Synopsis The Scottish Play - theatrical types consider saying its name to be unlucky! Thrust into power by his overwhelming desires and an over ambitious wife, Macbeth finds his only security is to murder and murder again. From "When shall we three meet again" to "is this a dagger I see before me" this is a powerful Shakespearean drama.
Simon Russell Beale’s appearance in Macbeth has been eagerly awaited. Not least because he’s not the first actor one thinks of in the role of a man of action, a soldier consumed, and ultimately destroyed by it. But this is a very different Macbeth.
John Caird’s slow-moving production, full of silences, gives us Macbeth as a philosopher-warrior. The fearsome Macbeth that we’re introduced to in the second scene has long gone, in fact. One couldn’t imagine him even lifting a sword, let alone brandishing it.
Instead, we have a disenchanted nobleman. Russell Beale's Macbeth claims the crown with little enthusiasm, as if he’s aware that it’s the first step to the grave – but he seizes the opportunity anyway. Emma Fielding’s hard-faced Lady Macbeth looks as if she’s made of sterner stuff - but her mask falls away while sleepwalking. Never have I seen this played with so much anguish. She exits the scene clutching the hand of an imaginary child, as if haunted by the death of her child as much as Duncan’s death.
For this is a Scotland where life is nasty, brutish and short. The ghostly-looking weird sisters are not the witches of popular imagination, but three Fate-like characters who are silent witnesses to the many tragedies unfolding. The witchcraft element is played down: there’s no bubbling cauldron here. Macbeth is not enchanted by the sisters. But he knows that his destiny cannot be untangled from them: they are intertwined from the moment they meet.
Russell Beale's meets his end willingly: the “lay on Macduff” a plea for death. And as one of the sisters, Atropos-like, blows out a candle that lies flickering beside him, we see the passing away of someone, long wearied with life.
This is clearly Russell Beale’s show. His existential Macbeth slowly, slowly inches towards his inevitable fate. We’re reminded once again, what a superb verse speaker he is. But here, it’s not just the words that hit home. We’re struck by the silences as well, those unspoken moments that can presage real pain. When he asks the doctor how to cure a mind, there’s an ache there. He rolls the words around his tongue as if relishing a ten-year-old whisky.
There’s some excellent support from Fielding too, feeling the pain behind the iron-lady façade. Praise also for Paul Higgins’ noble Macduff, a particularly poignant figure, and for Silas Carson’s doomed Banquo, who exhibits a mistrust of Macbeth from the outset.
In truth, there’s not a poor performance here. This is far from a one-man show. There’s richness in all the performers, as the small cast brings out the misery in this too-human of tragedies. But ultimately, it’s the vision of Simon Russell Beale’s anguished title character edging inevitably towards death that makes the most compelling memory.
This is 'Designer Macbeth' - too slick for its own good. Brilliant minimalist set enabling quick and effective scene changes. Great verse speaking. Atmospheric lighting. Get the picture? Only once in the first 100 minutes was there any real passion and by the interval I was bored rigid. Give me the ragged edges but thrilling ride of Out of Joint at Wiltons any day of the week. - 81.135.215.49)
23 Feb 05
Agree with the comments on the mis-casting of SRB. It is a beautifully spoken performance by him, would be perfect for radio. Reminds me of the comment about John Gielgud "The greatest actor in the world ... from the neck up". - 192.135.68.2)
07 Feb 05
This is supposed to be Shakespeare's shortest play, isn't it? It didn't feel like it, though. I was really looking forward to this as I love the play and admire SRB but the two didn't quite seem to gel. It's hard to put my finger on it but overall there was something missing. The weird sisters weren't especially weird either. There was some atmosphere and good use of lighting and shadow. But ultimately, not one of my favourite productions of this play. - 194.82.50.2)
03 Feb 05
Simon Russell Beale maybe a terrific actor, unfortunately, a Macbeth (no matter how much he would like to, or what a wonderful role it is) he will NEVER be!! He pulls the whole production down with him. - 12.103.239.82)
25 Jan 05
Beale just about scrapes through as Macbeth, but why did Deborah Warner cast him as the "lean and hungry" Cassius in her upcoming Julius Caesar? Falstaff would be a more suitable role for him! - 195.92.168.170)
24 Jan 05
I agree completely with the 5 star review. Simon Russell Beale brings Macbeth alive in a way that I have never seen before although I have seen the play many times. What he achieves magnificently is to show you what is going on in Macbeth's mind - most completely in "Tomorrow and Tomorrow". The crushing despair that Russell Beale articulates in this speech is one of the most chilling moments that I have ever experienced in the theatre. - 195.93.34.12)
23 Jan 05
Couldn't disagree more. He was chilling, psychologically damaging and utterly terrifying - not in a blood and guts way, but much, much more profoundly. A marvellous production - and a fabulous contrast with the Out of Joint one, equally good but oh so different. - 81.131.153.218)
22 Jan 05
I second the motion: Simon Russell Beale is a talented and intelligent actor; a Macbeth he is not. - 4.37.219.1)
21 Jan 05
Russell-Beale is an intelligent and talented actor - a Macbeth he is not. This studied and clinical approach to the character, an attitude echoed by the production, does away with all spontaneity of action and thus any hope of engaging the audience on an emotional level [the Lady Macduff scene excepted]. This version has its moments, but my goodness you don't half have to hang around for a long time waiting for them. - 195.93.34.12)
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