Macbeth Study Notes
Macbeth Study Notes
presents
By William Shakespeare
Student-Teacher
Study Guide
compiled and arranged by the Education Department of The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey
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In This Guide:
Classroom Activities for Teachers and Students ......................................p2 Shakespeare: Helpful Tips For Exploring & Seeing His Works .................p3 About the Playwright...............................................................................p4 Shakespeares London .............................................................................p5 Shakespeares Verse ................................................................................p6 Are you SURE this is English?................................................................p7 Macbeth: An Introduction .......................................................................p8 Macbeth: A Short Synopsis ......................................................................p9 Whos Who in Macbeth ......................................................................... p10 Aspects of Macbeth ...............................................................................p10 Sources and History of Macbeth ...........................................................p13 Commentary and Criticism ....................................................................p14 The Curse of The Scottish Play ...........................................................p14 Shakespeares Common Tongue ............................................................p15 Terms and Phrases Found in Macbeth...................................................p15 What Did He Say/Who Said That - Quizzes............................................p16 Topics for Discussion .............................................................................p17 Test Your Understanding Quiz ...............................................................p18 Follow-Up Activities ...............................................................................p19 Sources Used for this Study Guide ........................................................p20 Answers to Quizzes................................................................................p20 Meeting the NJ Core Curriculum Content Standards ............................p21 About The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey .........................back cover
PHOTO: Macbeth visits the wierd sisters to know his fate in the 2012 Shakespeare LIVE! touring production of MACBETH. Photo: Andrew Murad.
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What we hear most from educators is that there is a great deal of anxiety when it comes to Shakespeare; seeing it, reading it and especially teaching it. One of the principal goals of The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jerseys education programs is to demystify Shakespeare, take him off the shelf and re-energize his work for students and teachers alike. Toward these goals, this Study Guide provides educators with tools to both allay their own concerns and to expand the theatre-going experience for their students beyond the field trip to The Shakespeare Theatre.
The information included in this guide will help you expand your students understanding of Shakespeare in performance, as well as help you meet many of the New Jersey Core Curriculum Content Standards. We encourage you to impart as much of the information included in this Study Guide to your students as is possible. The following are some suggestions from teachers on how you can utilize elements of the guide given limited classroom time.
Many teachers have found that distributing or reading the Short Synopsis and Whos Who pages has greatly increased students understanding and enjoyment of the production. It provides the students with a general understanding of what they will be seeing and what they can expect. Some teachers have simply taken the last five minutes of a class period to do this with very positive results.
C L A S S R O O M T S A C T I V I T I E S
FOR EACHERS AND TUDENTS
When more class time is available prior to your visit, we recommend incorporating the background information on William Shakespeare and the play itself. One teacher divided her class into groups and assigned each group research topics based on the divisions found in the study guide. Using a copy of the corresponding study guide page as a launch pad, the students had one week to research the topics. The students then presented their information to the class in three- to five-minute oral reports. Including the questions that evolved from the presentations, the entire project took only one class period. I am told that the reading of Old English and Middle English texts was quite entertaining and very informative. Using the questions found in the TOPICS FOR DISCUSSION, many teachers will opt to take a class period after the trip to The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey to discuss the play with their students. The questions help keep the comments focused on the production, while incorporating various thematic and social issues that are found in the play. One school spent two days working through performance-based activities (a few of which are suggested in the FOLLOW-UP ACTIVITIES section) with a particularly dicult and rowdy class. They were astounded with the results. Their students took the opportunity to ham it up, and discovered a great joy and understanding from performing Shakespeare.
Again, we hope you will incorporate as many portions of this study guide as you are able into your classroom experience. If you have any suggestions for activities or topics not already found in the Study Guide, please contact our education department. We are always interested in hearing new ways to excite young people (and teachers) about Shakespeare and live theatre. Happy Teaching,
Before attending the production, give each student one line from the play to listen for. Discuss the meaning of the line and encourage their input in deciphering what Shakespeare meant by the line. How would the student perform the line? Why is the line important to the play? Does it advance the plot, or give the audience particular insight into a character or relationship? Following the production, discuss the line again. Did the actor present the line in the way your student expected? If not, how was it different?
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(to Shakespeare). See a play, read it aloud, rent a video, listen to a tape. Its up to you. When you look at Shakespeare close up, hes not as intimidating as when hes seen from afar.
Norrie Epstein The Friendly Shakespeare
Dont worry so much! Just make sure your ears are clean and your
eyes are sharp. Listen and look and watch. Look at the distance people stand from each other; look at the relationships being developed.
Tragedy can have humor, and great comedy always has elements of the tragic.
18th-century critics complained that Shakespeares tragedies werent consistently serious enough. According to the classic rules, tragedy should be uniformly somber. Shakespeares use of humor in his tragedies prevents us from becoming washed away in a dense fog of emotion. Rather, it forces us out of the tragic long enough to appreciate the level to which the plays passions have taken us.
