Read Love's Labour's Lost (Arden Shakespeare) Page 19

Roesen, Bobbyann [Anne Barton], "Love's Labour's Lost," Shakespeare Quarterly 4 (1973), pp. 411-426. One of the first critical essays to take the play seriously.

  Turner, John, "Love's Labour's Lost: The Court at Play," in Shakespeare: Out of Court: Dramatizations of Court Society, ed. Graham Holderness, Nick Potter, and John Turner (1990), pp. 19-48. Historical-sociological treatment.

  THE PLAY IN PERFORMANCE

  Branagh, Kenneth, "Love's Labour's Lost," in Shakespeare in Perspective Volume Two, ed. Roger Sales (1985). Actor's perspective.

  Brooke, Michael, "Love's Labour's Lost on Screen," www.screenonline.org.uk/tv/id/564633/index.html. Pithy overview of 1965, 1975, and 1985 BBC television productions and 2000 Kenneth Branagh film.

  Gilbert, Miriam, Love's Labour's Lost, Shakespeare in Performance (1993). Good overview.

  Holland, Peter, English Shakespeares: Shakespeare on the English Stage in the 1990s (1997). Considers some key modern productions.

  Luscombe, Christopher, "Launcelot Gobbo and Moth," in Players of Shakespeare 4, ed. Robert Smallwood (1998). View from a small but key part.

  Pendergast, John S., Love's Labour's Lost: A Guide to the Play (2002). Helpful insights.

  Richardson, Ian, in Shakespeare's Players, ed. Judith Cook (1983). On playing Berowne.

  RSC "Exploring Shakespeare: Love's Labour's Lost." Particular focus on Gregory Doran's 2008 production, starring David Tennant as Berowne.

  For a more detailed Shakespeare bibliography and selections from a wide range of critical accounts of the play, with linking commentary, visit the edition website, www.therscshakespeare.com.

  AVAILABLE ON DVD

  Love's Labour's Lost, directed by Elijah Moshinksy (BBC television Shakespeare, 1985). Very competent rendering in neoclassical eighteenth-century setting.

  Love's Labour's Lost, directed by Kenneth Branagh (2000). Not entirely successful updating into the style of a 1930s Cole Porter musical, with very heavily cut text.

  REFERENCES

  1. In each of his first two comedies, The Blind Beggar of Alexandria (1596) and An Humorous Day's Mirth (1597), the playwright George Chapman appears to allude to Shakespeare's play.

  2. Quoted in E. K. Chambers, William Shakespeare: A Study of Facts and Problems (2 vols, 1930), Vol. 2, p. 332.

  3. Dr. Johnson on Shakespeare, ed. W. K. Wimsatt (1969), p. 108.

  4. W. May Phelps and John Forbes-Robertson, The Life and Life-Work of Samuel Phelps (1886), p. 165, quoted in Miriam Gilbert, Love's Labour's Lost, Shakespeare in Performance (1993), p. 35.

