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Synopsis The King of Navarre persuades three friends to join him in a vow of celibacy so that they can concentrate on their studies, but the beautiful princess of France and her three gorgeous ladies in waiting arrive for an informal visit. Supported by KPMG. Costumes generously supported by Ian and Caroline Cormack.
With its unexpected love-doesn't-necessarily-conquer-all ending, Love's Labour's Lost - in which a King's plans for male bonding and abstinence in studious isolation are sweetly disrupted by the arrival of a French princess and her bevy of beauties - is one of Shakespeare's more morose comedies and for this, his farewell National Theatre production, Trevor Nunn has wrested every darker nuance from the text.
Widely trailed as an Edwardian production, you might enter the NT Olivier auditorium expecting something akin to a Merchant Ivory film of languid, lotus-eating youths in country houses. Yet Nunn's Labour begins more like All Quiet on the Western Front as officer Berowne contemplates gentler times. In fact, in an unusual twist with this scene that comes full circle, Nunn uses the play's closing line - that "the words of Mercury are harsh after the songs of Apollo" - to both begin and end proceedings.
Do we really need reminding that the Great War was the aftermath of the Edwardian summer? And surely the martial (as opposed to marital) theme would have been more appropriate if Shakespeare had said "words of Mars"? Perhaps Nunn is obliquely referring to the fact that Mercury is the god of liars referring to the broken promises that litter Shakespeare's play - the onset of a war would lead to many enforced separations?
Best to get past it. Despite the clumsiness of the framing device, this is an excellent production, almost Chekhovian in its pacing. Nunn rightly draws attention to the fact that, while the king can self-indulgently clear his court of women, it's not such a happy choice for the maids thrown out of work and separated from their lovers.
There are further Chekhovian tones in Nunn's touches on class differences. When Holofernes and Sir Nathaniel go on the picnic, they drink wine from glasses, while the more proletarian Dull drinks from a mug. Meanwhile, the servants carrying the aristocrats' hampers rub their feet in exhaustion - it's clear that this is no picnic for them. There's a glimpse of pure nastiness, too, as the aristocrats bait the Judas Maccabeus masque with anti-semitic comments.
Nunn draws some excellent performances from his actors. Simon Day is a pompous prig of a king, Olivia Williams a buttoned-up princess (you suspect they'd make a perfect couple) and Joseph Fiennes is smoothly cynical as Berowne. Best of all, in smaller parts, are Philip Voss' Boyet, a maliciously camp gossip, and Robin Soans' insufferable pedant of a Holofernes, everyone's nightmare Latin teacher.
There are some low points. The king, Dumaine and Longaville hymn their loves with some rather cheesy songs that seem out of place and, even though the actors were miked, I still had difficulty hearing all the words.
While this Love's Labour's Lost might not be one of Nunn's truly great productions, there's enough to remind us what he's done at the National and why his Shakespearean productions are always worth seeing.
Blimey! To quote Jonathan Ross, "Sweet baby Moses in a basket!" To quote Armado, "Heavy, dull and slow." To quote Holofernes, "This is not generous, not gentle, not humble." (Holofernes was talking about the audience - I am talking about this production, which bears little relation to Shakespeare's sparkling comedy.) - USER: Whatsonstage.com (195.93.50.13)
12 Mar 03
This was a wonderfully evocative production, and turns the ambiguous ending into quite a sad one which actually had us still talking about it nearly two hours later. Joseph Fiennes was marvellously witty, we loved his portrayal of Berowne although the other gentlemen were rather overshadowed by him (but then they're overshadowded by Berowne's character as much as by Joseph Fiennes' acting). Young Fiennes in the big theatre, senior Fiennes in the little theatre, what a month we've had. Thanks, National Theatre! - USER: Whatsonstage.com (212.50.179.251)
08 Mar 03
I usually love this play - seen it several times at the RSC and have no problem with Edwardian or even Weimar type settings. However, apart from Simon Day and Olivia Williams, I thought performances were extremely average. The pace was truly awful - Shakespearian comedy is not meant to be played like Chekhov! It was boring, the friends I went with found it boring and I thought this was an appalling drop in Trevor Nunn's standards. To be honest, I thought it had the hallmark of a de-mob happy director leaving, who should certainly have done better by letting Anything Goes be his National swansong. Don't bother going to this! - USER: Whatsonstage.com (217.206.120.227)
07 Mar 03
Wow. I was most impressed by Joseph Fiennes as Berowne - actually, the whole cast (especially Simon Day, Philip Voss and Olivia Williams) was superb - and the lighting and idyllic woodland stage set everything off perfectly. At almost three hours long, it's a bit bum-numbing but there's much to lighten it, especially Simon Day's prim king, Joseph Fiennes in the tree and the fake Muscovites. The low-point: a mobile going off just as John Barrowman launched into his love sonnet. He shot a brief disapproving glance in the phone's direction and you could tell the audience was astonished that some complete idiot had not turned their phone off. My advice to that person - 'stay at home and watch a video, and don't bother us again.' - USER: Whatsonstage.com (193.130.127.205)
06 Mar 03
Hey folks (and I mean two of you below who have added a P.S. to your review and voted twice), you have upset the average rating and lowered it to 2.8 whereas it should be 3.13! I guess the best I can do is add five stars myself to try to raise the rating to nearer its correct number. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (62.30.138.5)
06 Mar 03
Hey folks (and I mean two of you below who have added a P.S. to your review and voted twice), you have upset the average rating and lowered it to 2.8 whereas it should be 3.13! I guess the best I can do is add five stars myself to try to raise the rating to nearer its correct number. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (62.30.138.5)
06 Mar 03
Sorry folks - just to clarify the previous review - I DON'T ( obviously!! ) mean Branagh's pitiable film, I mean his performance as Berowne onstage some years ago. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (195.93.50.13)
02 Mar 03
To the person staggered by my so-called "vitriolic" review: no, I have nothing against updating. One of the finest productions of The Merchant of Venice updated the play to a 1980s City dealing floor and featured Owen Teale as Bassanio, offering Gratiano a Marks and Spencer dish with the words "Here I have a dish of doves". Hilarious! Teale also starred in a superior RSC update of LLL some years ago. And then there was Branagh's....wonderful. But this was truly misconceived and did not respect the original - re-assigning lines, etc. However, well done Fiennes et al - the acting is good. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (195.93.50.13)
02 Mar 03
Truly splendid production which gives us back Joseph Fiennes. Welcome back to where he should be. Likewise Philip Voss. But the production is a truly team effort. Best of all - Trevor Nunn has finallt realised that there is an audience on three sides in the Olivier. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (195.93.50.13)
01 Mar 03
Excellent and thought provoking production; the WW1 framing worked very well, IMO, and the actors were, in the main, spot on. Joseph Fiennes was marvellous, especially up the tree listening to his three companions - a hoot! - USER: Whatsonstage.com (212.50.181.58)
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