Macbeth Resource Pack
Macbeth Resource Pack
CONTENTS
3    PLOT SYNOPSIS
4    ACT AND SCENE LOCATION
5    FORM, STRUCTURE AND PLOT
6    CAST AND COMPANY
7    CHARACTERS
11   AN INTERVIEW WITH MACBETH: LIAM BRENNAN
13   AN INTERVIEW WITH DIRECTOR: LUCY PITMAN-WALLACE
15   PRODUCTION AND COSTUME DESIGN
16   COSTUME
19   THEMES OF MACBETH
20   SYMBOLISM USED IN MACBETH
21   FAMOUS LADY MACBETHS
22   AN INTERVIEW WITH LADY MACBETH: ALLISON McKENZIE
23   FURTHER STUDY QUESTIONS
24   PRACTICAL EXPLORATION: DRAMA EXERCISES
 PLOT SYNOPSIS
 Confronted by three witches as he returns from battle, Macbeth,
 Thane of Glamis, is given a tantalising vision of the future – he will
 acquire great power in his homeland, first as Thane of Cawdor and
 then as King of Scotland.
 Intrigued by this prophecy his personal ambitions are aroused and when word
 arrives that his valour in the King’s service has indeed been rewarded with the
 title of Cawdor, his thirst for power begins to control him.
 Obsessed with the prophecy, he and his scheming wife set their sights on achieving
 this ultimate honour and authority. And when King Duncan comes to stay at his
 trusted nobleman’s home, the scene is set for bloody murder, a power grab, and
 a dark period of tyranny and fear in Scotland. As Macbeth’s powerlust, paranoia and
 guilt grow stronger by the day, the bodies begin to mount up, and he finds himself
 haunted by the past and tormented by the fear of losing his new kingdom.
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ACT AND SCENE LOCATION
Act 1, Scene 1: A desert place.
Act 1, Scene 2: A camp near Forres.
Act 1, Scene 3: A heath near Forres.
Act 1, Scene 4: Forres. The palace.
Act 1, Scene 5: Inverness.
                                              PAULINE LYNCH (WITCH,
                Macbeth’s castle.
                                              GENTLEWOMAN AND FLEANCE)
Act 1, Scene 6: Before Macbeth’s castle.      DESCRIBES HER FAVOURITE SCENE,
Act 1, Scene 7: Macbeth’s castle.             ACT 2 SCENE 2:
Act 2, Scene 1: Court of Macbeth’s            The suspense has been built up so well from the
                                              previous scene and we feel we’re waiting with
                castle.
                                              Lady Macbeth while the murder is happening
Act 2, Scene 2: The same.                     nearby. When Macbeth appears, the rhythm of
Act 2, Scene 3: The same.                     the language becomes so disjointed that we see
                                              immediately how the murder has made them
Act 2, Scene 4: Outside Macbeth’s castle.     both paranoid and we know it won’t sit easily
Act 3, Scene 1: Forres. The palace.           on them.
Act 3, Scene 2: The palace.
                                              For me, this scene sums up the struggles of the
Act 3, Scene 3: A park near the palace.       whole play. It’s all downhill for the Macbeths
Act 3, Scene 4: The same.                     from here!
                Hall in the palace.
Act 3, Scene 5: A heath.
Act 3, Scene 6: Forres. The palace.
                                              DONALD PIRIE (ROSS) DESCRIBES HIS
Act 4, Scene 1: A cavern.                     FAVOURITE SCENE, ACT 4 SCENE 2:
Act 4, Scene 2: Fife. Macduff’s castle.       After the mayhem, there is a lovely peaceful
                                              moment of normality with Lady Macduff and
Act 4, Scene 3: England.
                                              her son. This is broken by a visit from the
                Before the King’s palace.     murderers!
Act 5, Scene 1: Dunsinane.
                Ante-room in the castle.
Act 5, Scene 2: The country near
                Dunsinane.
Act 5, Scene 3: Dunsinane.                   Further Study Question:
                A room in the castle.        In this production of Macbeth, some of the
Act 5, Scene 4: Country near                 scenes listed to the left have been cut.
                Birnan wood.