  5. New York Times, 29 March 1891.

  6. Gordon Crosse, Fifty Years of Shakespearean Playgoing (1941), p. 94.

  7. John Dover Wilson, Shakespeare's Happy Comedies (1962), pp. 64, 73.

  8. The Times, 29 April 1946.

  9. Sally Beauman, The Royal Shakespeare Company: A History of Ten Decades (1982), p. 166.

  10. Lionel Hale, The Old Vic: 1949-50 (1950), p. 32.

  11. Helen Dawson, "A Labour of Love?" Plays and Players 16(5) (February 1969).

  12. Irving Wardle, The Times, 20 December 1968.

  13. Charles Marowitz, New York Times, 5 January 1969.

  14. Gilbert, Love's Labour's Lost, pp. 78-9.

  15. John S. Pendergast, Love's Labour's Lost: A Guide to the Play (2002), p. 156.

  16. Robert Giroux, New York Times, 12 February 1989.

  17. Sheridan Morley, New Statesman, 10 March 2003.

  18. Stanley Kauffman, "Well, Not Completely Lost," New Republic, 10-17 July 2000, pp. 32-3.

  19. A. O. Scott, "What Say You, My Lords? You'd Rather Charleston?" New York Times, 9 June 2000.

  20. Andrew St. George, Financial Times, 7 September 1990.

  21. Harold Matthews, Theatre World 61(484) (May 1965).

  22. Irving Wardle, The Times, 8 August 1973.

  23. Rhoda Koenig, Independent, 29 October 1993.

  24. Peter Roberts, Plays and Players 12(9) June 1965.

  25. B. A. Young, Financial Times, 8 April 1965.

  26. Irving Wardle, The Times, 8 August 1973.

  27. Roger Warren, Shakespeare Survey 32 (1979).

  28. Russell Jackson, Cahiers Elisabethains 28 (October 1985).

  29. Christopher Edwards, Spectator, 27 October 1984.

  30. Michael Coveney, Observer, 9 September 1990.

  31. Peter Holland, English Shakespeares (1997), p. 164.

  32. Holland, English Shakespeares, p. 187.

  33. Stanley Wells, Times Literary Supplement, 5 November 1993.

  34. Wells, Times Literary Supplement, 5 November 1993.

  35. Pendergast, Love's Labour's Lost, p. 106.

  36. Robert Speaight, Shakespeare Quarterly 16 (1965).

  37. Christopher Luscombe, "Launcelot Gobbo and Moth," in Players of Shakespeare 4, ed. Robert Smallwood (1998).

  38. Kenneth Branagh, "Love's Labour's Lost," in Shakespeare in Perspective Volume Two, ed. Roger Sales (1985).

  39. Rhoda Koenig, Independent, 29 October 1993.

  40. Martin Dodsworth, Times Literary Supplement, 26 October 1984.

  41. Jackson, Cahiers Elisabethains.

  42. Warren, Shakespeare Survey, 1979.

  43. Gilbert, Love's Labour's Lost, p. 177.

  44. Ian Richardson talking about playing Berowne (1975), in Shakespeare's Players, ed. Judith Cook (1983).

  45. Michael Billington, Guardian, 10 May 1975.

  46. John Barton, program note for Love's Labour's Lost, RSC, 1965.

  47. J. W. Lambert, Drama 130 (Autumn 1978).

  48. Gilbert, Love's Labour Lost, p. 173.

  49. Warren, Shakespeare Survey.

  50. Jackson, Cahiers Elisabethains.

  51. Michael Ratcliffe, Observer, 14 October 1984.

  52. Gilbert, Love's Labour's Lost, p. 211.

  53. Robert Smallwood, Shakespeare Quarterly 42 (1991).

  54. Holland, English Shakespeares, p. 191.

  55. Janet Clare, "Love's Labour's Lost," in Shakespeare in Performance, ed. Keith Parsons and Pamela Mason (1995).

  56. Holland, English Shakespeares, p. 187.

  57. Gilbert, Love's Labour's Lost, p. 212.

  58. Holland, English Shakespeares, p. 197.

  59. Samuel Schoenbaum, Times Literary Supplement, 27 October 1978.

  60. Anne Barton, program notes for Love's Labour's Lost, RSC, 1978.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  AND PICTURE CREDITS

  Preparation of "Love's Labour's Lost in Performance" was assisted by two generous grants: from the CAPITAL Centre (Creativity and Performance in Teaching and Learning) of the University of Warwick, for research in the RSC archive at the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, and from the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) for a term's research leave that enabled Jonathan Bate to work on "The Director's Cut."

  Picture research by Helen Robson and Jan Sewell. Grateful acknowledgment is made to the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust for assistance with picture research (special thanks to Helen Hargest) and reproduction fees.

  Images of RSC productions are supplied by the Shakespeare Centre Library and Archive, Stratford-upon-Avon. This library, maintained by the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, holds the most important collection of Shakespeare material in the UK, including the Royal Shakespeare Company's official archives. It is open to the public free of charge.

  For more information see www.shakespeare.org.uk.

