Is this Macbeth I see before me?

Is this Macbeth I see before me?

Robert Tanitch review Macbeth at Young Vic, London SE1

Samuel Pepys saw Macbeth eight times. What he liked best, apart from the acting of Thomas Betterton, was the singing and dancing. But then he didn’t see Shakespeare’s version; he saw William Davenant’s adaptation.

I suspect the only place you could see singing and dancing inMacbeth nowadays would be in Verdi’s opera and in the Zulus’Umbatha, a tribal warrior version, whose high point are the pounding feet and drumming.

I was going to say I was surprised that nobody had done a dance-theatre version until a friend, a balletomane, alerted me to a Bolshoi production in 1980.

Lady Macbeth, I should have thought, would have been a perfect role for Martha Graham. Macbeth could be a great role for Edward Watson.

Director Carrie Cracknell and Australian choreographer Lucy Guerin have done some heavy cutting to Shakespeare’s text and added a lot of movement; but the movement bears little relation to the play.

Lizzie Clachan’s set is a long grey tunnel receding into the distance with moving walls and hidden doors. The stage is piled high with body bags.

The witches are certainly weird. Strutting and fretting they look like shop-window mannequins waiting for clothes. The much-loved King Duncan, famous for his goodness, has been turned into a thug. The Porter has gone completely.

Robert Tanitch logoJohn Heffernan and Anna Maxwell Martin won’t be most people’s idea of the Macbeths; but at least Heffernan speaks the lines distinctly.

The final scene takes its cue from Macbeth’s question: “Canst thou minister to a mind diseased?” There is no battle as such and no Birnam Wood, only a lot of movement.

The production will be visiting Birmingham Repertory Theatre in late January and Home in Manchester in early February.

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