Cedric Messina had initially planned to screen Othello during season two, and had attempted to cast James Earl Jones in the part. However, the British Actors' Equity Association had written into their contract with the BBC that only British actors could appear in the series, and if Messina cast Jones, Equity threatened to strike, thus crippling the show. Messina backed down and Othello was pushed back to a later season. By the time it was produced, Jonathan Miller had taken over as producer, and he decided that the play was not about race at all, casting a white actor in the role.
Bob Hoskins played Iago as a Rumpelstiltskin type, an impish troublemaker who delights in petty mischief, and mocks people behind their backs.
Part of the long running BBC Television Shakespeare project which ran between 1978 and 1985.
The interior design of the production was based on the interiors of the Palazzo Ducale, Urbino, while the street set was based on a real street in Cyprus.
For the scene where Iago (Bob Hoskins) asks Cassio (David Yelland) about Bianca (Wendy Morgan), Othello (Sir Anthony Hopkins) stands behind the open door. Most of the scene was shot from behind him, so the audience sees what he sees. However, not all of the dialogue between Iago and Cassio is audible. Although this led to criticism when the episode was screened in the U.S., where it was assumed that the sound people simply had not done their job very well, it was actually done so as to increase subjectivity. If Othello is having difficulty hearing what they are saying, so too is the audience.