Dont negate the move that Shakespeare will make toward your gut, toward your soul because he will touch you there, if you allow yourself to be touched.
-David Suchet, actor
Some of the plays have taken on mythic proportions. By myths, I mean we grow up knowing certain things about [Shakespeares] characters but we dont know how we know them.
There are some parts of the plays youll never understand. But excuse me, I thought thats what great art was supposed to be about.
laugh, cry, and be moved. Shakespeare wrote for a live and active audience. Both audience and actor must be involved to create a truly winning performance.
Dont be afraid to
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The SonneTS
You might have thought that Shakespeare wrote the sonnets earlier in his career, as a type of stepping stone to his plays. However, Shakespeare actually penned most of his sonnets during the various outbreaks of the plague in London, when the theatres were closed.
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Shakespeares London
London, in the late 16th and early 17th centuries, was a bustling urban center filled with a wide variety of people and cultures. Although most life centered around making a living or going to church, the main source of diversion for Londoners was the theatre. It was a form of entertainment accessible to people of all classes. The rich and the poor, the aristocrats and the beggars all met at the theatre. Though often appeasing the church or the monarchy, theatre at this time did experience a freedom that was unknown in previous generations. Evidence of this can be found in the numerous bawdy and pagan references found in Shakespeares plays. This relative artistic license and freedom of expression made theatre extremely unpopular among certain members of society, and it was later banned entirely by the Puritans. Not until the reign of Charles II (1660-1685) was the theatre restored to the status it held in Shakespeares day. The Globe Theatre, the resident playhouse for Shakespeares company of actors, was easily accessible to Londoners and an active social center. Actors and performers were also regularly brought to court or to private homes to entertain. Despite their social popularity, actors maintained a relatively low status, sometimes no better than a common beggar or rogue. Most performers were forced to earn a living doing trade work. The aristocracys desire for entertainment, however, did spur the development of numerous new theatre pieces. Often a nobleman would become a patron to an artist or company of actors, providing for their financial needs and sheltering them to some degree from ocial sanctions. In return, the company would adopt the name of the patron. Shakespeares acting company was originally named Lord Chamberlains Men after their patron, Henry Carey, Lord Chamberlain. Later, under the patronage of King James I, they were known as The Kings Men, an unprecedented honor at the time. Despite the flourishing of the arts at this time, London was sometimes a desolate place. Outbreaks of the Black Plague (the bubonic plague) frequently erupted, killing thousands of citizens. Theatres, shops, and the government were all shut down during these times in hopes of preventing the spread of the disease. Elizabethans were unaware that the disease was being spread by the flea and rat populations, which well outnumbered the human population of London at that time.
heaRInG a PLay
The Elizabethans were an audience of listeners. They would say, Im going to hear a play, not Im going to see a play. The Elizabethan audience would pick up on words and their various meanings that we wouldnt.
Marjorie Garber Speaking in rhyme is not natural to us, but it was to the Elizabethans, so we have to understand what language meant to them, and what language does not mean to us today. If I were an Elizabethan and I wanted to impress you as a lover, I wouldnt send you flowers. I would come and woo you at your feet and recite to you a sonnet I had written just for you no matter how bad it was. Elizabethan England was a world where people sang, talked and breathed language.
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Shakespeares Verse
Shakespeares plays are written predominantly in blank verse, a poetic form preferred by English dramatists in the 16th and early 17th centuries. It is a very flexible medium, which, like the human speech pattern, is capable of a wide range of tones and inflections. The lines, which are usually unrhymed, are divided into five feet, each of which is a two-syllable unit known as an iamb. Each iamb is made up of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable. Blank verse is technically defined as unrhymed iambic pentameter. Here is a selection of blank verse from A Midsummer Nights Dream, with the stressed syllables in bold type: Theseus: To you, your father should be as a god; One that composd your beauties, yea, and one To whom you are but as a form in wax By him imprinted, and within his powr To leave the figure, or disfigure it. Demetrius is a worthy gentleman. Hermia: So is Lysander. Theseus: In himself he is; But in this kind, wanting your fathers voice, The other must be held the worthier. In this short selection, you can see a variety of speech tones indicated by the verse. The regularity of the rhythmic pattern and the use of full lines to complete his thoughts give Theseus a sense of calm and authority. Hermias brief response, which breaks the iambic pattern, is only a fraction of a line, suggesting that she is impassioned and saying only a portion of what she is thinking. Theseus, however, completes her line and restores the iambic pattern, indicating his authority and the fact that he is, at this point in the play, literally overbearing her will. Notice that while the blank verse pattern is generally iambic, even in this short passage there are instances where the pattern of stress is broken. The play would quickly become monotonous if the characters truly spoke in nothing but perfect iambic pentameterfortunately for audiences, Shakespeares rhythms of-ten become jagged and jarring to reflect the tension and conflict among his characters. Trying to determine where the rhythm of a line is regular or irregular provides important clues for the actor trying to understand what the character is thinking or feeling. As in real life, choosing to change the stressbearing syllable may radically alter the meaning of what is being said. Other clues are provided by word order and punctuation. There were few established rules for either in Shakespeares time, so he was free to experiment with unusual syntax. As in our daily speech, the sentence structure (as indicated by both word order and punctuation) helps the reader or listener understand both the literal meaning of the sentence and the emphasis. A comma may indicate a new portion of the same idea, while a dash breaks into the sentence to insert a new idea, and a period suggests the completion of one idea and the start of another. Editors of Shakespeare over the years have quarreled bitterly about what punctuation the Bard meant to use or should have used. The heaRT oF As an actor or reader The PoeTRy of Shakespeare, it is up to you to decide if a The alternating unstressedstressed pattern of blank verse comma, dash, or period has often been compared to the makes the meaning of rhythm of the human heartbeat. the line most clear. When a character in Shakespeare is agitated, confused or upset, the rhythm of their verse often alters, much in the same way a heartbeat alters under similar conditions.
