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People performing
Macbeth have always referred to it as the Scottish
play because of the superstition surrounding this play. People
have died, been injured, and acting careers terminated as a result
of performing this play. Therefore, saying the very title of the
play aloud is understood to be a curse and must be avoided by using
this polite pseudonym.
Here is an
outline of the plot
Macbeth and Banquo, generals in the service of Duncan, King of
Scotland, are returning victorious from battle when they are hailed
by three witches who prophesy that Macbeth will become Thane of
Cawdor and then King of Scotland. The first part of the prophesy
is soon fulfilled when Duncan rewards Macbeth's loyal service: encouraged
by this, and playing on her husband's ambition, Lady Macbeth persuades
him to murder Duncan while he is a guest at their castle. Malcolm,
Duncan's son and heir, flees to England for safety.
Macbeth, now King of Scotland, has Banquo murdered in an attempt
to secure his own position, but Banquo's ghost appears to him at
a banquet.
Macbeth visits the witches again. They warn him to beware of Macduff,
a noble who has also fled to England, but assure him that he cannot
be harmed by any man born of woman. Macbeth orders the murder of
Macduff's wife and children.
In England, Macduff and Malcolm raise an army and march against
Macbeth but he, armed with the witches' prophecy, believes himself
to be invincible. As his enemies draw nearer, Macbeth learns that
his wife is dead and, despite the witches' words, he himself is
killed by Macduff. Malcolm is crowned King of Scotland.
(from RSC site)
Click here for Not Exactly Macbeth,
a modern poem retelling the story.
And here is a
PowerPoint
version of the play.
Macbeth was first performed in 1606, three years after James
I succeeded Elizabeth I on the English throne. By that time, William
Shakespeare was the most popular playwright in England, and his
company, which had been called the Chamberlain's Men under Queen
Elizabeth, was renamed the King's Men.
You can see from the subject and content of Macbeth that
Shakespeare was writing to please the new king. At the time James
became James I of England, he was already James VI of Scotland,
so a play like Macbeth about Scottish history was a tribute to him.
This play was especially flattering because James was of the Stuart
line of kings, and supposedly the Stuarts were descended from Banquo,
who appears in the play as a brave, noble, honest man.
Also, James wrote a book called Demonology, and he would have been
very interested in the scenes with the witches.
It is not unusual that Shakespeare would have written Macbeth
with an eye toward gratifying his patron. Shakespeare was a commercial
playwright-he wrote and produced plays to sell tickets and make
money.
One of his early plays--Titus Andronicus--was popular for the same
reason certain movies sell a lot of tickets today: it is full of
blood and gore. The witches and the battles of Macbeth, too,
may have been there in part to appeal to the audience.
It was Shakespeare's financial success as a playwright that restored
his family's sagging fortunes. John Shakespeare, William's father,
was the son of a farmer. He opened a shop in Stratford-upon-Avon
and eventually become one of the town's leading citizens.
John married Mary Arden, the daughter of his father's landlord.
Mary was a gentle, cultivated woman, and their marriage helped John
socially in Stratford.
William, their first son, was born in 1564. It seems that by the
time he was twenty his father was deeply in debt, and John's name
disappeared from the list of town councillors. Years later, when
William was financially well off, he bought his father a coat of
arms, which let John sign himself as an official "gentleman."
So Shakespeare was no aristocrat who wrote plays as an intellectual
pursuit. He was a craftsman who earned his living as a dramatist.
We don't know much about Shakespeare's life. When he was eighteen,
he married Anne Hathaway, who was twenty-six. They had three children,
two girls and a boy, and the boy, Hamnet, died young. By his mid-twenties,
Shakespeare was a successful actor and playwright in London, and
he stayed in the theatre until he died, in 1616.
Macbeth was written relatively late in Shakespeare's career--when
he was in his forties. It was the last of what are considered the
four great tragedies. (The others are Hamlet, Othello, and
King Lear.) Macbeth is one of the shortest of Shakespeare's
works, and its economy is a sign that its author was a master of
his craft. You are amazed at the playwright's keen understanding
of human nature and his skill in expressing his insights through
dramatic verse as, step by step, he makes the spiritual downfall
of Macbeth, the title character, horrifyingly clear.
All Shakespeare's plays seem to brim over with ideas--he is always
juggling several possibilities about life. England, too, was in
the midst of a highly interesting period, full of change.
Queen Elizabeth was a great queen, and under her rule England had
won a war against Spain, which established it as a world power.
America was being explored. Old ideas about government and law were
changing. London was becoming a fabulous city, filling with people
from the countryside. Even the English language was changing, as
people from distant areas came together and added new words and
expressions to the common language.
More than a half-century earlier, Henry VIII, Elizabeth's father,
had broken away from the Roman Catholic Church and established the
Church of England. Forty years later, in the middle of the seventeenth
century, King Charles I would lose his head, executed by the Puritans
in a civil war.
Elizabeth was not as secure on the throne as you might think. Though
her grandfather, Henry VII, had stripped the nobles of England of
much power, Elizabeth still struggled with them throughout her reign.
She had to be a political genius to play them against each other,
to avoid the plottings of the Roman Catholics and to overcome the
country's financial mess created by her father, Henry VIII.
A lot was "modern," a lot was "medieval" about
the way people thought in Shakespeare's time. People were superstitious,
and the superstitions became mixed up with religion. Things that
nobody understood were often attributed to supernatural forces.
You can feel some of these things moving behind the scenes as you
read Macbeth. But none of this background--not the influence
of James I or the intrigues of Elizabeth's court or the superstitions
of the times--should determine the way you read the play. It has
a life of its own, breathed into it by Shakespeare's talent and
art. It stands on its own and must be evaluated on its own terms.
When you think you know the play, try this simple
PowerPoint
Quiz.
Or, try this simple
True
or False quiz.
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