Like as the waves make towards the pebbled
shore,
So do our minutes hasten to their end;
Each changing place with that which goes
before,
In sequent toil all forwards do contend …
(Sonnet 60)
Sounds
quite familiar, apart from the stilted tone, doesn’t it? The RSC made quite a
striking collection of time references IN “MACBETH” in their leaflet, so I was
prepared … The first thing I noticed about TIME was what I wrote already: that
the strict regime of time and pressure made the storytelling consistent in a
way I have never seen before. Much of what happens in “Macbeth” became logical
just because there seems to be NO TIME for it to turn out otherwise. And I
liked this.
On the
other hand, this approach was probably responsible for a lot of “incisions” into
the original intention of the play which I didn’t like or didn’t understand at
first. I think, THESE were the places where the audience gets separated in
those who know the play so well that they are not willing to make these sacrifices
just to see something new – which might not even convince THEM! - and the ones
who were thrilled, like me. I was glad that I was not the only one who was
thrilled. Talking with my companions after the play, it appeared as if they
hadn’t liked it one bit, and the applause wasn’t overenthusiastic – so, how
should “they” know that there were people like me in the audience who had loved
it? But my landlord, who asked me the next morning if I had liked it, obviously
was one of those people. Pity that there was NO TIME for a discussion, but he
said that there had been a very DIFFERENT interpretation of the play which he
seemed to have liked, and this would have been a good start … though I was then
in this phase of the aftermath where I probably looked like the cat that has
eaten the cream but where my mind was entirely blank. I just came to realize
how HAPPY I was, and just began to EXPLAIN to myself why … And then I began to
write to explain it some more, and the brew just boiled over – like this
morning at work when I had all the crucial insights at once and had to make
notes instead of tugging into my shit pile …
One of
the most telltale changes was the beginning when the three little weird sisters
sat in front of the bed where an obviously very old and frail Duncan lay
sleeping. I couldn’t make anything of this, and, like the others, I disliked it
that Duncan was this weak and pathetic old man without any visible authority to
go with a crown. But I came to understand that the whole point about Duncan, in
this production, was to show that he is “getting counted”. He is nearing his
end, and a younger, more vigorous and promising successor is already on his way
towards the throne … This is how it is supposed to be, and no regrets because TIME
is inexorable.
I DIDN’T
LIKE IT BUT I UNDERSTOOD IT – that might in fact be the tenor for this review.
Even about Macbeth himself there wasn’t much that “stood out” in a memorable
way, like monologues … We are always waiting for them, and then he says them
just like normal things you say … which isn’t entirely a bad thing. Or not at
all. I always saw the ASIDES in Macbeth as difficult because, unlike in
“Richard III”, they are not spoken to the audience but are inner debates that
are revealed to no one in particular without any obvious reason. They often do
this nowadays by “freezing” the other actors and changing the light. In this
case, there WAS no problem. The asides just appeared naturally to blend in with
the rest. And I think there was a reason for this, apart from the inconspicuous
way Christopher Eccleston dealt with them. Claudia said that he “carried the
production”, and this is certainly true, but there is an aspect to it with
regards to content, and which, I think, is the most significant REDUCTION they
made for making it so consistent. The focus is ENTIRELY on Macbeth himself.
Regarding what I had observed on playing Shakespeare so far, I would never have
thought this could be a good thing. It was, though, thanks to Christopher
Eccleston who didn’t even THINK of making Macbeth special or spectacular in any
way. (I kind of knew he wouldn’t do that …) Instead he made him feel very
authentic in the way of people “we” already know. It is what HAPPENS to Macbeth
that is important, and everything else has to come second. But there often was
this feeling that there should be more. Especially in the final phase where, if
I remember this correctly, a lot of the great self-inspection was just
canceled. I suppose there was NO TIME for it.
I quite
liked Raphael Sowole as Banquo. More because of the kind of person they casted
than because of the acting – which, I am afraid, I couldn’t really do justice
because I was captivated by the outside. (There is the audience’s TIME and
attentiveness to be taken into account as well when it comes to producing Shakespeare.
I just came to think how much I loathe idling on the stage – and there wasn’t a
SECOND of it!) First of all, Raphael Sowole was a massive physical presence,
with a great voice – the only one who looked as if he EASILY could elbow
Christopher Eccleston into a corner, and THIS as such was enough to explain why
Banquo HAS to die. Claudia said, though, that she had liked it that Banquo
didn’t just appear to be the “good one” but as if he actually wanted the job
for himself. So, Raphael Sowole must be a good actor – on top of being gorgeous
– because there wasn’t much TIME for showing this, but, of course, I believe
her (and am looking forward to the DVD …). He certainly was very clear and
obvious, and - when I am thinking about it – he made Banquo hugely CONFIDENT
and SLIGHTLY threatening. (I remember now that I liked it very much how he
said: “So I lose none by seeking to augment it …” charged with second thoughts.)
