Showing posts with label shakespeare. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shakespeare. Show all posts

Love’s Labour’s Lost Review

Great stuff, good fun.

2007, Shakespeare’s Globe

  • Director: Dominic Dromgoole
  • Designer: Jonathan Fensom
  • Composer: Claire van Kampen

Self-denial is in fashion at the court of Navarre where the young King and three of his courtiers solemnly forswear all pleasures in favour of serious study. But the Princess of France and her all-too-lovely entourage have other ideas and it isn’t long before young love, with its glad eyes, hesitations and embarrassments, has broken every self-imposed rule of the all-male ‘academe’.

Cast
Rosaline: Gemma Arterton
Sir Nathaniel: John Bett
Costard: Joe Caffrey
Katherine: Oona Chaplin
Moth: Seroca Davis
Holofernes: Christopher Godwin
Berowne: Trystan Gravelle
Ferdinand King of Navarre: Kobna Holdbrook-Smith
Maria: Cush Jumbo
Longaville: William Mannering
Dumaine: David Oakes
Jaquenetta: Rhiannon Oliver
Boyet: Paul Rider
Princess of France: Michelle Terry
Dull: Andrew Vincent
Don Armado: Timothy Walker

The Merry Wives of Windsor Review

 

Rating, 4.5 Globes out of 5 image

The music, The costumes, The fun

It’s fun, accessible Shakespeare

The most laughs I’ve had at a globe performance to date.

image
   

 

Just a reminder that the most enjoyable performance by an actor or actress, went to the funny character from the Merchant of Venice, I think

 

Other plays at the globe I’ve seen.

2008 Season  
King Lear 8 out of 10
Amazing storm and eye gouging scene. Wow.
The Merry Wives of Windsor 9 out of 10.
Such fun.
Love’s Labour’s Lost  

 

2007 Season  
Othello 7 out of 10
The Merchant of Venice 8 out of 10
   

Other Reviews:

***** "Christopher Luscombe’s production brims with  humanity, ingenuity and irresistible charm, and boasts a magnificent Falstaff in Christopher Benjamin... Serena Evans and Sarah Woodward make one of the funniest double acts I have ever seen on the stage... As we all stood up to applaud at the end, I felt that this was not just theatre but the capital at its very best" Sunday Telegraph

Othello

Fantastic Performance by Tim McInnery as Iago

And from Sam Crane as Roderigo – most enjoyable of all performers i’ve seen at the globe!

From Peter Brown, http://www.londontheatre.co.uk/peterbrown/reviews/othello07globe.htm

“Best known perhaps for his long-running appearances in the hit TV show 'Black Adder', Tim McInnnerny presents a more swashbuckling Iago than the customary definition of a scheming, political conniver”

and

“Though this version of Othello doesn't scream novelty, or provide much in the way of new insights, it continues the development of serious and polished Shakespearian work at the Globe since Dominic Dromgoole took over as artistic director there last year. Hopefully though, the best is yet to come.”

Another reviewer, Rob Marshall, http://www.london-se1.co.uk/news/view/2746

“This Iago plays the Globe's interactive audience well (a hot, balmy night produced the usual pick and mix audience selection which only adds to a Globe visit. You feel as if you have been to the theatre with people you never met ,but got to know, just for this.)”

by William Shakespeare

  • Director: Wilson Milam
  • Designer: Dick Bird
  • Composer: Stephen Warbeck

The republic of Venice employs Othello, a self-made man and a Moor, to defend its overseas territories against the Turks. But for all his military success, Othello remains an outsider in the city, an object of racism, envy and mistrust. As the Turkish threat gathers and Venetian forces are despatched to Cyprus, Iago, a junior officer secretly enraged by his lack of promotion, exploits Othello's ambiguous position and ingenuous nature, driving him into a passionate and uncontrollable jealousy.

Performed for the first time at the Globe, Othello, with its racing concentrated plot and intense dramatic details, is one of Shakespeare's most exciting, atmospheric and heartbreaking plays. By introducing to early 17th-century England a black character as complex as Othello, it is also one of his most extraordinary imaginative achievements.

Cast

  • Bianca: Zawe Ashton
  • Cassio: Nick Barber
  • Emilia: Lorraine Burroughs
  • Roderigo: Sam Crane
  • Montano: Nigel Hastings
  • Iago: Tim McInnerny
  • Duke of Venice: Jonathan Newth
  • Gratiano: Michael O'Hagan
  • Desdemona: Zoe Tapper
  • Brabantio: John Stahl
  • Othello: Eamonn Walker