Shakespeare Plays Available in Video Format
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All’s Well That Ends Well
Antony and Cleopatra
As You Like It
The Comedy of Errors
Coriolanus
Cymbeline
Hamlet
Henry IV, part 1
Henry IV, part 2
Henry V
Henry VI, part 1
Henry VI, part 2
Henry VI, part 3
Henry VIII
Julius Caesar
King John
King Lear
Love’s Labour’s Lost
Macbeth
Measure for Measure
The Merchant of Venice
The Merry Wives of Windsor
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Much Ado About Nothing
Othello
Pericles
Richard II
Richard III
Romeo and Juliet
The Taming of the Shrew
The Tempest
Timon of Athens
Titus Andronicus
Troilus and Cressida
Twelfth Night
Two Gentlemen of Verona
The Winter’s Tale
Shakespeareana

Available versions

1985: Elijah Moshinsky

2000: Kenneth Branagh

2011: Dominic Dromgoole

2015: Robin Lough

2016: Jake O’Hare, Jennifer Sturley

2017: Barry Avrich


Love’s Labour’s Lost
2015: Robin Lough

This is the recent Royal Shakespeare Company version of the play, and it holds up quite well. It is fairly complete, and quite well-acted, and supports the part of the play that still has some real depth. Unlike the Branagh version, which is set in 1939, this is set in 1914. Clearly it is important for everything to be on the brink of war. This kind of movement into another time and place does not really trouble the comedies as much as the histories, I would argue, and in general, this works quite well.

There is a certain similarity in the aesthetic of this production and the Branagh version of fifteen years earlier: there's a lot of empahsis on color variation and highly symmetrical stage blocking. None of that is particularly unwelcome.

Edward Bennett as Berowne and Michelle Terry as Rosaline maintain their barbed banter much as they do as Beatrice and Benedick in the Much Ado About Nothing presented as a sequel to this (billed, unaccountably, as Love’s Labour’s Won); I find Terry’s delivery typically somewhat too monochromatically acidic at the beginning of the play, though here she is not, to my taste, as harsh and hard to listen to as she is in some of Dominic Dromgoole’s Globe productions. (She has the role of the Princess of France in his 2011 Love’s Labour’s Lost.) She redeems the whole performance, for my money, at the end with her final speeches to Berowne, which stand all the silliness in the play on its head. I’m a little less satisfied with the very ending, at which the four gentlemen of Navarre are apparently sent off to war — which makes sense of the 1914 setting, but nonsense out of Shakespeare’s script.

There are some troubling inconsistencies like this, and there is some gratuitously ridiculous stage business revolving around a teddy bear, and some more than is really needed about Hercules and the snake, but Lough and his crew take the dive from farce into the relatively dark ending of the play seriously (if somewhat confusedly) and pull it off with gravity and nuance. For a relatively complete version of the play not overly encumbered with high concept, this is definitely worth seeing, though with the understanding that the staging is clearly not Elizabethan.


Berowne: Edward Bennett

Boyet: Jamie Newall

Costard: Nick Haverson

Don Armado: John Hodgkinson

Dull: Chris McCalphy

Dumaine: Tunji Kasim

Footman: Chris Nayak

Footman: Oliver Lynes

Gamekeeper: Harry Waller

Gamekeeper: Peter Basham

Holofernes: David Horovitch

Housemaid: Sophie Khan Levy

Jaquenetta: Emma Manton

Katharine: Flora Spencer-Longhurst

King of Navarre: Sam Alexander

Longaville: William Belchambers

Marcadé: Roderick Smith

Maria: Frances McNamee

Moth: Peter McGovern

Princess of France: Leah Whitaker

Rosaline: Michelle Terry

Thomas Wheatley: Sir Nathaniel