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Macbeth

Wed, 25 June 2008, 08:21 am
Gordon the Optom21 posts in thread
Macbeth,’ by William Shakespeare, is being presented by the Bare Naked Theatre Company at the Subiaco Arts Centre until Saturday 28th June. The shows are at 8 pm with a couple of matinees.

I will not explain this well-known storyline, other than to say that the setting is as Shakespeare intended. It is the North of Scotland in the years 1050-57, where a fight for the Scottish throne is taking place between Duncan, Macbeth, and Malcolm.

   Over the next few months, this production will tour the WA costal towns from Mandurah to Esperance, so, by necessity, the set is virtually nil. However, with totally authentic, quality costumes and dramatic lighting (Aaron Stirk), the atmosphere was quite powerful.
   In this production, director Stephen Lee has tackled the script head on, and created a gripping drama.
     The minor weak points. ‘Glamis’ is pronounced Glamz not Glam-is. ‘Hecate’ is Heck-a-tee not heck-ate.


The multiple and appropriate noises-off were all live, and of a generally high standard, but the thunder sheet should be tapped in the centre with the fingertips (especially if it is the shorter version), as if it is shaken it sounds like a sheet of metal being shaken. At the start of the play, one or two of the males’ passages were delivered too quickly and without enough enunciation, this was aggravated by the complex Shakespearean prose and the lack of a solid set – the backcloth adsorbing much of the diction. I realise this was opening night and that this talented team will have the problems sorted quickly.

The good points. After all of the contemporary versions that have been around, it was good to see this play ‘au naturel’. Lighter pieces of Shakespeare, such as ‘Romeo and Juliet’ and ‘Midsummer night’s dream’ can become alive with a fresh modern-day approach. With true history like ‘Macbeth’, to capture the full conflict and insight of the troubled minds of the characters – perhaps I am old fashioned or because this area of Scotland was my home territory – but the original approach is the only way.
Repeatedly in productions of Macbeth there is an abundance of tartan, which was developed centuries later, here the drab plaids were the authentic natural colours of the plants used to dye them were spot-on. Congratulations to Meredith Ford.
Very often, Macbeth is incorrectly portrayed as a strong character from the opening scene, whereas he was actually a timid being, gradually going through a phase of confusion, strength, and finally megalomania. David Meadows displayed this transformation with skill.
The complex character of Lady Macbeth was captured beautifully by Angelique Malcolm. Dan Luxton convincingly showed the power of Macduff turn to grief as ‘his chickens died’. The highlight for the young audience was Stephen Lee’s Porter scene, probably the best I have seen, as often it is simply depicted as a miserable old gateman with little humour exhibited.

The audience were mainly schoolkids, there to see their ‘set’ book. My heart sank as, just before curtain-up, I saw a couple of rows practising a Mexican Wave for Macbeth’s entrance!! Then during the play as Banquo quoted ‘The instruments of darkness tell us truths,’ one of the little darling’s phones went off.

This was an excellent production; clearly depicted by a hard working talented cast (others included Ian Bolgia, James Davies, and Olivia Hogan). Convincing sword fights (Andy Fraser) – so authentic, that the lady in the front row almost died at Macbeth’s hand too, as Macduff landed on top of her.

Macbeth

Sun, 29 June 2008, 01:49 pm
As I explained to David M and Stephen L after Friday night's performance, I was a live Macbeth virgin, having only seen the Derek Jacobi and Ian McK productions (both on video, I hasten to add). And by name-dropping in my opening sentence, I have declared a self-interest in the production - I've worked with both David and Stephen a number of times. Being a backstage person (and amateur props diva), I'm sometimes distracted by the staging, costuming and props of a play (more name-dropping - during the performance of Jacobi's Tempest in Sheffield, I was more interested in how the backdrop was sucked into Prospero's magic book DSC than I was with his opening speech), so I'll deal with those first. Stephen Lee's hallmark sparse set and minimal lighting and sound ensure that the words and actions of the play are the focus. Half a dozen boxes became thrones, the dining room where Macbeth sees the ghostly Banquo and the Weird Sisters' cauldron. The only props were those that were actually used in and important to the scene. Ditto the set dressing - four branches became Birnam Wood heading towards Dunsinane. Merri Ford's costuming was, as always, appropriate, interesting and non-intrusive. And so to the performances. A small cast played a lot of characters - ok, most of the characters were played by Stephen Lee with a variety of accents* - but, for the most part, the performances were spot on, with one exception. Possibly it's because my advancing years mean my hearing isn't what it was (or it could be all the Status Quo concerts I went to as a younger person) but I found Dan Luxton's Macduff hard to understand. To my ears, he spoke too quickly and I wasn't able to adjust to and understand the language as quickly as I normally do. This apart, his performance was rich, heart-felt (and heart-breaking) and involving. David and Angelique's Mr and Mrs Mac weren't stereotypical baddies, all evil moustache twirling with no redeeming features (and that goes for Mr Mac as well), but believable, human people who had greatness, or the suggestion of greatness, thrust upon them. And, being human, despotism and madness weren't far behind. I'm no longer a live Macbeth virgin - I hope it was as good for them as it was for me. *I've worked with Stephen the Director a number of times and have witnessed just how well he knows a play. He knows ALL the lines - all of them. Can his one-man Macbeth be far behind? Actually, I'd probably pay to see that... Pamela S You're only young once, but anyone can be immature.

Thread (21 posts)

MacbethGordon the Optom25 June 2008
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