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Warwickshire's Charlecote Park becomes the setting for the RSC's new production

A Tudor house and deer park in Warwickshire has become the ideal setting for the RSC's new comedy double-bill, Love's Labour's Lost and Love's Labour's Won. Catherine Vonledebur reports

The stunning National Trust property Charlecote Park has been ingenuously recreated for the latest .

The celebrated theatre and costume designer Simon Higlett has come up with the idea for a giant 4.5 tonne sliding doll’s house for Christopher Luscombe’s double bill of and Love’s Labour’s Won at the in Stratford-upon-Avon.

“I have known Chris a long time. He rang me last November on a Sunday morning and said he would like me to design not one but two Shakespeare plays for the RSC,” Simon says.

Simon was called up from his job as head of design at Chichester Festival Theatre to Stratford-upon-Avon for a meeting with Christopher.

He adds: “Chris knew the two plays would straddle the First World War because of this year’s centenary and knew it was going to be in a stately home. Both plays are set around a house in Sicily and Spain. Chris is very quick and in one meeting we knew we were going to play one scene on a roof inspired by Brideshead Revisited.

“Then Chris said: ‘why not make is local?’, especially with A Christmas Truce (the RSC’s Christmas show) being a local story. Two of the officers are from Warwickshire and use a Warwickshire accent.

“Love’s Labour’s Lost is set in an idyllic world around 1912 when life was rather pleasant for the rich; whereas Love’s Labour’s Won is set in 1918 when life was not so pleasant.

“I started to read John Martin Robinson’s Felling the Ancient Oaks: How England Lost its Great Country Estates.