Boy, oh Boy
In Shakespeares England, it was against the law for women to perform on the public stage. For this reason, the female roles in plays were always performed by males, usually teenage boys who were of slighter build than the other actors, had higher voices and no facial hair. In Macbeth, however, the unique appearance of the witches (you should be women, yet your beards forbid me to interpret that you are so) probably indicates that they, at least, were played by adult actors in the company.
PHOTO: King Duncan hears word of the battle from Lennox in the 2012 Shakespeare LIVE! touring production of MACBETH. Photo: Andrew Murad.
Shakespeare LIVE! is the Educational Touring Company of The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey
Shakespeare LIVE! is the Educational Touring Company of The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey
Macbeth: An Introduction
Like all of Shakespeares tragedies, Macbeth is a characterdriven play. Unlike the others, however, Macbeth contains no sub-plots, little comic relief, and no extravagant detail. This places a constant, searing focus upon the title character and his motivations. The play, narrating Macbeths swift rise and fall from power in Scotland, can be simultaneously viewed as a fictionalized history play, a tale of a man trapped by fate, and a cautionary tale of the consequences of unchecked ambition. As with King Lear, Shakespeare looked to early medieval European history for his plot when penning Macbeth. He chose the career of a Scottish king recounted in Holinsheds Chronicles of England, Scotland, and Ireland, a nIGhTTIMe In storehouse of ShaKeSPeaReS Day plots to which Shakespeare The Elizabethans believed that night was the time of spirits and demons. and his Though many contemporary thinkers contemporaries would scoff at such a notion, one must often turned. consider what nighttime was like for The historical the Elizabethans. In pre-modern times, the night lacked the artificial glow that Macbeth was a chases away complete darkness today. contemporary Only the moon, stars and scattered of Edward the lanterns and candles illuminated the Elizabethan night. Confessor, King of England from In the dim flicker of these limited light 1042 to 1066 CE. sources, it is easy to imagine superOne can interpret Macbeth as a play that depicts the demise of a man who chooses evil as his good. The witches promise Macbeth that he will be King, yet he, driven by his power-hungry wife, believes that his only path to the crown is through the murder of King Duncan. With Duncan dead, Macbeth is crowned King and the prophesy is fulfilled. Once enthroned, however, Macbeth continues on a path of murder fueled by his paranoia and determination to hold on to the throne.
natural encounters. A dead tree jostled in a breeze can be transformed into a hideous monster, a darting bird can become a fleeing spirit. Because these sights were never seen in the bright daytime, Elizabethans believed that ghosts held domain over the night, and the first signs of the dawn (such as the crowing rooster) chased evil spirits away.
Macbeth murders Banquo in an attempt to prevent the prophesy that Banquo will be the root and father of many kings from coming true. He incorrectly interprets the prophesy to mean that Banquos young son Fleance will be the immediate instrument of his downfall. Fearful of traitors within the Scottish nobility, Macbeth also places spies in the homes of the thanes. When he hears that Macduff has fled to England to gain forces to overthrow him, Macbeth has Macduff s castle destroyed and his family slaughtered. A warrior by training, Macbeth seems well suited for the bloody path on which he has embarked. Lady Macbeth, on the other hand, believes that the murder of Duncan is a singular sacrifice, which usher them into a life of royal ease and splendor. Macbeth understands that the bloody path on which they have embarked is only the beginning of a long road on which blood will have blood. Despite his violent deeds, Shakespeare does not paint Macbeth as a simple villain. When we are introduced to the protagonist, he is a valiant and honorable general returning from a war in which he has nobly defended his country and his king from both foreign invasion and treachery. After the visitation from the three witches he resolves that If chance will have (him) King... chance may crown (him) without (his) stir despite his black and deep desires. It is Lady Macbeth that insists that they must murder Duncan to gain the crown. Macbeth struggles with this option, but finally decides that his will be a bloody path to the crown, and once he embarks, Macbeth does not turn back. Even at Macbeths darkest, however, Shakespeare gives us a glimpse of the man he once was. When a messenger announces that the Queen, his wife, is dead, he ponders the futility of his life with insight and eloquence in the famous Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow speech. Regardless of the various possible interpretations of Macbeth, the themes of ambition, corruption, destiny, sex and power presented in the play are quite tangible even today. Modern audiences can relate to the feelings of lust, power and ambition that drive Macbeth and Lady Macbeth. Though we may not match the extreme lengths to which they go, the desires that drive them are, on a basic level, all too human. This may be one of the many reasons why Macbeth has remained one of Shakespeares most popular tragedies for nearly four centuries.
