I KNEW
there would be chaos in my blog after this. After having seen the National
Theatre’s production in the “Cinema” on June 25th, today is the day.
I actually AM in Stratford, and tonight, if my luck holds, I am going to see
Christopher Eccleston as Macbeth. When we arrived here two days ago and went to
the theatre “Macbeth” was on matinee, and we were sitting on the other side of the
river, spying on the balconies and speculating if one of the actors that showed
up there for brief moments might have been him … Of course “Macbeth” has to
come first, and I am glad to have made countless notes on “authenticity”, “To
be or not to be …” and, actually, “Nothing” … I already anticipate “Macbeth” to
have a really long aftermath.
The
National Theatre’s production already turned out extremely interesting – not
actually because it was THAT good. In this case I can do without most of the
detail because Claudia e-mailed me a link for a review by Michael Billington
from the Guardian (Wed 7, Mar 2018) which contains an accurate description of
what we BOTH had seen – though, unlike Claudia and Mr. Billington, I basically
liked it.
(I am
afraid I am not allowed to put in the link anymore- thanks to new copyright
crap legislation! Silent protest …)
Standing
in front of the underground after the show, this time we very much agreed on
WHAT we had seen but basically disagreed about if we had liked it. The amazing
thing for me, though, was that between the three of us (including Mr.
Billington) we apparently agreed on an issue which I had identified earlier as
what might be the problem with playing “Macbeth” in our day and age, and which
I had called “metaphysical guilt”. As Michael Billington put it:
“I
assume Norris’ intention is to show us the destructiveness of a male-dominated
militarism. But this ignores the religious sanctions that haunt the text and
turn Macbeth into a fallen Lucifer, conscious of trumpet-tongued angels and his
own immortal soul.”
And THIS
became extremely important for me: that THREE people agreed on this being such
a central issue of the play that, taken out, it isn’t “Macbeth” anymore.
Nonetheless,
though I agreed that the context of brutal and lawless civil war doesn’t reach
far enough to cover the metaphysical (and historical) implications of Macbeth’s
guilt – killing the king and upsetting the divine order of things, and taking
out tragedy, again! – I kind of liked the production. Not even because
Anne-Marie Duff totally seduced me as the first convincing Lady Macbeth I have
seen – strong and “breakable” at the same time, and totally consistent. (About
Macbeth this has still to happen, but I liked Rory Kinnear for the first time
in the scene after Duncan’s murder actually being “wrecked” by guilt. (And I
LIKED it how he said “The labour we delight in physics pain” because that was
one of the very few moments where he actually got off just RECITING the text.) I
don’t know why “they” are always trying to convince me that Macbeth is kind of
a static affair. For me, what is going on with him is extremely dynamic, and
there is so much in there for an actor to BRING OUT that I feel they would
actually have to take their pick … I don’t want to raise my hopes too high but,
of course, if Chris Eccleston does it tonight he will be my hero …)
The main
reason why I enjoyed the play was that I had always felt that the extreme
violence is a distinctive feature that has to get in in some way. And I must
admit that my solution of large amounts of blood on the stage would not just be
inconvenient but probably not as effective as I would wish – considering the
level of splatter and slaughter on display in other media. I just felt that
“Macbeth” has to stand out in some way – even from other Shakespeare plays. In
this respect the “brutal consistency” of cultural background, set, sound, and
not respecting the text too much worked extremely well. Especially the way they
turned the huge space into an advantage, having a really big world at their
disposal for displaying external violence and cunningly alternating it with
small, cramped spaces for intimate scenes between the main protagonists. And I
liked it how most of the supporting actors achieved to give their characters a
life and a predicament of their own, partly filling the “psychological”
emptiness created by Rory Kinnear’s Macbeth and the lack of genuine
communication between Macbeth and Lady Macbeth. Especially Patrick O’Kane who
appropriated so much stage time digging really deep into the inner conflict of
Macduff and the repercussions of what happens to him I was gawping … (Though I
will always want to see Graham MacTavish as Macduff he probably couldn’t have
done better.)
But the
greatest thing about this production for me is still how it brought out the
point in “Macbeth” BY MISSING IT. I think I rather nailed it already having my
first “stab” at tragedy and metaphysical guilt and – when I am thinking about
it – we were already in this together. It was Claudia who triggered the concept
in me by insisting on Prospero’s guilt and tragic failure as a ruler whereas I
was still looking for personal guilt, which isn’t such a big thing in this case
to actually explain why he is feeling so guilty.
Where, I
think, I fundamentally disagree with the two others is that somehow getting
back to the metaphysical and historical context of a past age would be the
cure. At the moment I am rather big on UPDATES, and I think that ANY
Shakespeare play needs to be “seriously” updated on a contemporary stage, with
contemporary actors for a contemporary audience to make it work at all. That
between the three of us who are now in Stratford to see the play NONE has ever
seen a production that was at least marginally satisfying is telling. Although
most of what is going on in “Macbeth” appears to be so obvious it is a real
bugger when it comes to playing it today, maybe for various reasons. But,
having seen the National Theatre’s production, I became even more convinced
that one of the main reasons is the problem “we” have today with metaphysical
guilt. In one of my former posts I described how cunningly Arthur Miller, in my
opinion, used tragedy and metaphysical guilt in “The Crucible” in his update of
a true story from the 17th century, preserving tragedy in a MEANINGFUL
way, because he was convinced that it is still “state of the art” for telling
this kind of story. I will always remember how AUTHENTIC the 2014’s update
turned out, and how thrilled I was about Richard Armitage being so pleased with
his part in the updating. How much he liked to imagine, and process, that he
actually MIGHT be this person – and I think THIS is the key to understanding
why tragedy, and a play like “Macbeth”, still “gets” us: that - even though we
usually don’t manage - we really WANT to be a GOOD person, with the right
attitude and the stamina to live up to it. And this wish lives in us independent
of the fact that we might have successfully eliminated all metaphysical issues
from our lives. Arthur Miller found a solution for this dilemma which obviously
still works whereas, for “Macbeth”, there is this challenge for every individual
production of finding their own. Now I’ll just wait and see what the RSC will
do about it …
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