As I wrote, subtle and quiet worked very well in this production. And I liked
the way Macbeth and Banquo were together. It wasn’t kind of “chummy” – as I had
thought it should be in the beginning – they acted AS EQUALS. People who are
both strong and confident, and actually are looking down on everybody else from
their respective heights, INCLUDING the frail Duncan and his pathetic offspring.
Niamh
Cusack’s Lady Macbeth I didn’t like ONE BIT. Probably not even because of the
actress I would have wanted to be changed (though I just FORBID myself to
imagine Anne-Marie Duff in her stead …). Even though I didn’t like anything of
what she did I followed her closely and could see that she acted it well and
very clearly. I just didn’t like WHO Lady Macbeth is in this production. I
STILL imagine her to be very strong and confident IN THE BEGINNING, and I STILL
don’t like her running about the stage like a mad spectre in the attic and
NEVER WILL. But Lady Macbeth, for me, obviously is still more difficult than
Macbeth, and I just put this to one side – as I already observed, the focus of
the production clearly is on Macbeth. So, the thing I was most unhappy with was
the relationship between Macbeth and Lady Macbeth which - as usual! – was more
or less inexistent. My companions DID see some “chemistry” between them – which
I couldn’t. So, I just stick to that and be done with it (– and am looking
forward the DVD). NOT to the moment, though, where Lady Macbeth is dissolving
into tears in Macbeth’s lap after having received the “compliment” about
bringing forth “men children only”. (They were sensitive about this kind of
issue – as a contemporary audience demands – and this was certainly not
entirely a bad thing. I suppose you can’t have it both ways …) So, basically, I
could accept Lady Macbeth for the sole reason that she was CONSISTENT. But what
I liked least, I think, of all the things I didn’t like is that there was NO
JOY in their relationship in the beginning. When she receives the letters Lady
Macbeth is definitely thrilled, I’d even say “violently happy” (as Björk put it
in one of her songs), and she begins to make plans and cannot wait for Macbeth
to come home, and wants to embrace him and confirm that she is in on this … and
Macbeth, coming home as the victor from the battlefield with his great news he
cannot wait to share with her, his great love and the only person with whom he
can share ANY of this … and you might imagine all sorts of things to happen –
which can’t happen, of course, because there is NO TIME for them. Duncan is
already on his way, and they have to act quickly. I understand this, but
nonetheless they might have found one of these ingenious “shortcuts” they had
for other things, just to bring it out how brutal the change is that TIME
inflicts on their relationship. (For example just NOT making her look like a
wreck already in the BEGINNING … but then she would have had to go through
makeup again, and there would have been NO TIME …???) I am adamant on this,
though, because it will ALWAYS be wrong to make her appear broken and weak already
in the beginning as her part in the fatal act is minimized. Macbeth WOULDN’T
NEED HER to convince himself to commit the murder. Which, if I am thinking
about it, is entirely consistent in this case. He ACTUALLY doesn’t need her
because he WILL do it anyway. And this is how I have always seen Macbeth. There
IS a choice which isn’t really a choice because, having been pushed up to where
he is, he CANNOT turn back. That I saw this in Christopher Eccleston’s Macbeth,
though, might be because I WANTED to see it. Claudia said that she liked it how
he REALLY didn’t want to do it … So - IF there is a contradiction!? - I am
probably wrong …???
The
Macduffs I liked in the beginning because they naturally appeared as this happy
little family – and Macduff as a kind father who will be broken by losing them
WITHOUT actually having to show it. But he is the only one who gets a very …
very … VERY … long TIMEOUT – for grieving! This was clever as well because they
made TIME matter in the opposite way. To some things there will be NO END … So,
there is no “redemption” for him by killing Macbeth, and it doesn’t really
matter that the end appears as some kind of hoax – as puny little Macduff could
never EVER have brought down big, brawny Macbeth anyway, no matter what The
Fates say …! It may even have been this ending that triggered the notion of
“arrogant” – which will become important … The way Macbeth just beats Macduff
to the ground and kicks him until the countdown is done, hands over his sword,
and then gives himself the cue for dying with “Enough!” There were LOTS and
lots of kicks, probably because they were behind on the countdown, but I don’t
know … it looked a bit like: “Fuck the countdown, I want to check out my mobile
and have a pint …” I didn’t like this change, but I accepted it because it
explained HOW all this doesn’t really matter. TIME will bring this to an end
WHEN TIME IS OUT – no matter how.
What became
most significant on behalf of the Macduff/Lady Macduff action was how much they
cut down on VIOLENCE. They obviously didn’t want any dead children on the
stage, and this made the scene where the Macduff family is killed more than a
bit lame. (Though they took one of these ingenious shortcuts by showing Lady
Macduff as being pregnant. Great! Why did this never occur to me …?!) And they
took advantage of Shakespeare’s intuition to hide Banquo’s murder by using “Who
did strike out the light?” as a stage direction! - which the Elizabethans
couldn’t have done because there was daylight. It just occurred to me that their
reluctance to show violent deaths on the stage might have been mostly because
they lacked the means of making it convincing. Red ribbons instead of blood
would have looked as ridiculous to them as they do to us, I suppose, and “dark
night” with its horrors cannot enter the stage for real, so it had ALL to be IN
THE TEXT.