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PHOTO: Lady Macbeth calms the banquet guests in the 2012 Shakespeare LIVE! touring production of MACBETH. Photo: Andrew Murad.
contradictory information about his future. He is told to beware Macduff, but that he himself can not be harmed by anyone born of woman. He is also told that he will never be defeated until the woods of Birnam advance on his castle. As the witches vanish, Macbeth is brought word from one of his soldiers that Macduff has fled to England. At this news, Macbeth orders the death of Macduffs family and servants, and the destruction of his home. In England, Macduff lobbies Malcolm to take Scotland back from Macbeth. Malcolm, unsure if he can trust Macduff, tests his loyalty. When satisfied that Macduff is not a spy for Macbeth, Malcolm announces that he has already gained the support of the English army, and is preparing to advance on Scotland. Meanwhile, back in Dunsinane castle, Lady Macbeth is observed sleepwalking and re-enacting the murder of Duncan. Macbeth finds himself more and more alone as those around him defect and ally themselves with Malcolm. As Malcolms forces arrive at Birnam Wood, the young prince orders them to cut down limbs from the trees. They will then carry the limbs before them as they march on Macbeths castle. Malcolm hopes this will disguise the size of their army. It will also make the woods appear to march toward Dunsinane castle, just as the witches predicted. On the eve of the great battle, Macbeth is told that Lady Macbeth has died. Alone, he ponders the meaning of his existence. A messenger brings him word that Birnam Wood has begun to move toward Dunsinane. Determined to beat the fate the witches said awaited him, he goes to battle. On the battlefield, he encounters Macduff. As Macbeth gloats that none of woman born can harm him, Macduff tells him that he was not born of woman, but rather had been delivered via caesarian-section. They fight and Macbeth is killed. Malcolm is crowned the new and rightful King of Scotland.
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Aspects of Macbeth
Whose Fault Is It, Anyway?:
This is probably the biggest question every reader, actor and director of Macbeth must face. Whos to blame? There are various possible answers to this question. Most commonly, however, one of four sources is the subject of the fingerpointing; the witches, Fate, Lady Macbeth, and, of course, Macbeth himself. THE WITCHES: It is the witches who plant the idea of royalty in Macbeths head. They also give him a false sense of his future as king when they tell him that no one born of woman can harm Macbeth. Several other questions must be asked, however, when considering the witches as the source of the downfall of Macbeth. Are they malicious? Do they intend to do Macbeth and/or Scotland harm? Do they know more than they say, or are they only given bits of information to pass on to Macbeth? For that matter, are they even magical at all? What if they are merely ugly old women who plant an idea in Macbeths brain just to see what will happen? Declaring the witches the villains of the play makes Macbeth their victim. Are we meant to pity his plight? FATE: There are many allusions to fate in Macbeth. Are the destinies of Shakespeares characters pre-determined? Are the witches the earthly servants of Fate? If you say its all a matter of Fate, then Macbeth is merely a puppet in this world, with no control over his destiny. In this case, is anyone really to blame? Does the outcome even matter? LADY MACBETH: Lady M has long been a popular favorite of finger-pointers. Shes the one who not only develops the plan to kill Duncan, but also convinces her noble husband to commit the actual assassination. She certainly carries some sway over her husband, and she uses it with brutal force in the first half of the play. Is Lady Macbeth the only truly evil character in the play? Is she merely looking out for her husbands best interest? Is she driven by personal ambition or love of her husband? MACBETH: Then of course theres the man himself. He decides to tell his wife about the witches prophesies, he eventually decides to kill Duncan and Banquo and the Macduffs. Shouldnt he take some responsibility? If
PHOTO: The Doctor and a gentlewoman look on as Lady Macbeth wrestles with her soul in the 2012 Shakespeare LIVE! touring production of MACBETH. Photo: Andrew Murad.
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Macbeth is the one you choose, the play is very much the story of a once noble man who becomes evil. Whichever choice you make when selecting who is to blame, you must consider how it affects your interpretation of the play as a whole. Is Macbeth a play about Mans entrapment by Fate? Is it an exploration of the evil that lurks within each of us? Does it present the human race as the puppets of the supernatural world? All of these answers are correct and supportable in the play. The choice is up to you!
Macbeth insists that it is nothing more than a projection of his conscience. This is the very painting of your fear, This is the airdrawn dagger which you said Led you to Duncan.
It is also likely that Shakespeares play is substantially responsible for the contemporary meaning of weird: eerie or strange. Macbeth is its first recorded appearance with that spelling and meaning.