                                             In groups of five, imagine you are a theatre
Act 5, Scene 5: Dunsinane.
                                             company and you need to cut five scenes
                Within the castle.
                                             out of the play. Which scenes would you cut
Act 5, Scene 6: Dunsinane.                   and why? Think about the story of Macbeth,
                Before the castle.           which scenes NEED to stay in? What effect
Act 5, Scene 7: Another part of the field.   does cutting scenes out have on the story?
Act 5, Scene 8: Another part of the field.
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FORM, STRUCTURE AND PLOT
Macbeth is organised into five acts. Each act contains several scenes. The play starts
with a prologue scene given by the three witches, who occasionally appear between
major scenes to foreshadow or comment on events. Shakespeare has some offstage
action in several points in the story. He uses offstage action for Duncan’s murder and
Lady Macbeth’s death. The single plot is chronological and easy to follow. There are
no flashbacks but there are some dream scenes, for example Lady Macbeth’s
sleepwalking. The attention is generally paid to Macbeth as the focus follows him
through the play.
EXPOSITION
The exposition is very vague, as the
characters are introduced throughout
the first part of the play. It can be
considered that the entire first act is
the exposition.
INITIAL INCIDENT
The three witches start the play off with
a prophecy that Macbeth will become
                                               SAM HEUGHAN (MALCOLM AND
king and that Banquo’s children will
                                               MURDERER) DESCRIBES HIS
become kings after Macbeth.
                                               FAVOURITE SCENE, ACT 3 SCENE 1:
                                               The writing is terrific, Macbeth is calculating,
RISING ACTION                                  powerful and dangerous. He could easily
The rising action is when some of the          command the murderers to do his bidding but
prophecies are coming true and Lady            is scheming enough to convince/entice them
Macbeth is trying to convince Macbeth          to want to do his will.
to kill Duncan.
                                               Watch how he manipulates them…!
CRISIS/CLIMAX
The climax is the actual murder
of Duncan.
FALLING ACTION
The falling action is all the events
occurring after the murder where
Macbeth tries to hide his crime and
cement his position as king by killing
other would-be kings. Lady Macbeth             CLAIRE BROWN (LADY MACDUFF)
goes insane.                                   DESCRIBES HER FAVOURITE SCENE,
                                               ACT 5 SCENE 8:
DENOUEMENT/RESOLUTION                          I love the end when Macduff announces that
Lady Macbeth dies and Macbeth is               he was born through caesarean section! It’s
killed. Malcolm becomes the King.              so chilling and absolutely means that the
                                               game’s up for Macbeth. The riddle finally
                                               unravels itself.
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CAST AND COMPANY
 Macbeth                                Liam Brennan
 Banquo                                 Martin Ledwith
 Duncan/Seyward/Doctor/Porter           Jimmy Chisholm
 Macduff/Captain/Murderer               Christopher Brand
 Malcolm/Soldier/Murderer               Sam Heughan
 Ross/Young Seyward                     Donald Pirie
 Lennox/Murderer of Lady Macduff        Stuart Nicoll
 Lady Macbeth                           Allison Mckenzie
 Witch/Lady Macduff/Messenger/Soldier   Claire Brown
 Witch/Macduff’s Son/Servant/Soldier    Joanne Cummins
 Witch/Gentlewoman/Fleance/Soldier      Pauline Lynch
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CHARACTERS
MACBETH
                 Macbeth’s complex character changes considerably throughout the
                 play. At the beginning Macbeth, Thane of Glamis, is a powerful man,
                 a brave soldier and war hero. He is popular with all the important
                 people of the time and well liked. He is also a loving husband to
                 Lady Macbeth.
LADY MACBETH
                Macbeth’s wife is probably Shakespeare’s most iconic female
                character. She is a strong ambitious woman and very much in love
                with her husband. Like Macbeth, her character develops greatly
                throughout the script. At the beginning her strong personality is
                evident along with her obvious love for her husband. She very quickly
                gets caught up in ambition and lust for power for herself as well as
                on behalf of her husband. She is the one that urges Macbeth to kill
Duncan and claim the throne for himself, showing that she is more ruthless than
Macbeth at the beginning.
