Approach of the Study Method of the Study
                                                                                Her honest explanation about Todd and his family is clearly explained in a song Poor  Thing.  In  this  song, Mrs.  Lovett  tells  what  happens  to  the  family  of
Benjamin  Barker chronologically.  Lovett  tells that  at  that  time  there  is  a  barber named Barker. He is a beautiful barber. He lives with his wife and a year-old kid.
Unfortunately,  because  of  his foolishness,  he is moved  to  a  place  far  from  his family by Judge Turpin and his Beadle who are rich and respectable persons in the
city. Furthermore, Lovett tells that Judge Turpin really fond of Barker’s wife and
wants to have her because of her beauty. Lovett describes Barker ’s wife, Lucy, as
a fool by using the word ‘poor thing’ because she wastes the opportunity to live
together with  Judge  Turpin  and  still  believes in  him after  knowing  that her husband is moved to a strange place by him. Lovett adds, Lucy
’s belief is proven by her participation in a ball where there is no one she knows. She is invited by
the Beadle to meet Judge Turpin there and in shame, an incident happening to her. At  the  party,  she  is raped  by  Judge  Turpin  with  no  single  person  helps  her.
Moreover,  from  the  quotation  above Todd  believes to  Mrs.  Lovett because  the event  is  similar  with  what  has  happened  to him. I
t  can  be  seen  from  Todd’s statement to Antony, a man who helps him from the ocean after his escape from
prison in The Barber and His Wife song. However, human mind is easily damaged and it  can be broken with very
easy techniques. In  the  play,  Mrs.  Lovett  proves  to  be  very  experienced  in manipulation. Throughout  the  play,  Lovett  is  able  with  her  words  to  control
almost every character she speaks to. She manipulates Todd by omitting the true
information  about  Lucy although  the  truth appears  when  it  is  too  late. She  does not tell the full information shortly after she realizes that Todd is Barker.
TODD. [A wild shout] Would no one have mercy on her? [The dumb show vanishes. TODD and MRS. LOVETT gaze at each
other] MRS. LOVETT. [Coolly] So it is you
– Benjamin Barker. TODD. [Frighteningly  vehement]  Not  Barker  Not  Barker  Todd  now
Sweeney Todd Where is she? MRS.  LOVETT.  So  changed  Good  God,  what  did  they  do  to  you  down
there in bloody Australia or wherever? TODD. Where is my wife? Where’s Lucy?
MRS. LOVETT. She poisoned herself. Arsenic from the apothecary on the corner. I tried to stop her but she wouldn’t listen to me.
TODD. And my daughter? MRS. LOVETT. Johanna? He’s got her.
TODD. He? Judge Turpin? MRS.  LOVETT.  Even  he  had  a  conscience  tucked away,  I  suppose.
Adopted her like his own. You could say it was good luck for her . . . almost. Wheeler, 1979:18-19
It  happens  after  she  sings Poor  Thing song. The conversation above proves  that Lovett  does  not  give  a  straight  answer  to  a  straight  question from  Todd. In  this
case, she decides not to tell Todd about Lucy. She wants Todd. She wants to win Todd
’s heart. The second evidence  is  when  Mrs.  Lovett hides the  identity  of  Sweeney
Todd from the Beadle. The incident occurs just after Sweeney Todd successfully beat Pirelli, a famous Italian barber, for the second time in the razor contest in the
Dunstans Marketplace. BEADLE. Mr. Todd . . . Strange, sir, but it seems your face is known to
me. MRS. LOVETT. [Concealing agitation
] Him? That’s a laugh – him being my uncle’s cousin and arrived from Birmingham yesterday.
TODD. [Very  smooth]  But  already,  sir,  I  have  heard  Beadle  Bamford spoken of with great respect.
BEADLE.  [Whatever  dim  suspicions  he  may  have  had  allayed  by the flattery] Well, sir, I try my best for my neighbors.
[To MRS. LOVETT ] Fleet Street? Over your pieshop, ma’am?
MRS. LOVETT. That’s it, sir. Wheeler, 1979:53-54 Lovett hides the
identity of Todd. She does not want anyone knows Todd’s new identity especially the beadle and the judge. The dishonesty done by Lovett is an
attempt to  protect  Todd since she  knows  Todd  wants  to  avenge  the  beadle  then she does keep for not telling others about the secret. Although in the beginning of
Beadle’s speech the figure of Todd is seemed familiar for him, Beadle who has a duty as a judge in the contest, eventually believes in what is said by Mrs. Lovett
and  promises to Todd  and Lovett  to  come  to  the  barbershop  before  the  week  is out.
Lovett  often  does  something  unfairly  or  dishonestly  in  order  to  get  what she  wants.  In  the  song A  Little  Priest in  which  it  is  the  third  evidence,  Lovett
expresses  her  manipulative  way  by  persuades  Todd  to  accept  her  plan.  It  is happened in the end of act 1.
MRS. LOVETT. [Pause. Chord] You know me. Sometimes ideas just pop into me head and I keep thinking . . .
[Sings] Seems a downright shame . . . TODD. Shame?
MRS. LOVETT. Seems an awful waste . . . Such a nice plump frame
Wot’s – his – name Has . . .
Had . . . Has . . .
Nor it can’t be traced. Business needs a lift
– Debts to be erased
– Think of it as thrift,
As a gift . . . If you get my drift . . .
[TODD stares into space] No? [She sighs]
Seems an awful waste.