Are any of these visions real? One might argue that the witches have some corporal existence in the world, for they are also seen by Banquo. However, Macbeth and Banquo are the only people who see them, and the witches are able to vanish into thin air. Certainly a double hallucination would seem farfetched, but not outside the realm of possibility. On the subject of the dagger and Banquos ghost, however, the debate is up for grabs. Is there actually a dagger? Does the ghost exist? Or are both merely projections of Macbeths own troubled psyche. Productions have been staged in which there is no image of a dagger seen by the audience, and no actor playing Banquos ghost. In these productions, Macbeth creates his own horror. Is this a more correct choice for the play? No one can say. This of course leads one to the next, and possibly more important question: If the dagger and the ghost are not projections of Macbeths mind, where do they come from? Are they the work of the witches? Is it heaven or hell attempting to guide Macbeth, or punish him, or madden him? The answers to these question all come down to ones interpretation of Shakespeares central character. Does he exist in a world in which magical events happen? Or is he so
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tormented by guilt and dread that his mind projects these images? The question of supernatural intervention versus guiltinspired madness is one of the great mysteries of Macbeth, and one of the elements that allows it to be such a mutable play from production to production. It also is one of the reasons the play has remained so popular for nearly 400 years. Why do you dress me in borrowed robes?: One way to analyze the play is through Shakespeares use of imagery. A recurring image is that of clothing and how well it fits (or doesnt fit) the title character. When greeted as the new Thane of Cawdor, Macbeth replies: Why do you dress me in borrowed robes? A few moments later, when Macbeth is rapt in ambitious thoughts, Banquo observes that: New honors come upon him Like our strange garments cleave not to their mold But with the aid of use. Macbeth initially refuses to murder Duncan, telling his wife: I have bought Golden opinions from all sorts of people, Which would be worn now in their newest gloss, Not cast aside so soon. These images continue throughout the play, nearly always presenting the image of Macbeth dressed in ill-fitting garments. As Malcolms forces approach, Macbeth is described with the following passage: ...now does he feel his title Hang loose about him, like a giants robe Upon a dwarfish thief. All these images seem to direct the reader to view Macbeth as a small man dressed in clothing that is too large for him. Although some productions have gone so far as to interpret this as a direct costume note from the Bard, more likely Shakespeare intended these images in a less literal manner. He presents Macbeth as a man who has forced himself into a position of power for which he is not suited. Some theorists argue that Shakespeare is trying to show the Scottish king as a man too emotionally small for the great task of kingly leadership. HERO OR ANTI-HERO?: The story of a bad man who commits a crime is not a tragedy, but rather, a straightforward tale of evil. Macbeth, however, is the story of a good man who becomes evil. This is his tragedy. When we are first introduced to Macbeth, he is a valiant hero in a war defending his country and his king. When stopped by the weird sisters who inform him of future honors, Macbeth, though tempted by these prophecies, resolves to leave his path to the throne in the hands of Fate.
Lady Macbeth urges her husband to murder Duncan, so that he may gain the throne immediately. Though he considers her suggestions, he acknowledges that what she is suggesting is wrong; a crime against the laws of man, nature, and divinity. He also states that the bloody acts that she would have him do will eventually return on them. But in these cases We still have judgment here, that we but teach Bloody instructions, which being taught, return To plague th inventor. When Lady Macbeth presses him further, Macbeths resolve is weakened, and he agrees to bend up each corporal agent to this terrible feat. Once he kills Duncan, Macbeth is a changed man. This one act transforms him, irrevocably, from a valiant hero to a cold-blooded assassin; a stranger to himself. Macbeth, however, soon becomes accustomed to his new identity. He has killed to get the throne, and his reign becomes a bloodbath in a futile attempt to retain the crown. It is this complete transformation from hero to antihero, not Macbeths specific deeds, that is the source of real terror in Shakespeares play. Shakespeare has combined both criminal and hero in his title character, and in doing so explores the potential for evil within each of us. At the end of the play, numb to feeling, Macbeth distantly remembers the man he once was: I have almost forgot the taste of fears. The time has been my senses would have cooled To hear a night shriek... ...I have supped full of horrors: Direness, familiar to my slaughterous thoughts, Cannot once start me. It is his capacity for self-scrutiny that makes Macbeth a worthy tragic subject. He never lies to himself about the nature of his deeds, and never attempts to rationalize or justify his actions. Aware that he is doomed, he pursues his damnation headlong to his own destruction: Though Birnam Wood be come to Dunsinane, And thou opposed, being of no woman born, Yet I will try to the last. It is only in these last moments of his life that Macbeth defies the prophecies that have guided his choices throughout the play. In this final futile attempt to regain control of his destiny, Macbeth, now a soldier in a battle for his soul, can once again be viewed as a hero in this great tragedy.
