A good and capable Macbeth
Director
Miles Potter’s version of the play sets a journeyman’s eye upon the script and
its challenges, no question. There is yeoman service given to the schizoid
setting, plot and characterization that all feed into one of Shakespeare’s most
popular plays. While skilled in execution in most respects, the production did
not find me leaving the tents doing fist-pumps while gushing “Yes! Yes!”
More
Salieri than Mozart, one might say.
Signal
:
for the first time in all the years I’ve attended mainstage Vancouver
performances, not even one audience member rose to give the cast a standing-o
on June 19th. Typically it’s 50% or more in this city.
In parsing
the play, most observers point to what they see as the contrasts between the Macbeths
as civilized gentry who then succumb to witches’ portents, ambition,
motive-&-opportunity – all of which “conspire” to “make” them evil.
I say from Moment
1 Macbeth’s ego augered him down into his bedrock essence. Of the
bearded sisters’ initial prediction he would be King of Scotland, Macbeth muses
immediately : “If good, why do I yield to that suggestion / Whose horrid
image doth unfix my hair / And make my seated heart knock at my ribs, / Against
the use of nature? Present fears / Are less than horrible imaginings : / My
thought, whose murder yet is but fantastical / Shakes so my single state of man
that function / Is smothered in surmise / And nothing is but what is
not.” [Aside : The line “Whose horrid image doth unfix my hair”
could not be improved upon – in 100 lifetimes by 100 different writers – one
iota.] Point is Macbeth’s brain conjures the prospect of ugly mischief
to achieve his destiny from the get-go.
Throughout,
Bob Frazer’s catch of Macbeth vacillates, as the script does. Robust man-of-action
braggadocio toggles with introspective soliloquies that are both poetic and
edgy. Still, I think I was looking for some psychic consistency, some
fundamental underlying menace that doubts and feints can only masque : a 17th
century warrior Nixon.
For her
part, Lady Macbeth (Colleen Wheeler) displays nefarious inclinations from her
first
soliloquy, too : right off she says her husband lacks the “illness” that should
attend to ambition. “Thus thou must do, if thou have it / And that
which rather thou dost fear to do / Than wishest should be undone.” She knows only brute
force will win Macbeth the throne. And she lets us know right smartly
she’s his go-to gal, his bloodlust seductress.
British
homeopathist Anna Thorley had occasion to write about these characters, thus :
“The fundamental problem with the Macbeths was that they were joined at the
hip, undifferentiated as a man and woman and frighteningly dependent on one
another. She was identified with masculine attitudes, manifesting in aggression
and cruelty; he was cut off from his manhood, completely unable to withstand
the pressure she put upon him. Both were estranged from feminine sensibilities,
intent on manipulating their outer situation with no regard for the
consequences for the soul.” Anyone familiar with yin/yang concepts would
have no argument there. Once Macbeth “murders sleep” neither of them find that sweet
peace in their bed or in their heads any longer.
So.
Back to Bard. Here is my cut at it – bad pun intended, given the numerous
swordfight scenes, all of which were well *executed* thanks to swordsman coach
Nicholas Harrison.
Highest kudos
go to sound designer Murray Price who, when Director Potter told him he wanted
a “claustrophobic, internal, edge of mania type of closeness” in the
soundscape, Price simply delivers up a Grammy.
The liner
notes say Macbeth’s backdrop comprises “sounds that we don’t so much
hear, but feel. They resonate in our bodies or our subconscious…” Between
the leitmotif of ravens squawking and owl scrills, there was a sub-sub-woofer
trend reminiscent of the 2010 World Cup vuvuzelas that buzzed away constantly.
Once or twice I was uncertain whether the other overhead commotion was from
Price’s recordings or helijet ambulances screaming toward St. Paul’s – but
whether by design or accident or both, all the ambient audio tension worked
wonderfully well.
The setting
with its moorish screen backdrop cutting out English Bay plus the many mists
and smokes pumping out effluent throughout enhanced the dark and equivocal mood
of the play immensely. For its part the gothic arch set had nothing particular to
recommend it but was functional, especially the subterranean entrance that was
used to good advantage.
Blocking and
stage business – other than the fight scenes – I found somewhat fixed and ploddy, not
unlike what one sees in opera. Except for Frazer’s excellent interpretation of
the Banquo ghost scene – on balance perhaps the best performed scene in the
play. In it Frazer showed terrific animation and true
existential angst as he sustained Emotion #4 of 4 – fear – the other three being
mad, sad, glad. Wheeler was ever-so-equal to Frazer in this scene with
her sardonic dismissal of his manhood, both in word and action.
Duncan Fraser
as Doctor (“More needs she the divine than the physician”) / 2nd
murderer / Old Siward gives each role his all with both overt and subtle
effect. Bernard Cuffling as King Duncan could not have been more
endearing or elegant. But special mention has got to be reserved for John
Murphy’s excellent porter – not just in the knocking / Gates of Hell
/dipsomania scene, but throughout. True consistency of character and comic
menace – very fun indeed.
Two clangers
: Lady M / Wheeler when she shrieks after the Banquo-ghost episode : “Stand
not upon the order of your going / But go at once!” Rosie
O’Donnell could not have executed it worse. Well, maybe.
Bob Frazer’s “Out,
out brief candle…” turn should have been Sisyphus grimly facing the
rock, yet again, but this time nearly opting for suicide himself – consumed
by core visceral pain, not just situational distress. It
came off as an aloof philosophical daydream. Still, his
lingering silent pause at the end of this most renowned and familiar speech of
the play almost compensated.
In sum, this
is Bard. This is summer(?) in Vancouver. So go, dress v-e-r-y warmly, avoid the popcorn
(in its 23rd season as well) and enjoy. “Yeoman” and
“professional” all the way through with a few moments of blue spark. I
may have wanted more or different, but this Macbeth is worth your
shekels regardless.
-30-
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