I was
critical about suppressing violence because I have always seen it as crucial
for how we see Macbeth. Truth demands that we should SEE what he has done - though
I always felt it to be wrong to dwell on violence for violence’s sake … Well,
Christopher Eccleston solved this dilemma once and for all by proving me wrong.
(To be continued in my next post …) Instead of being shocked in an obvious way
there was this scandalized laughter in the audience a few times, in places
where nobody WOULD laugh. I think it was this laughter of RECOGNITION: when we
recognize something we already know being highlighted in an unexpected way. And
I think this is a much more interesting and genuine RESPONSE to be got out of
the audience than trying to get us shocked about something we know anyway.
I REALLY
LIKED Malcolm! Apart from the production by the Globe Theatre I have on DVD, it
was the first time where they could - or would - get ANYTHING out of Malcolm.
Of course there never is ENOUGH TIME for that … but at least there is this long
scene with Macduff which I always have felt to be important and never
understood, actually until I saw Luke Newberry play it on the RSC’s stage. He
was very clear and knew what he was doing with almost EVERY SENTENCE – which made
it one of these vignettes of really special and successful Shakespeare acting
that I have “collected”, mostly by Brian Protheroe – who is “in the business”
for a lifetime and likes to show that he can do it with one hand tied behind
his back. And here comes this wispy youth showing us that he can do the same …
Amazing! But most of all I liked it how the clever acting made this scene count
in regard of what I have always thought HAS TO HAPPEN in the play. Of course
Malcolm is very young and – actually! – very scared, and anything else but a
great warrior, but he has to display and DEVELOP the potential of becoming a
leader – probably a better one than Macbeth is. And I have always felt that
this scene is very cunningly written to show just that: Malcolm coming into his
own in a VERY SHORT TIME - Macbeth seriously “being counted” now, and Malcolm
finally finding “the time to friend” and seizing it.
One of
the most important “changes”, though, was what they did about the WEIRD
SISTERS. In my opinion they reduced and marginalized them making them children
– who looked great and appropriately “weird”. This made them feel satisfactory
as an aesthetic presence, but they had no FUNCTION at all as to what happened
on the stage.
I
initially DISLIKED this, as I see the Weird Sister as a great opportunity of
doing all kinds of things to link the scenes, make it more consistent in an
entertaining way … but all these ideas are very vague and, tried out, might not
amount to much. So they easily convinced me that the Weird Sisters can be “made
redundant.” But before I come to examine this, I must take note of my many
“DISLIKES”. There were definitely “likes” as well, but - looking back on what I
have written - the “dislikes” have it. Naturally, being so happy after having
seen it, I was disappointed that the others hadn’t liked it. Counting my
“dislikes”, I can easily understand this. So, why the hell did I LOVE it???
Of
course, I knew the answer when I began to write this, and I chose my headline
very carefully. And, even though I don’t like to do this, in this case I must
explain it. It is some kind of pun about one of my favourite book series by
Bernard Cornwell about the Anglo-Saxon warlord Uthred of Bebbanburgh. His motto,
linking the interminable succession of novels, is that “FATE is inexorable.” I
kind of loved this because I am very much into early history where people lived
and thought entirely differently, were their lives were shaped by different
morals and circumstances. I loved it, but didn’t really understand it – as I
have always liked the Weird Sisters in “Macbeth” BECAUSE I don’t understand
what they are about. Though they have always been the “Three Fates” for me, and
always will be. But FATE, for us, is just some kind of placeholder, whereas at
the time it must have had a distinct meaning. “We” cannot really understand a
life ruled by distinct powers beyond our reach – be it supernatural
“liabilities”, like witchcraft, or God. The religious concerns that Michael
Billington mentioned in his review for the Guardian of the National Theatre’s “Macbeth”
aren’t really our concern anymore. But TIME IS.
TIME is
what shapes our lives and what we understand intimately. We constantly have
this feeling of time being most precious, as well as the factor that
mercilessly rules our lives. There never appears to be enough time for the
things that are really important. And, as good and successful as we may be
right now, time will bring us down in the end. TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE – and, as
the sonnet shows – Elizabethans already felt the same. Maybe not people like
me, who tend to deny change, are deeply suspicious of the internet (and
Twitter!), and basically want things to continue as they are … in Elizabethan
terms: believed that their lives are ruled by fate, and tragic sin, and
supernatural powers. Not THIS kind of people, but people like Shakespeare, or Thomas
Cromwell who, according to Hilary Mantle, knew already that the world was ruled
by time and money, NOT by kings … Understanding this, I came to love what they
had done – using TIME as an exterior structure AND interior motivation in the
text they created on the stage. As far as I am concerned, it worked great, and
it definitely UPDATED the text for me – way beyond where my own imagination
could reach. And of course I loved this!
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