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It is assumed because of the subject matter that the play was performed at court for King James, who had himself authored a book on witches, around 1606. The play was certainly performed again at the Globe in 1611, but was not printed until 1623 as part of the First Folio. There are many questions about this text the fact that Macbeth is so much shorter than any other Shakespearean tragedy has caused some to speculate that sections are missing from the a LITTLe Too ToPICaL? Folio text, while other passages, such as the Hecate scene, seem almost certainly to have Royal assassination was on English minds at the time in which Shakespeare wrote been added at some point by another writer. Macbeth. Around the time Shakespeare began writing the play, England was rocked In the 1660s, when the public theatres reopened, Macbeth was revised by Sir William Davenant as a baroque opera, complete with singing, dancing witches. This version remained popular through the mid-18th century when David Garrick, and later J.P. Kemble, returned to Shakespeares text and the psychological journey of its main characters. Since the middle of the 20th century, Macbeth has been perhaps the most widely-read and widely-adapted of Shakespeares tragedies. One remarkable production was staged in 1936 by Harlems Negro Theater Project, directed by a then 20-year-old unknown named Orson Welles. The production set the play in 19thcentury Haiti, complete with all the trappings of voodoo. Known to this day as The Voodoo Macbeth, the production was accompanied by unprecedented publicity. On opening night, more than 10,000 people stood in line
by the discovery of the Gunpowder Plot, a plan orchestrated by a group of extreme Catholics intent on ridding England of its Protestant king and his sympathizers. They planned to blow up the Houses of Parliament on the opening day of the legislative session in November 1605. Had the group succeeded, it would have been a political catastrophe for England, and would have almost certainly led to the collapse of the nation. The explosion would have killed not only the King, his heirs and practically every government ocial. In our time, this would be equivalent to the simultaneous deaths of the President, his entire cabinet, and every member of Congress and the Supreme Court. The plan was thwarted, however, when Guy Fawkes, the man appointed to ignite the explosives, was caught on the eve of the parliamentary session waiting beneath the House of Lords with a lantern in his hand and several slow-burning matches in his pocket. After Fawkes arrest, the other conspirators were eventually captured, charged with treason, convicted and hanged. Guy Fawkes Day is still celebrated in Britain every November 5th as a commemoration of the day in 1605 when his plan was foiled and the English government and royal family were saved. If you have seen the movie V for Vendetta, or read the graphic novel on which it is based, you will be familiar with some of the many references to Guy Fawkes Day in British popular culture, including the rhyme that begins Remember, remember, the 5th of November... When watching Macbeth, audiences in Shakespeares day would have no doubt keenly understood the national turmoil that ensues from Duncans murder.
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a SIMPLe PLay?
Macbeth is distinguished by its simplicity... Its plot is quite plain. It has very little intermixture of humor. It has little pathos except of the sternest kind. The style... has not much variety. A.C. Bradley, Shakespearean Tragedy
The play is less about legitimacy and usurpation than about the divided self... The drama of Macbeth is really a matter between Macbeth and his ambition, Macbeth and the witches and his wife and his hallucinations and his own tortured soul, the drama of prophecies and riddles, and how he under-stands them, and what he decides to do about them, and how they, in themselves, constitute retribution. Stephen Orgel, Introduction to the Pelican edition of Macbeth It is certainly indicative that there are only two plays in which the word love occurs so seldom as in Macbeth, and no play in which fear occurs so often; indeed, it occurs twice or thrice as often as in most other plays Caroline Spurgeon, Shakespeares Imagery
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1. To whom is Macbeth speaking? 2. What does he hope is done quickly? 3. Define trammel up and surcease. 4. In the first half of this speech, do you believe that Macbeth will perform the action he is discussing? Why or why not? 5. What is the judgment of which Macbeth speaks? 6. What does he mean by bloody instructions, and how will they return to plague thinventor?
Match the spoken line to the character who speaks it. Three characters have two quotes each. Seven characters have none of the quotes listed below. A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. Out damned spot. Out I say. If it were done, when tis done, then twere well It were done quickly. The raven himself is hoarse, That croaks the fatal entrance of Duncan Under my battlements. Thou hast it now, King, Cawdor, Glamis, all, As the Weird Women promisd; and I fear, Thou playdst most foully for t. I have no spur To prick the sides of my intent, but only Vaulting ambition, which oerleaps itself And falls on tother. Let us rather Hold fast the mortal sword, and like good men Bestride our downfall birthdom. Cousins, I hope the days are near at hand, That chambers will be safe. Well have thee as our rarer monsters are, Painted upon a pole, and underwrit, Here may you see the tyrant. He was a gentleman on whom I built An absolute trust. BANQUO DONALBAIN DUNCAN FLEANCE LADY MACBETH LADY MACDUFF LENNOX MACBETH MACDUFF MALCOLM MURDERER ROSS THE WITCHES
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PHOTO: The witches prepare in the 2012 Shakespeare LIVE! touring production of MACBETH. Photo: Andrew Murad.
