perhaps because she, being a thief since the age of six, needs stability in her life, and because she believes that she loves him. However, when he thinks Nancy has betrayed him, Sikes viciously murders her. The murder is especially gruesome and one of the most graphic, frightening scenes Dickens ever wrote. In the end a mob hounds him through the streets of London until he hangs himself while trying to escape. It is left ambiguous as to whether or not this was intentional. Sikes has almost no redeeming qualities, although Dickens does give him some shading: at the robbery in the countryside, Sikes, rather than leave Oliver at the scene of his botched burglary of Rose Maylie's house, picks him up and runs with him as far as he can, before hiding him in a ditch at the suggestion of an accomplice. After he brutally beats Nancy to death, he apparently is capable of feeling guilt—although this is essentially suspicion that Fagin lied to him about her betrayal, and fear of the possibility of being caught. Sikes lives in Bethnal Green and later moves to the squalid rookery area of London then called Jacob's Island, east of present-day Shad Thames. Sikes' background and early life prior to joining Fagin are not mentioned in the book. However, it can be deduced that he could have come from a family of criminals and could have been treated harshly as a child (the most likely cause of his violent personality). ==Theatrical portrayals== Sikes was played by Danny Sewell in the stage musical ''Oliver!'' which won several awards in the early 1960s. Oliver Reed played Sikes in the 1968 film musical ''Oliver!'' which also won several awards. In the latter, Sikes's death is changed slightly: while attempting to swing to another building to escape the mob, he is shot by a police officer and is hanged from the stomach. Robert Newton played Sikes in the 1948 British film noir ''Oliver Twist''. Perhaps Newton's portrayal is the closest to how Dickens himself envisioned the character: a vicious, heavy drinking sociopath. In Disney's animated version, ''Oliver & Company'' (1988), Sikes is renamed Sykes and he is a cold-hearted loan shark who lives and works in a New York shipyard with his Dobermans, Roscoe and DeSoto and is voiced by Robert Loggia. Fagin, here depicted as a dogkeeper, owes him money. In a final confrontation, Sykes chases Fagin and the dogs into the subway tunnels until they reach the Brooklyn Bridge. While Roscoe and DeSoto are killed when they fall onto the electrified railway, Sykes fights with Oliver on the roof of his limousine, and is finally killed when his car collides with a train, sending his body falling into the East River. In Disney's 1997 live action television production, ''Oliver Twist'', Bill Sikes is played by David O'Hara. Sikes is portrayed by actor Tom Hardy in the BBC One ''Oliver Twist (2007 miniseries)'', later aired in the United States on PBS's Masterpiece Classic. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bill Sikes」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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