  1. Design for a knot garden, private collection (c) Bardbiz Limited 2. Directed by Peter Brook (1946). Angus McBean (c) Royal Shakespeare Company 3. Old Vic (1949). (c) John Vickers Theatre Collection

  4. Directed by Michael Kahn (2006). Malcolm Davies (c) Shakespeare Birthplace Trust 5. Directed by Barry Kyle (1984). (c) Stephen Macmillan

  6. Directed by Ian Judge (1993). Malcolm Davies (c) Shakespeare Birthplace Trust

  7. Directed by John Barton (1965). Tom Holte (c) Shakespeare Birthplace Trust 8. Directed by Terry Hands (1990). Joe Cocks Studio Collection (c) Shakespeare Birthplace Trust 9. R
econstructed Elizabethan playhouse (c) Charcoalblue

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  1.1 Location: Navarre, in the king's park. This is the location for the entire play Ferdinand in fact, the King of Navarre at the time of the play's composition was Henri Berowne, Longaville the Duc de Berowne and the Duc de Longueville both fought for King Henri Dumaine perhaps based on Charles de Lorraine, Duc de Mayenne and initially King Henri's opponent 1 fame renown

  2 registered recorded

  2 brazen brass-plated, enduring (plays on sense of "shameless") 3 grace honor

  3 disgrace disfigurement/shame

  4 spite in spite

  4 cormorant i.e. ravenous (literally, a greedy seabird) 5 breath i.e. life/speech

  6 bate abate, blunt

  6 his i.e. time's

  6 keen sharp/eager

  9 affections passions

  11 late recent

  11 in force i.e. be binding

  12 Navarre the place/the king

  13 academe institution of learning (originally Plato's academy near Athens) 14 Still ... in calmly, constantly studying contemplative in meditating on 14 living art the art of living/vitality within scholarship 16 term period of time

  17 keep observe

  18 schedule document/list

  19 passed pledged

  19 subscribe sign

  20 hand sword/handwriting

  21 branch clause

  22 armed prepared (plays on sense of "carrying weapons") 23 deep solemn

  23 it subscription (to the oath)

  25 pine starve, languish

  26 pates heads (i.e. wits)

  26 dainty bits choice morsels of food

  28 mortified dead to worldly pleasures

  29 grosser coarser, earthier

  30 gross whole/coarse

  30 baser slaves those subject to inferior pleasures 32 in according to the tenets of/by the study of 33 say ... over repeat their vows

  36 observances requirements

  37 As such as

  38 enrolled written

  43 wink close one's eyes/sleep

  44 wont accustomed

  44 think no harm i.e. sleep

  49 pass away from renounce

  50 an if if

  52 space duration

  54 By ... nay a common oath

  55 end aim

  57 common sense ordinary understanding

  58 recompense reward

  59 Come on quibbles on common

  65 too hard-a-keeping oath an oath too hard to keep 66 troth faith

  70 stops impediments

  70 quite completely

  71 train entice

  71 vain foolish, trifling, self-gratifying 73 pain effort, suffering, labor

  73 purchased acquired

  73 inherit bring about more

  74 As for example

  75 the while in the meantime

  76 falsely treacherously

  76 his look its sight

  77 Light i.e. eyes, thought to produce the beams of light by which they saw 77 light intellectual enlightenment

  77 light ... beguile the eyes are cheated out of enlightenment (by excessive study) 78 ere before

  78 darkness intellectual obscurity

  80 Study me let me learn

  81 fairer more beautiful (plays on sense of "lighter") 82 dazzling blinding (my eyes)

  82 that eye i.e. of the fairer woman 82 heed focus of attention/guardian

  85 saucy insolent

  86 Small little

  87 Save except

  87 base lowly, secondhand

  88 godfathers ... lights astronomers who name the stars, as godparents name children at baptism 90 profit of benefit from

  90 shining i.e. starlit

  91 wot know

  91 they the stars/the walkers

  92 Too ... fame an excess of knowledge brings only a vainglorious reputation 93 every godfather i.e. any ordinary person 95 Proceeded argued (plays on sense of "taking a university degree") 95 proceeding intellectual advancement