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3. The old English word wyrd, often confused with our word weird, means a. fate. b. bizarre. c. magic. 4. After Duncan is murdered, Malcolm flees to where? a. Mantua b. Verona c. Ireland
5. The prophesies Macbeth receives from the apparitions are a. that he will be Thane of Glamis, Thane of Cawdor and King of Scotland. b. beware Macduff; none of woman born can harm Macbeth; fear not until Birnum Wood comes to Dunsinane. c. that he will be visited by three spirits; one at 1:00 a.m., another at 2:00 a.m., and the third at 3:00 a.m. d. that he will die alone, unhappy and ruined. 6. Macbeth does not have a hand in the death of which of these characters? a. Lady Macduff b. Lady Macbeth c. Banquo d. Duncan
7. Complete this line: Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow a. we love you tomorrow. Youre always a day away. b. has lighted fools the way to dusty death. c. My husband, we dare not delay; the murder of the King must happen this day. d. creeps in its petty pace from day to day to the last syllable of recorded time. 8. The ruler of Scotland at the beginning of the play is whom? a. Malcolm b. Macbeth 9. Immediately prior to the murder of Duncan, Macbeth sees what? a. the image of a floating dagger c. a warriors bloody helmet 10. The rule of Scotland at the end of the play is whom? a. Macbeth b. Malcolm c. Duncan b. the ghost of Banquo d. the weird sisters c. England d. Duncan d. Macduff
11. The line Out damned spot. Out I say, is said by whom and refers to what? a. Lady Macduff, referring to a spot of blood on her hand seen while sleepwalking. b. Macbeth, referring to a tarnish on his new crown. c. Lady Macbeth,, referring to wine stains that appear on her gown at the coronation banquet. d. Lady Macbeth, referring to a spot of blood on her hand seen while sleepwalking. 12. At his coronation banquet, Macbeth is faced with the ghost of whom? a. Banquo b. Duncan c. his father d. Lady Macbeth
13. Who says Get thee back. My soul is too much charged with blood of thine already, and to whom? a. Macbeth to Banquos ghost b. Malcolm to Macduff c. Macduff to Macbeth d. Macbeth to Macduff 14. Macbeth tells us his fathers name when he is first approached by the witches. What is it? a. Donalbain b. Sinel c. Father Macbeth d. Macdonwald
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Follow-up Activities
1. Critics Corner Write a review of this production of 5. A Director Prepares Macbeth has long captured the Macbeth. Be sure to include specific information and your own reactions to both the acting and the design elements (lights, set, costumes and sound). Explain what you liked and disliked, and support your opinions. Then submit your review to The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jerseys Education Department, or see if it can be published in your school newspaper. 2. Alert the media! This play would certainly pack a news ticker: one foreign invasion is defeated, another succeeds, a king is murdered, his sons flee the country under suspicion of the deed not to mention the cannibalistic horses and other spooky signs. Assign these and other big events of the play to members of the class and create appropriate television or newspaper coverage. How do you think the people of Scotland and England feel about these events? 3. I learn by this letter... Write a letter or diary entry from the point of view of one of the characters, discussing an event or situation in the play. For example, the (unheard) first half of the letter which Macbeth sends to Lady Macbeth after encountering the witches, a letter from Macduff to his wife on his way to England, a letter from Banquo to Fleance after encountering the witches, or Lady Macbeths diary entries before and after becoming queen. Be sure to incorporate text from the play as much as possible. 4. 15-minute Shakespeare Divide into five groups, and have each group take one act of the play. Your task is to create a three-minute version of your act, using only Shakespeares words. Choose carefully the lines from your act that carry the most important information and advance the story. When each group is done, you will have a 15-minute version of Macbeth which you can perform for one another. Afterwards, discuss both the process of adaptation and how your abridgement compared to the more modest cuts which the director made for this touring production. Teachers:
Do you have activities or exercises to suggest for this play? We are always looking for new ideas to inspire students (and teachers). Send your suggestions to [email protected] and we will share them with other teachers, and maybe even include them in future study guides.
imaginations of directors and designers for stage and screen. Individually or in small groups, come up with your own scenic or costume designs for the play. Find a line or image expressed in the play as your launch pad. You can use drawings and collage as well as writing to explain and justify your design to the class. 6. Speak the Speech... In small groups, work to present a short passage of the text (any one of Macbeths soliloquies, for example) to the class. Each group should come up with its own unique presentation: different rhythms, echoing or underscoring key words or phrases, simple props, movement, etc. After each group has presented its interpretation of the text, discuss what was successful about each one. From this, you can develop a rubric for what makes a good performance. 7. Play/Pause/Rewind Available versions of Macbeth on video include the 1960 Hallmark Hall of Fame film, the 1971 Roman Polanski film, the 1978 RSC production starring Ian McKellen and Judi Dench, and Michael Bogdanovs 1998 British television version. Choose two versions of the same scene, such as Macbeth and Banquos encounter with the witches, and show each to the students, asking them to observe how the actors in each production speak, interpret and move to the language. Make liberal use of the pause button to stop and ask specific questions, then rewind and let them watch the entire scene through uninterrupted.
