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All’s Well That Ends Well
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As You Like It
The Comedy of Errors
Coriolanus
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Henry IV, part 1
Henry IV, part 2
Henry V
Henry VI, part 1
Henry VI, part 2
Henry VI, part 3
Henry VIII
Julius Caesar
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King Lear
Love’s Labour’s Lost
Macbeth
Measure for Measure
The Merchant of Venice
The Merry Wives of Windsor
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Much Ado About Nothing
Othello
Pericles
Richard II
Richard III
Romeo and Juliet
The Taming of the Shrew
The Tempest
Timon of Athens
Titus Andronicus
Troilus and Cressida
Twelfth Night
Two Gentlemen of Verona
The Winter’s Tale
Shakespeareana

Available versions

1948: Orson Welles

1954: George Schaefer

1961: Paul Almond

1971: Roman Polanski

1979: Philip Casson

1981: Arthur Allan Seidelman

1983: Jack Gold

1997: Jeremy Freeston

1998: Michael Bogdanov

2001: Gregory Doran

2006: Geoffrey Wright

2006 [1988]: Michael T. Starks

2009: Colleen Stovall

2010: Rupert Goold

2014: Eve Best

2015: Justin Kurzel

2017: Barry Avrich

2018: Robin Lough

2018: Kit Monkman

2021: Joel Coen


Adaptations

1957: Throne of Blood

1991: Men of Respect

1991: Scotland, PA

1992: Nikolai Serebryakov, Dave Edwards (animated)

2005: ShakespeaRe-Told: Macbeth

2016: Macbeth Unhinged

2022: Curse of the Macbeths


Production drama

1999: Macbeth in Manhattan

2003: Slings and Arrows (Season 2)

2017: The Scottish Play (series)

2021: The Scottish Play


Educational

2008: This Is Macbeth

2013: Shakespeare Uncovered (Season 1, Ep. 2)


Macbeth
2017: Antoni Cimolino, Shelagh O'Brien; Barry Avrich

This is filmed from the Canadian Stratford Festival version of the play from 2017. As such it is stage presentation, but it is done with considerable attention to cinematic presentation as well.

Like most of the Stratford productions, this one retains a genuine respect for the original material, and presents the play with conventional costumes and props, very little by way of sets, and using North American accents.

The dynamic of the chief characters here is intriguing. Macbeth himself seems more subject to Lady Macbeth, and more resentful of what he’s been required to do, even long after the fact, than in most other productions. There is no doubt that he’s reticent from the outset, but at some point he seems to overcome that and to claim his own misdeeds for himself, even as Lady Macbeth, originally the motivator of the murder, falls apart. That point is deferred longer than in most other productions. This is certainly a plausible way to handle the character, and it shows the range of possibilities inherent in the play, but the sustained frantic note in his diction becomes (to my ears, at least) rather wearying after a while.

That much is only my own take on things, however, and certainly falls within the scope of reasonable production. The acting is solid throughout. There are no roles that fall out of sympathy with the whole performance. Such things as the apparitions in the middle witch scenes are arrestingly plausible; nothing seems overly artificial. The brief exposition of the relationship between Lady Macduff and her son is charming and (in context) moving. More is preserved here, too, of the interview between Macduff and Malcolm than is sometimes shown, and this is a distinct advantage.

Unlike some versions of the play, the ghost of Banquo makes an actual appearance at the banquet scene; I personally think that this is important for several reasons, but many renditions of the play present it completely as a psychological aberration of Macbeth himself. Unlike any other version I can recall, at the second appearance of Banquo, Duncan also appears, walking down the middle of the table. He does not provoke a similar reaction from Macbeth, though, and the reason for his inclusion (other than as a kind of footnote to the extent of Macbeth’s crimes) is not clear to me.

In sum, this is one of the best versions I have seen of this treacherously simple but subtle play. It does not attempt any high concept other than pursuing the increasingly rare notion that one can reasonably trust the play as it is written. It holds together quite well. I can recommend it without any parental reservations, save for the blood and violence that are the core of the play itself.


Angus: Tim Campbell

Apparition: Sophie Neudorf

Banquo: Scott Wentworth

Bloody Sergeant: Peter Hutt

Caithness: Robert King

Doctor of Physic: John Kirkpatrick

Donalbain: Emilio Vieira

Duncan: Joseph Ziegler

First Murderer: Robert King

First Witch: Brigit Wilson

Fleance: Declan Cooper

Gentlewoman: Ijeoma Emesowum

Lady Macbeth: Krystin Pellerin

Lady Macbeth's Attendant: Jessica B. Hill

Lady Macduff: Sarah Afful

Lenox: Jamie Mac

Macbeth: Ian Lake

Macduff: Michael Blake

Malcolm: Antoine Yared

Menteth: Sanjay Talwar

Messenger: Alexei DeLuca

Old Man: Brian Tree

Old Siward: Peter Hutt

Porter: Cyrus Lane

Ross: David Collins

Second Murderer: Peter Hutt

Second Witch: Deidre Gillard-Rowlings

Seyton: E.B. Smith

Third Witch: Lanise Antoine Shelley

Young Macduff: Oliver Neudorf

Young Siward: Rodrigo Beilfuss