Posts with the label macbeth
Showing posts with label macbeth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label macbeth. Show all posts
Friday, 26 October 2018
Macbeth, Barbican Centre | Review
Barbican Centre
Reviewed on Thursday 25th October 2018 by Jake C Macpherson
★★★★
Having never experienced Shakespeare live before, but going into the RSC’s production of Macbeth knowledgeable in the complete story I was apprehensive in how it would be adapted and whether it would be brought up to date for a contemporary audience.
The production opens with the appearance of the witches - not typically imagined. Three young girls in matching red dresses. All of the witches are seen throughout in unusual and unpredicted parts of the play, but all play a vital part in delivering the horror thriller movie vibe that I believe designer Fly Davis and director Polly Findlay have envisioned.
The set designed by Fly Davis was reimagined and interpreted to structure the psychological and mental aspect that was heavily heightened throughout the piece. The carpet was cleverly used on most of the stage to make the link of waiting rooms, quietness and rooms of power.
Christopher Eccleston delivers a fresh and vulnerable Macbeth, one who is not afraid of the tasks he must achieve but is afraid of the hunger for power Lady Macbeth holds. Niamh Cusack is a strong-willed Lady Macbeth whose intentions are very clear from the outset. Cusack begins her character journey at a peak that only keeps on rising throughout.
The Porter (Michael Hodgson)- eerily cemented at the back of the stage, intensifies the element of the psychological trauma Macbeth and Lady Macbeth are going through. For every death that takes place, a tally is struck against the black chalkboard at the back of the stage. Visually this works well. Hodgson is also able to captivate the audience and add some humour to the play which helps break up the trauma of it.
After the death of Duncan (David Acton) an oversized LED timer begins to countdown from the centre of the stage; representing the fate that is yet to come and the fall of Macbeth and everything around him in such a short space of time. Although I found this element a little distracting at points, I feel that the time element did add another level of interest and eeriness to the show.
However, after the intense build up to the end climax I found that it didn’t really go anywhere. The timer strikes zero mid fight and Macbeth is quickly killed, it gave the clear impression that it had been rushed and made me wonder whether the timer could have been re-worked. It added to the piece as a whole but left me leaving wondering whether it was worth it.
Overall it is a beautiful re-telling of Macbeth, keeping true to the script but taking a twist on a unique element. Macbeth at the Barbican is not to be missed.
Macbeth runs at the Barbican until 18th January 2019.
For tickets and information about the show, visit https://www.londonboxoffice.co.uk
Wednesday, 7 March 2018
Macbeth, National Theatre | Review
Macbeth
Olivier Theatre, National Theatre
Reviewed on Tuesday 6th March 2018 by Olivia Mitchell
★★★
I've seen and studied a fair few Shakespeare plays but I wouldn't say I'm an expert in any form. I do however, know what I like when going to the theatre and recognise brilliant acting when I see it. The National Theatre's current production of Macbeth does have brilliant acting but overall it just didn't do it for me.
Walking into the wonderful Olivier theatre we are greeted with an almost bare stage, there are four poles with ragged, witchy fabric attached to the top; in the centre there is a sloped wooden platform decorated with severed limbs from plastic baby toys. Rae Smith's minimalistic set works well with the sparse life of the characters within the show; with them all (including Duncan and Macbeth) looking as though they're on the poverty line in muddy, battered clothes.
Rory Kinnear is thoughtful and suitably plagued as Macbeth; his small comedic moments are particularly enjoyable and he proves why he's such an esteemed actor.
The choice to make Alana Ramsey's Murderer a fishnet tights-clad alcoholic is a great one and she works very well to show the extents which people will go to when they feel they have nothing, just to get their fix or some quick cash.
Trevor Fox's alcoholic Porter is like a ghost moving around, silently hearing all the secrets he shouldn't know. It's refreshing to see him as a more serious, important character rather than mainly being onstage for comedic relief. This darker side emphasises him as the metaphor for the gates of hell, something which I feel is often missed in productions of Macbeth.
It's Anne-Marie Duff who steals the show as Lady Macbeth. Every movement is clearly well thought out and her transition from the headstrong wife who lacks humanity to the crumbling woman plagued by ghosts is striking.
I didn't find anything specifically wrong with this production, I just didn't really feel, well, anything. It's not scary, it's not particularly gory, it's not emotional and it's not funny, it's just a bit uninspiring. There are elements which have brought Shakespeare's play into the modern world but the emotions didn't translate for a modern audience... at least for me.
If you're a Shakespeare fan then there's no reason why you shouldn't go and judge Rufus Norris' Macbeth for yourself but if not then I wouldn't rush along, as I don't think this is the production to make you a fan.
Macbeth runs at the National Theatre until June 23rd and will be broadcast live to cinemas worldwide on May 10th as part of NT Live.
photo credit: Brinkhoff Mögenburg
Friday, 3 November 2017
Macbeth, Bussey Building | Review
Bussey Building
Reviewed on Thursday 2nd November 2017 by Alessandra Cenni
★★★
Nothing screams ‘welcome to this production of Macbeth’ better than a lovely full-body skeleton comfortably sitting centre stage.
The charming gentleman was the first character I met last night at the CFL Art Cafe in the Bussey Building - a suggestive performing space, large enough to allow an interesting setting, but that nonetheless will give you the chills when the lights go out.
The premise of this post-apocalyptic retelling of the famous tragedy was clearly stated in the programme: civilisation had met its fall, and humanity is trying its best to survive through violence, living on the scraps of the previous world. The setting and costumes give justice to this new world, and I found myself wondering how military clothes and bullet belts could feel even more appropriate than traditional costumes. Because they really did. This new desperate-fallen-revolutionaries look just clicked with the characters better than I expected.
I found the visuals and sounds of the second act particularly beautiful - especially if you have a thing for dark and stormy nights, blood-thirsty characters, and violent actions, like I do. That was the part where the raw savagery of the plot found its perfect expression in this broken, hopeless imitation of humanity.
And yet, this backstory also becomes a downside to the production. It raised lots of expectations on the way this story was going to intertwine with the original and what it could add to it, but these were never fulfilled. The backstory was more of a background than a story, maybe also due to a pretty static stage. Since I love the idea, I would definitely love to see how this would play out in a larger production.
The cast gave a fierce, energetic performance that had its strongest moments during the second act. At points I was amazed at how I felt as though I was in the middle of a epic war with only six actors actually fighting on stage.
The witches chose to go for a seriously creepy effect (borderline disturbing, I would say). Their movements had something feral, that belongs to wild beasts rather than humans. The main pair - Macbeth and his Lady - were just made for the part. Henry Proffit’s Macbeth starts off with a cheeky smile, almost playful, but his later torment seems genuine. Sadie Pepperrell (also one of the witches) plays a Lady Macbeth who looks extraordinarily young, charming, and ambitious. Her mental breakdown in Act 2 was particularly strong and convincing.
My loyalty, however, goes to Macduff (Jared Fortune) and his family. Lady Macduff (Danielle Bond - again, one of the witches as well) fights like a tiger against four men, and so does her son, before being slaughtered. Macduff’s despair was so authentic I took his family's death as a personal offence, and I was really invested in their revenge.
A special mention goes to the kids - Quentin Debone as Macduff’s son, and Adam Nkomo as Fleance at this performance - who really made an impression on me and, from the high-pitched noises I heard, on the rest of the audience as well.
This Macbeth could be a starting point for something truly great; it is also a good way to get to know this venue, and definitely worth a trip to South London even if you're not local.
Macbeth plays until the 18th of November at the Bussey Building, Peckham
photo credit: Scott Rylander
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