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1,094 (8,434)
1,036 (8,338)
879 (6,237)
Source: A COMPLETE AND SYSTEMATIC CONCORDANCE TO THE WORKS OF SHAKESPEARE; Marvin Spevack
Test your understanding Quiz answer Guide 1. C 2. B 3. A 4. D 5. B 6. B 7. D 8. C 9. A 10. B 11. D 12. A 13. D 14. B Shakespeare LIVE! is the Educational Touring Company of The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey
Who Said That? answer Guide A. Lady Macbeth B. Macbeth C. Lady Macbeth D. Banquo E. Macbeth F. Macduff G. Malcolm H. Macduff I. Duncan
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VISUAL & PERFORMING ARTS STANDARDS According to both No Child Left Behind and the New Jersey CCCS, the arts (including theatre) are a core subject and experience with and knowledge of the arts is a vital part of a complete education. In the area of performing arts, performances, workshops and study guide exercises developed by The Shakespeare Theatre address all five state standards. Below, you will find just a few of the possibilities for aligning your study of our productions to each of these standards.
STANDARD 1.1: All students will use aesthetic knowledge in the creation of and in response to dance, music, theatre and visual art. Discuss the use of metaphor in both the text and the design of the production; discuss how the play expresses cultural values of its period and/or of today. STANDARD 1.2: All students will utilize those skills, media, methods, and technologies appropriate to each art form in the creation, performance, and presentation of dance, music, theatre and visual art. Perform a monologue or scene from the play; participate in a classroom workshop that develops the physical and technical skills required to create and present theatre. STANDARD 1.3: All students will demonstrate an understanding of the elements and principles of dance, music, theatre and visual art. Participate in a post-show discussion of elements such as physicality and creating motivated action; discuss the relationship between play text and production design. STANDARD 1.4: All students will develop, apply and reflect upon knowledge of the process of critique. Write a review of the production using domainappropriate terminology; develop a class rubric for effective theatrical presentations; compare and contrast the play with work by other artists. STANDARD 1.5: All students will understand and analyze the role, development, and continuing influence of the arts in relation to world cultures, history, and society. Discuss the representation of social issues (class, political leadership, etc.) in the play; research how the historical period affected the writers work; compare the play to work from other historical periods.
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Student/Teacher Study Guide About The Shakespeare Theatre of NewMACBETH: Jersey Shakespeare LIVE! 2012
The acclaimed Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey is one of the leading Shakespeare theatres in the nation. Serving approximately 100,000 adults and young people annually, it is New Jerseys only professional theatre company dedicated to Shakespeares canon and other classic masterworks. With its distinguished productions and education programs, the company strives to illuminate the universal and lasting relevance of the classics for contemporary audiences. The longest-running Shakespeare theatre on the East Coast and the seventh largest in the nation, The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey marks its 50th season in 2012. The companys 2012 Main Stage 50th Anniversary Season will feature six productions presented in its 308-seat F.M. Kirby Shakespeare Theatre from June through December. In the summer, an Outdoor Stage production is also presented at the Greek Theatre, an open-air amphitheatre nestled in a hillside on the campus of the College of Saint Elizabeth in nearby Morristown. In addition to being a celebrated producer of classic plays and operating Shakespeare LIVE! (one of the largest educational Shakespeare touring programs in the New York/New Jersey region), The Shakespeare Theatre is also deeply committed to nurturing new talent for the American stage. By providing an outstanding training ground for students of the theatre, and cultivating audiences for the future by providing extensive outreach opportunities for students across New Jersey and beyond, The Shakespeare Theatre is a leader in arts education. For additional information, visit our web site at www.ShakespeareNJ.org. The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey is one of 22 professional theatres in the state of New Jersey. The companys dedication to the classics and commitment to excellence sets critical standards for the field. Nationwide, the Theatre has emerged as one of the most exciting new theatres under the leadership of Artistic Director, Bonnie J. Monte since 1990. It is one of only a handful of Shakespeare Theatres on the east coast, and in recent years has drawn larger and larger audiences and unprecedented critical acclaim. The opening of the intimate, 308-seat F.M. Kirby Shakespeare Theatre in 1998, provided the Theatre with a state-of-the-art venue with excellent sightlines, and increased access for patrons and artists with disabilities. The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey is a member of ArtPride, The Shakespeare Theatre Association, Theatre Communications Group, and is a founding member of the New Jersey Theatre Alliance.
The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jerseys programs are made possible, in part, by funding from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts/Department of State, a Partner Agency of the National Endowment for the Arts, as well as funds from the National Endowment for the Arts. Additional major support is received from The Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation, the F.M. Kirby Foundation, The Edward T. Cone Foundation, The Shubert Foundation, and Drew University, as well as contributions from numerous corporations, foundations, government agencies and individuals. The Shakespeare Theatre is an independent, professional theatre company located on the Drew University campus.
Shakespeare LIVE! is the Educational Touring Company of The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey