Shakespeare's Love's Labour's Lost--Discussion and Summary

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
  • A comedy about love with a surprise ending!
    See below for links to other Shakespeare discussions:
    Twelfth Night: January 2-8 • Shakespeare's Twelfth ... ​
    Henry VI Part 1: January 10-16 • Shakespeare's Henry VI... ​
    Henry VI Part 2: January 18-25 • Shakespeare's Henry VI... ​
    Henry VI Part 3: January 27-February 2 • Shakespeare's Henry VI... ​
    Comedy of Errors: February 4-8 • Shakespeare's Comedy o... ​
    Taming of the Shrew: February 10-15 • Shakespeare's Taming o... ​
    Titus Andronicus: February 17-22 • Shakespeare's Titus An... ​
    Romeo and Juliet: February 24-March 2 • Shakespeare's Romeo & ... ​
    • Shakespeare's Romeo & ... ​
    Richard III: March 4-12
    Julius Caesar: March 14-19 • Shakespeare's Julius C... ​
    Two Gentlemen of Verona: March 21-25 • Shakespeare's Two Gent... ​
    King John: March 27-April 1 • Shakespeare's King Joh... ​
    Richard II: April 3-9 • Shakespeare's Richard ... ​
    Venus and Adonis: April 13-17 • Shakespeare's "Venus a... ​
    Hamlet: April 19-28 • Shakespeare's Hamlet: ... ​
    The Rape of Lucrece: April 30-May 4 • Shakespeare's "Lucrece... ​
    Sonnets 1-80: May 6-8 • Shakespeare's Sonnets ​
    Bonus Episode! Sir Thomas More: • Shakespeare's Sir Thom... ​
    Othello: May 11-18 • Shakespeare's Othello-... ​
    Sonnets 81-154: May 20-22 • Shakespeare's Sonnets ​
    Love’s Labour’s Lost: May 26-June 2 • Shakespeare's Love's L... ​
    Pericles: June 4-9 • Shakespeare's Pericles... ​
    Cymbeline: June 11-18 • Shakespeare's Cymbelin... ​
    King Lear: June 22-30 • Shakespeare's King Lea... ​
    A Lover’s Complaint: July 2 • Shakespeare's "A Lover... ​
    The Passionate Pilgrim: July 3 • Shakespeare's The Pass... ​
    A Midsummer Night’s Dream: July 6-10 • Shakespeare's A Midsum... ​
    The Merchant of Venice: July 12-16 • Shakespeare's Merchant... ​
    Bonus Episode! Love's Labour's Won: • Shakespeare's Love's L... ​
    Much Ado About Nothing: July 20-26 • Shakespeare's Much Ado... ​
    As You Like It: July 28-August 3 • Shakespeare's As You L... ​
    Macbeth: August 5-10 • Shakespeare's MacBeth-... ​
    Troilus and Cressida: August 12-20 • Shakespeare's Troilus ... ​
    Antony and Cleopatra: August 22-29 • Shakespeare's Antony a...
    Coriolanus: August 31-September 10
    All’s Well That Ends Well: September 12-19
    Measure for Measure: September 21-27 • Shakespeare's Measure ...
    Henry IV Part 1: September 29-October 5
    The Merry Wives of Windsor: October 7-13
    Henry IV Part 2: October 15-22
    Henry V: October 24-31
    Henry VIII: November 2-9
    Edward III: November 11-17
    Timon of Athens: November 19-24
    The Winter’s Tale: December 1-7 • Shakespeare's The Wint...
    • Shakespeare's The Wint...
    The Tempest: December 9-14 • Shakespeare's The Temp... ​
    The Two Noble Kinsmen: December 16-23
    The Phoenix and Turtle: December 27 • Shakespeare's "The Pho...

Комментарии • 26

  • @gaileverett
    @gaileverett 7 месяцев назад +2

    I just watched a performance of this on RUclips, done by the BBC in 1975 with Jeremy Brett as Berowne. It was brilliantly directed and I highly recommend it.

  • @basilisks
    @basilisks 3 года назад +4

    This is a stellar video. I loved your points, and the sprinkles of trivia were especially interesting as well!

  • @matanwiesner3640
    @matanwiesner3640 3 месяца назад

    0:00 langugage in the ply
    2:33 Notes
    0:00 langugage in the play
    2:33 comedy doesn’t end as a comedy
    Plot:
    - 3:55 Act 1: King of Navarre and his people sign on not talking to women, Costard sent to armando to be punished,
    -6:14 Act 2: princess come, they only stay in court , each princees know one lord.Taking about sopme old doubt.
    -8:06 Act 3: Costard is free, Berowne ❤ Rosaline
    -8:42 Act 4 : some letter replacement , we discover Berowne breaks his outh
    --10:00 focus on Act 4 scense 3: people reads sonnets, hides, watch others and then blame others for break the outh , finally Berowne is caught due his letter, they decided to “get the girls”(his words)
    -12:49 Act 5: Plan to perform a play
    -- 13:34 A5S2: Mens get women present, ask them to wear them but ladies replace present and come with veil , someone told about someone pregment, and some told about a dead father
    20:40 Death in play
    21:00 the end song
    21:30 find a performance

  • @matanwiesner3640
    @matanwiesner3640 3 месяца назад

    Any advice how you deal with the play as a non native spaker? Other plays - I can read a translation and source together and understand but when it come to word game of this play - I lost

  • @touka8922
    @touka8922 Год назад +1

    THABK YPU SM I HAVE AN AP LIT TEST TMRWWW OMG THIS WAS SO HELPFUULLL :))

  • @tomservo75
    @tomservo75 Год назад

    Glad I found this video. I watched this play for the first time (Stratford performance in Canada) and can you say WEIRD? I mean on it's face the play is a very simple plot, but there seemed to be extraneous scenes that had nothing to do with the story. The boy playing moth was awesome but he and Armado did these music numbers that aren't in the play and spoke so fast I couldn't follow any of it. And the fake Russians and that Nine Worthies thing I just thought it made no sense at all and was just filler or something. But after seeing this video I'll go back and watch it again (a different production, the Stratford performance was well-done but confusing).

  • @thegloriousmoodman2152
    @thegloriousmoodman2152 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for your pains, sir! Tis an odd one. But worth study.

  • @austinmchale7232
    @austinmchale7232 9 месяцев назад

    Didn't Kenneth Brannagh do a musical version of this play, interspersed with songs from Cole Porter etc? The novelty of a musical with a book in verse would be rare enough, I imagine. Slán.

    • @Nancenotes
      @Nancenotes  9 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, he did, with Alicia Silverstone as the Princess. It had some fun parts, and the music was entertaining.

  • @jameslabs1
    @jameslabs1 2 года назад

    Thanks

  • @tomservo75
    @tomservo75 Год назад

    Not to mention all that talk about l'envoys and plantains was very confusing.

  • @jasonhill8506
    @jasonhill8506 4 года назад +3

    Why dose Shakespeare write a lot about miscommunication?

    • @Nancenotes
      @Nancenotes  4 года назад +5

      It’s an incredibly common human problem and is at the root of so many unfortunate situations.

  • @matthewkramer5702
    @matthewkramer5702 3 года назад +1

    The word is "remuneration" rather than "renumeration".

  • @dianeallen5803
    @dianeallen5803 3 года назад +4

    Why is it that I simply CANNOT get interested in Love's Labor's Lost? I've started it at least half a dozen times and just can't, well, to turn a phrase, pick it up. I have only a couple more of his comedies left to read and then I've read everything that I hadn't previously read, but I just can't get interested in this one. Well, that's not entirely true. I didn't care for Winter's Tale either.

    • @Laocoon283
      @Laocoon283 Год назад +2

      Cause its completely vapid. There's almost no plot at all. It's just dull word play the whole time.

  • @dianeallen5803
    @dianeallen5803 3 года назад +1

    Are you switching to Rumble?

    • @Nancenotes
      @Nancenotes  3 года назад +1

      Hmmm, interesting! I hadn’t put enough thought into it yet, though I can see some reasons for doing so. On the other hand, I’ve put so much work into RUclips. I’ll have to do more research.

    • @Andy-lm2zp
      @Andy-lm2zp 3 года назад

      Cool !

  • @shaneweikel
    @shaneweikel 9 месяцев назад

    ❤️🤘✌️

  • @jasonhill8506
    @jasonhill8506 4 года назад

    Didn't Shakespeare write this because of the boys saw his plays and then beat him up. I could be wrong.

  • @Andy-lm2zp
    @Andy-lm2zp 3 года назад

    Sound not good