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Review: Love's Labour's Lost at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon

Catherine Vonledebur reviews Love's Labour's Lost at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon

Loves Labour's Lost by the Royal Shakespeare Company.

It has always struck Gregory Doran that Love’s Labour’s Lost and Love’s Labour’s Won belong together.

Christopher Luscombe directs both with a single company of actors in a five-hour double-bill set locally in a and deer park.

Sat in the audience was the Lord of another stately home – in ITV’s Downton Abbey. The actor Hugh Bonneville, looking tanned in a burgundy suit, began his career here at the RSC.

Love’s Labour’s Lost opens in the library of Charlecote Park, in the long hot summer of 1914.

The King of Navarre and his three chums Longaville (William Bellchambers), Dumaine (Tunji Kasim) and Berowne (Edward Bennett) recline in plush red tapestry armchairs and a chaise longue as they vow – somewhat reluctantly on Berowne’s part – to devote three years to study. No woman is allowed within a mile of the King’s court. There is public schoolboy camaraderie.

Impressively, in Scene Two the library slides to the back of the stage like a shrinking painting to reveal a grass lawn underneath and the warm red-brick exterior of the historic Tudor house. The Princess of France (Leah Whitaker) and her three ladies-in-waiting Maria (Frances McNamee), Katherine (Flora Spencer-Longhurst) and Rosaline (Michelle Terry) are greeted by a No Women sign on the front door.

and admiration at Coventry-born Simon Higlett’s breathtakingly clever stage design and beautiful Edwardian costumes. The attention to detail is second to none.

The public school camaraderie between the King’s men is never more evident than in a superbly choreographed rooftop scene. There are gasps as a glass dome and smoking chimney pots rise from beneath the stage where Berowne, in a blue dressing gown, is composing a sonnet to secret crush Rosaline under the stars. His three friends singularly follow suite, each in a different colour dressing gown – Dumaine, with his teddy bear, in a nod to Evelyn Waugh’s Brideshead Revisited.