Harry Potter Poster #55 FRAMED the Wizard w/ Wand Deathly Hallows
$74.99
Description
Quidditch is a competitive sport in the Wizarding World of the Harry Potter universe, featured in the series of novels and movies. It is an extremely rough but very popular semi-contact sport, played by wizards and witches, and academic D. Bruno Starrs has written about its uniqueness as a sport in which players in the same match may be any age or gender. Matches are played between two teams of seven players riding flying broomsticks, using four balls called the Quaffle, two Bludgers, and the Golden Snitch. There are six elevated ring-shaped goals, three on each side of the Quidditch pitch. In the Harry Potter universe, Quidditch holds a fervent following.
The sport is monumental throughout the Wizarding World. Harry plays an important position for his house team at Hogwarts: he is the Seeker and becomes the team captain in his sixth year at school. Regional and international quidditch competitions are mentioned throughout the series. In Goblet of Fire, Quidditch at Hogwarts is cancelled for the Tri-Wizard Tournament, but Harry and the Weasleys attend the Quidditch World Cup. In addition, Harry uses his Quidditch skills to capture a golden egg from a dragon called the Hungarian Horntail (in the first task of the Tri-Wizard Tournament), to capture a flying key in Philosopher’s Stone, and on two vital occasions in Deathly Hallows — getting hold of Ravenclaw’s Diadem and during the final fight with Voldemort — Harry’s Quidditch skills prove extremely useful. Harry has owned two broomsticks, the Nimbus 2000 and the Firebolt, both of which are destroyed by the series’ end.
According to Rowling, the idea for both the Harry Potter books and its eponymous character came while waiting for a delayed train from Manchester to London in 1990. She stated that her idea for “this scrawny, black-haired, bespectacled boy who didn’t know he was a wizard became more and more real to me”. While developing the ideas for her book, she also decided to make Harry an orphan who attended a boarding school called Hogwarts. She explained in a 1999 interview with The Guardian: “Harry had to be an orphan — so that he’s a free agent, with no fear of letting down his parents, disappointing them … Hogwarts has to be a boarding school — half the important stuff happens at night! Then there’s the security. Having a child of my own reinforces my belief that children above all want security, and that’s what Hogwarts offers Harry.”
Her own mother’s death on 30 December 1990 inspired Rowling to write Harry Potter as a boy longing for his dead parents, his anguish becoming “much deeper, much more real” than in earlier drafts because she related to it herself. In a 2000 interview with The Guardian, Rowling also established that the character of Wart in T. H. White’s novel The Once and Future King is “Harry’s spiritual ancestor.” Finally, she established Harry’s birth date as 31 July, the same as her own. However, she maintained that Harry was not directly based on any real-life person: “he came just out of a part of me”.
Rowling has also maintained that Harry is a suitable real-life role model for children. “The advantage of a fictional hero or heroine is that you can know them better than you can know a living hero, many of whom you would never meet … if people like Harry and identify with him, I am pleased, because I think he is very likeable.”
In a 2007 interview with MTV, Radcliffe stated that, for him, Harry is a classic coming of age character: “That’s what the films are about for me: a loss of innocence, going from being a young kid in awe of the world around him, to someone who is more battle-hardened by the end of it.” He also said that for him, important factors in Harry’s psyche are his survivor’s guilt in regard to his dead parents and his lingering loneliness. Because of this, Radcliffe talked to a bereavement counsellor to help him prepare for the role. Radcliffe was quoted as saying that he wished for Harry to die in the books, but he clarified that he “can’t imagine any other way they can be concluded.” After reading the last book, where Harry and his friends do indeed survive and have children, Radcliffe stated he was glad about the ending and lauded Rowling for the conclusion of the story. Radcliffe stated that the most repeated question he has been asked is how Harry Potter has influenced his own life, to which he regularly answers it has been “fine,” and that he did not feel pigeonholed by the role, but rather sees it as a huge privilege to portray Harry.
Frame is shrinkwrapped until time of purchase. Ships boxed with packing peanuts.
THE PERFECT GIFT!
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