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Macbeth -An Introduction-
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Macbeth: An Introduction
Macbeth is among the best-known of William Shakespeare’s plays. Shakespeare’s shortest tragedy (b/c King James would often fall asleep during long plays). Believed to have been written between 1603 and 1606. Shakespeare said to have written play especially to honor King James—King James was a direct descendant of Banquo.
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Macbeth: An Introduction
Popular b/c the treachery and deceit within the play mirrored the constant assassination attempts on King James, especially the Gunpowder Plot of 1605. Play written during a time when England was experiencing a love affair w/ all things Scottish due to the new King. King James was also said to have been fascinated with witches and witchcraft—actually wrote a book about it—Daemonologie.
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Macbeth: An Introduction
It is frequently performed at both amateur and professional levels, and has been adapted for opera, film, books, stage and screen. Often regarded as archetypal, the play tells of the dangers of the lust for power and the betrayal of friends.
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What is an Archetype? An original model or pattern from which other later copies are made, especially a character, an action, or situation that seems to represent common patterns of human life. Often, archetypes include a symbol, a theme, a setting, or a character that some critics think have a common meaning in an entire culture, or even the entire human race.
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The Real Macbeth King of Scotland (1040–57).
He succeeded his father as governor of the province of Moray Was a military commander for Duncan I. (Right: portrait of Macbeth)
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The Real Macbeth In 1040, Macbeth killed Duncan in battle and seized the throne. Possibly of royal descent himself, he acquired a direct claim to the throne through his wife, Gruoch; she was a granddaughter of Kenneth III, who had been overthrown by Duncan's ancestor Malcolm II. (Right: portrait of Duncan I)
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The Real Macbeth Macbeth was defeated in 1054 by Siward, earl of Northumbria, who regained the southern part of Scotland on behalf of Malcolm Canmore, Duncan's son. Malcolm himself regained the rest of the kingdom after defeating and killing Macbeth in the battle of Lumphanan. He then succeeded to the throne as Malcolm III.
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The Real Macbeth William Shakespeare's version of the story comes from the accounts of Raphael Holinshed and Hector Boece.
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“The Scottish Play” There are many superstitions centered on the belief that the play is somehow “cursed”.
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“The Scottish Play” Explanation #1
Shakespeare is said to have used the spells of real witches in his text, purportedly angering the witches and causing them to curse the play.
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“The Scottish Play” Explanation #2
Struggling theatres or companies would often put on this popular 'blockbuster' in an effort to save their flagging fortunes. However, it is a tall order for any single production to reverse a long-running trend of poor business. Therefore, the last play performed before a theatre shut down was often Macbeth, and thus the growth of the idea that it was an 'unlucky' play.
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“The Scottish Play” Explanation #3
Theatre companies may have used Macbeth as a back-up play if they were to lose an actor and were not able to perform the production originally planned for the performance. Macbeth requires fewer actors (when doubling of characters for actors occurs) and has the least amount of text for the actors to memorize. Macbeth may have been the play kept in theatre companies' back pockets, just in case some bad luck were to occur prior to any planning of a performance.
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“The Scottish Play” A large mythology has built up surrounding this superstition, with countless stories of accidents, misfortunes and even deaths, all mysteriously taking place during runs of Macbeth (or by actors who had uttered the name). Many actors will not mention the name of the play aloud, referring to it instead as "The Scottish Play".
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“The Scottish Play”: A Chronology of Misfortunes
Here are some of the gory particulars: Beginning with its first performance, in 1606, Dear Will himself was forced to play Lady Macbeth when Hal Berridge, the boy designated to play the lady with a peculiar notion of hospitality, became inexplicably feverish and died. Moreover, the bloody play so displeased King James I that he banned it for five years.
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“The Scottish Play”: A Chronology of Misfortunes
When performed in Amsterdam in 1672, the actor playing Macbeth substituted a real dagger for the blunted stage one and with it killed Duncan in full view of the entranced audience.