  96 weeds pulls up

  96 lets ... weeding allows the weeds to flourish 97 green geese innocent simpletons/geese fed on grass 99 Fit in his in a manner appropriate to its 101 reason

  100 In reason nothing i.e. it doesn't follow logically 101 rhyme i.e. the opposite of

  102 envious malicious

  102 sneaping biting/nipping (rhyme puns on "rime"--i.e. frost) 103 first-born infants youngest plants

  104 proud glorious/arrogant

  106 abortive premature, unnatural

  108 new-fangled shows newly created, elaborate displays (of flowers) 109 like of I delight in

  109 in season i.e. at its proper time 110 too late i.e. in life

  111 climb ... gate i.e. pointless

  112 sit you out don't take part

  114 barbarism uncivilized ignorance

  117 bide endure

  117 three years' day day of three years 126 Marry by the Virgin Mary

  128 hence away from here

  128 dread dreadful/frightening

  129 gentility civilized behavior

  133 article clause

  134 in embassy as an ambassador

  136 complete perfect

  137 Aquitaine area of southwest France

  140 vainly pointlessly

  142 overshot wide of the mark (i.e. mistaken) 143 would wants

  146 towns ... lost i.e. a town that is burnt down as part of a military campaign is no gain at all 147 force necessity

  148 lie lodge

  148 on mere out of absolute

  149 forsworn perjured, oath breakers

  151 affects passions, desires

  152 might personal strength

  152 grace div
ine favor

  153 word phrase

  155 at large as a whole

  157 in attainder accused/convicted

  158 Suggestions ... me I am as susceptible to temptation as any man 160 the ... oath the last one to swear, but the one who will keep his word the longest/the least likely to keep my oath the longest 161 quick lively

  162 haunted With frequented by

  164 in ... planted involved in whatever is fashionable 165 mint creative source/wealth (literally, place where money is coined) 168 compliments accomplishments, courtesy 169 mutiny discord

  170 child of fancy flamboyant, fanciful creature 170 hight is called

  171 For interim as an interval

  172 high-born noble/lofty

  173 tawny browned (by sun)

  173 debate strife

  174 delight take pleasure

  176 for my minstrelsy as my minstrel (i.e. musician, entertainer) 177 wight person

  179 Costard literally "large apple"; slang for "head"

  179 he i.e. Armado

  179 swain low-ranking man/rustic

  179 sport entertainment

  181 duke's i.e. king's

  183 reprehend malapropism for "represent"

  184 tharborough thirdborough (i.e. parish constable) 187 commends you commends himself to you (i.e. greets you respectfully) 188 abroad at large

  189 contempts malapropism for "contents"

  189 touching concerning

  190 magnificent ostentatious/splendid (joking allusion to the 1588 Spanish Armada, often referred to as "magnificent") 191 How ... matter however debased the content 191 high lofty

  193 high hope great expectation

  193 low heaven i.e. small blessing 195 forbear refrain from

  198 be it let it be

  198 style puns on "stile" to climb

  200 to about

  201 manner nature, way it is expressed

  201 taken ... manner caught in the act/with the stolen goods 203 In ... following a commonly used legal phrase 203 form bench

  203 those three i.e. words (manner, form, following; punned on in the ensuing explanation) 205 park enclosed land used for hunting

  207 manner custom, nature

  210 correction punishment

  210 God ... right a formal prayer said before trial by combat 214 simplicity stupidity/simple nature

  216 welkin's heavens'

  216 vicegerent deputy

  217 dominator ruler

  218 fostering supporting

  222 but so merely so-so, not saying much

  224 peace be extended to

  224 Be i.e.

  226 Of ... secrets Costard again extends the meaning of the king's words 227 sable-coloured black

  228 commend commit

  228 black oppressing humour i.e. melancholy 228 humour mood (one of the four bodily "humours" that governed the disposition) 229 physic medicine

  229 as I am on my word as

  234 ycleped called

  236 obscene repulsive

  236 preposterous improper, perverse

  237 snow-white pen i.e. goose quill 237 ebon-coloured black