He did
it. He actually DID IT!!! Even though I kind of expected it I still cannot
really believe it …
I MUST
have expected it because I came to Stratford to see him rather than wait
another six months or so for the DVD. And this is something I haven’t done for
any other actor so far. The combination of “Macbeth” and Christopher Eccleston
just appeared too good to be true – though he still wouldn’t have been who I
had casted, but I know that I am usually wrong about this. Now I think that I
didn’t even seriously consider the possibility that he might disappoint me.
Nonetheless … (This is the moment where the cork pops …) By the way, seeing him
on DVD, I couldn’t have accidentally have bumped into him in the ”Dirty Duck”.
Not literally – PITY!!! – because then I would have apologized, and he would
have said something, and I would have heard his voice and could have confirmed
that it was really him. Now, until the end of my days, I will not know …
SHITTT!
No
matter, he did it and nailed Macbeth for me, though, quite literally, this
isn’t possible: to see (and hear!) the “complete” Macbeth all in one go. I never
experienced this as I did last Saturday: how important it is not to expect the
WRONG things when I want to enjoy Shakespeare in the theatre. And to expect to
see what I THINK the play is about is the worst I can do. What I expect and
allow for in the first place is to be seduced and captivated, and if “they” are
any good they will find something to seduce me. (The RSC usually does.) But
this time I expected something more. I am not sure what it was exactly, but I wanted
to be CONVINCED - if not by the RSC then by Christopher Eccleston. And he did
it, he convinced me. Better still: I have now a REAL Macbeth to refer to
instead of a mere concept. Of course I have added him now - after a long
“vetting process” – to the growing list of actors that have unlimited credit
with me.
Thinking
about why I enjoyed his performance so much, my wonders and my praises grew and
grew … and grew - to the point of forgiving him everything, even not knowing
his text a few times and being quite arrogant as an actor. (I expressly wrote “as
an actor” because I don’t know anything about him as a person. The only time I
saw him as a (public) person was an interview about “Doctor Who” where he didn’t
strike me as arrogant, and, looking for production photos for my desktop, I
just hit on an interview by Gareth McLean from the Guardian (Mar 12, 2018)
which is interesting in this respect. He describes Eccleston as “authentic”. Interesting!
I mean that he uses THIS category - though he might be wrong because
Christopher Eccleston certainly is somebody who can play ANYTHING, including
himself … But McLean appears to be quite a good judge of people, and there
actually is more about humbleness and arrogance by Christopher Eccleston himself
in this interview which, I believe, will become relevant …)
There
are three main reasons why this was one of the best performances of a
Shakespeare character I have ever seen. The first one is the unique way he
dealt with the TEXT, the second his profound relationship with the CHARACTER
and, last but not least, that I could actually see some CHANGE in Macbeth –
which was very subtle but, as I felt, extremely convincing. Besides he did some
great physical stuff which was quite sexy, and, I think, helped him with the
confidence and the dynamics. And – YESSS!!! -
he proved me right about the fact that Macbeth doesn’t lose it. SUBTLE
works very well, until the end!
About
the TEXT – briefly (I think there will be more …): There are many actors who
play Shakespeare great but few who have this unique, kind of intimate
relationship with the text. I wrote this about Lucian Msamati as Iago whom I
expressly remembered kind of “singing” the text, and the joy and physical
pleasure I felt in the aftermath … And, recently, there was Martin Hutson as
Cassio in “Julius Caesar” (RSC). I will have to get back to him … Christopher
Eccleston was even more stunning because his approach was so NATURAL. As if
this was just WHAT YOU DO with a text by Shakespeare. I cannot pin it down
exactly, of course. Maybe it was just that he got the “beat” and the timing so
EXACTLY right. I expressly noticed the great timing a few times, and I still
kind of feel the “beat” in a certain part of my body, about two inches beneath
my heart ( - my “erogenous zone” for poetic stimulation …??? I should hear his
“Revenger’s Tragedy” again, which I have on DVD and where I already felt
something like this, to check.) And, at least where I am concerned, there is a
seduction in this which probably made me FEEL that Macbeth is great – even
though he obviously is NOT!
As to
CHARACTER: All I wished to see was a REAL (and contemporary) human being which
would convince me that Macbeth was actually THERE. And THIS I already knew
would happen when Chris Eccleston would play him. I think he is an actor who
couldn’t come on the stage without already BEING Macbeth, and, of course, I was
right about this. Maybe this sounds stupid because we usually take it for
granted, but it often doesn’t happen for me, and never happened with Macbeth.
Now, for the first time, it did! As I wrote: I hadn’t doubted him, the only
thing I had feared was that he might not be “loud” and “obvious” enough to get through to the audience, but there really was no need to worry
about that! This was a really powerful performance. Of course he might still have
been totally wrong about WHO Macbeth is. This danger he avoided by not making
him very detailed and special, not giving him any quirks or distinct character
traits. This doesn’t sound so good in the first place but it turned out to be a
good thing. It isn’t a distinct, “readable” character we need for understanding
Macbeth – to fill the blanks in the character, which I had hoped for. Now I
understood that this would only distract me from the “core action”. To
understand the relationship that Macbeth has with himself is much more
important, and this depends on the strength of the relationship the actor
strikes with his character which obviously WAS very strong.
In my
opinion, the crucial thing about playing Macbeth is that the character has to
undergo a number of changes which, I believe, is extremely difficult even to
figure out, let alone play!, because there is NO TIME for it. This was another
thing I only understood after having seen THIS production where the actors had
even less time than usual, or appeared to have, because the clock was ticking …
literally. We could SEE that there were only two hours for an action that
stretches out over at least a few years. And for the first time I understood
how historical time REALLY doesn’t matter, not only because there are just a
few hours for all this change on the stage anyway, but because what matters is
the INNER time, the way TIME is experienced by us. And this URGENCY – as if
EVERYBODY was in a position of pressure where nothing that happens can be
random but HAS to happen - made the events FEEL consistent for me for the first
time. I kind of knew that, even though, on the surface, “Macbeth” appears so
obvious in every respect, it isn’t really BECAUSE I had no questions. Now I had
this feeling that loads of questions I couldn’t ask just got answered. Maybe I
mostly enjoyed this performance because, for some reason, I enjoy logic and
text consistency as part of texts being “poetic” instead of boring - as real
life usually is. As some kind of break from the same things happening all over
again.
The
happiest moment, though, was when I actually FELT THE CHANGE … It was very
subtle and “authentic” – a real break from any “antics”, or losing it in
spectacular way, or breaking down which, I think, is what Macbeth wants to
avoid AT ALL COSTS. What Chris Eccleston did felt very intimate and might have
something to do with the issue I had with arrogance. I think it was just that I
suddenly KNEW that I didn’t LIKE Macbeth anymore …
So, these
were just the initial “wonders and praises”. There will be more about the
production and about Macbeth, about what I understood and didn’t understand,
what I did and didn’t like, in my next post(s).
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