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“The Scottish Play”: A Chronology of Misfortunes
As Lady Macbeth, Sarah Siddons was nearly ravaged by a disapproving audience in 1775; Sybil Thorndike was almost strangled by a burly actor in 1926; Diana Wynyard “sleepwalked” off an elevated platform in 1948, falling down 15 feet.
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“The Scottish Play”: A Chronology of Misfortunes
During its 1849 performance at New York's Astor Place, a riot broke out in which 31 people were trampled to death.
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“The Scottish Play”: A Chronology of Misfortunes
In 1937, when Laurence Olivier took on the role of Macbeth, a 25 pound stage weight crashed within an inch of him, and his sword which broke onstage flew into the audience and hit a man who later suffered a heart attack.
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“The Scottish Play”: A Chronology of Misfortunes
In 1934, British actor Malcolm Keen turned mute onstage, and his replacement, Alister Sim, like Hal Berridge before him, developed a high fever and had to be hospitalized.
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“The Scottish Play”: A Chronology of Misfortunes
In the 1942 Macbeth production headed by John Gielgud, three actors -- Duncan and two witches -- died, and the costume and set designer committed suicide amidst his devilish Macbeth creations.
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“The Scottish Play”: A Chronology of Misfortunes
The indestructible Charlton Heston, in an outdoor production in Bermuda in 1953, suffered severe burns in his groin and leg area from tights that were accidentally soaked in kerosene.
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“The Scottish Play”: A Chronology of Misfortunes
An actor's strike felled Rip Torn's 1970 production in New York City; two fires and seven robberies plagued the 1971 version starring David Leary; in the 1981 production at Lincoln Center, J. Kenneth Campbell, who played Macduff, was mugged soon after the play's opening.
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“The Scottish Play”: A Chronology of Misfortunes
Even brave and talented actors like Glenda Jackson to Ian McKellen don’t refer to this haunted play by name, but instead call it “That Scottish Play” or simply “That Play”; everyone, it seems, will get the message, in a flash.
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“The Scottish Play” Several methods exist to dispel the curse, depending on the actor. One is to immediately leave the building the stage is in with the person who uttered the name, walk around it three times, spit over their left shoulders, say an obscenity then wait to be invited back into the building. Another popular "ritual" is to leave the room, knock three times, be invited in, and then quote a line from Hamlet. Yet another is to recite one of Shylock's monologues from The Merchant of Venice.
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Superstition of Characters’ Names
“The Scottish Play” Superstition of Characters’ Names (Only acceptable time to say names is in character during an actual production) MacBee Macker’s Mr. and Mrs. M. The Scottish King MacWhat’s-his-face
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The Witches AKA the Weird Sisters
Painting by William Rimmer depicting the witches’ conjuration of an apparition (Act IV, scene i) Macbeth and Banquo meet the witches (Act I, scene iii) by Johann Heinrich Fussli Portrayal in the 2006 film version of Macbeth
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The Witches They tell Macbeth that he is destined to be king, and urge him to do bloody things.
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The Witches Their character is modeled after Norse mythology- the Norns (three Fates) the name Urðr (Wyrd or “Weird”) does not mean “odd” or “strange.” Comes from the Anglo-Saxon word that means "fate" or simply "future.” The norns- by Arthur Rackham
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Three Fates of Greek and Roman mythology
The Witches The witches were also modeled after the Three Fates of Greek and Roman mythology They controlled the metaphorical thread of life of every mortal and immortal from birth to death . The names of the Three Fates were: Nona - spun the thread of life from her staff onto her spindle. Decima - measured the thread of life with her rod. Morta - was the cutter of the thread of life. She chose the manner of a person's death. When she cut the thread with her scissors, someone on Earth died.
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Holinshed’s Witches Holinshed’s sisters are described as “creatures of the elderwood…nymphs or fairies.” What associations do we have with regards to nymphs and fairies?
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Shakespeare’s Witches
Shakespeare transforms the weird sisters into ugly, androgynous hags, and they distinctly take on a more sinister role than was assigned to them in Holinshed’s Chronicles.
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The Witches Represent darkness, chaos and confusion.
“Fair is foul and foul is fair”- a contradiction = “Evil is good, while good is evil.”
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