There is something ‘other worldly’ about Lady Macbeth and she is often closely linked
with the world of the three witches and magic, often referring to spirits, she predicts
the arrival of Duncan and suffers terrible hallucinations.
As the play progresses, Lady Macbeth feels increasingly guilty and these feelings
develop into madness. As her madness consumes her, and she feels rejection from
her husband, she eventually cannot live with what they have done together and
commits suicide.
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CHARACTERS CONT.
THE THREE WITCHES
                                                        The “Weird Sisters” control
                                                        the actions of Macbeth and
                                                        other characters in the play.
                                                        They are entirely supernatural
                                                        and predict all of the action in
                                                        the play in the form of prophecy.
                                                        In this production of Macbeth,
the witches ‘own’ the stage space as if all of the action is taking place for them. They
are driven by a thirst for blood and death, with their main ambition being to cause as
much death as possible. They prey on Macbeth in particular, possibly seeing him as
the most corruptible character, but also the most likely to succeed in doing their work.
They are always present in this production, lurking in the shadows of the stage,
watching their prophecies come true.
DUNCAN
                  King of Scotland at the beginning of the play, Duncan is portrayed
                  as a virtuous and wise king. Macbeth murders him in order to take
                  his place.
MALCOLM
                  Duncan’s eldest son and rightful heir to the throne. After his
                  father’s murder, Malcolm flees to England, resulting in Macbeth
                  being crowned king. Macduff and Malcolm later invade Scotland
                  and attack Macbeth.
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CHARACTERS CONT.
PORTER
                A servant in Macbeth’s castle.
CAPTAIN
                Wounded in battle, he gives an account of the war at the beginning
                of the play.
MURDERERS
                                                  Macbeth hires the murderers to
                                                  kill Banquo, Fleance and Lady
                                                  Macduff and her children.
BANQUO
                Banquo is a friend of Macbeth. Banquo is the only person who heard
                the witches’ prophecy with Macbeth, so Macbeth has him killed to
                protect his position.
FLEANCE
                Fleance is Banquo’s son. He escapes Macbeth’s attempts to murder
                him and by the end of the play his whereabouts are unknown. It
                could be that he eventually goes on to rule Scotland and fulfil
                another of the witches’ predictions.
LADY MACDUFF
                   Wife of Macduff, murdered with her children, to punish her husband.
ROSS
                   A Thane of Scotland. The character of Ross is used to move the
                   action on in the text.
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AN INTERVIEW WITH MACBETH:
LIAM BRENNAN CONT.
HOW DO YOU VIEW MACBETH’S ABILITY TO MURDER HIS WAY TO THE TOP? IS
AMBITION HIS EXCUSE FOR EVILNESS?
I think that any evilness comes from the supernatural element. After the first time
Macbeth meets the witches Macbeth states, ‘If chance will have me king, why, chance
may crown me’ (Act 1, Scene 3). The first thought is there but he decides to leave it as
a thought at that point. Only later does the thought get under his skin. Then his wife
moves the ambition forwards. Macbeth is a soldier; he does kill on the battlefield.
With Duncan though it is different, more sacrilegious.
Once he has fulfilled his ambition he becomes paranoid about losing it and is haunted
by the witches. He is scared his position is going to be wrenched from him.
I see Macbeth as ambitious but capable of darkness. The witches saw something in
him, they picked the right person. Witches plus Macbeth equals evil. Was evil there
before though, I’m not sure you can say. Is anyone evil without input from others?
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AN INTERVIEW WITH DIRECTOR:
LUCY PITMAN-WALLACE
                       WHY CHOOSE TO TAKE ON THE CHALLENGE OF DIRECTING
                       SUCH A WELL KNOWN AND LOVED SHAKESPEARE PLAY?
                       I love working on Shakespeare texts, they have such depth,
                       so many different layers. It’s like jumping into an ocean of
                       language. It is a fantastic play with a great action packed and
                       thrilling story. It is less complicated than some Shakespeares
                       as it tells more of a direct story. There is a driving power
                       behind it.
                       I have always loved the play; I did it for O Level many years
ago, so I have known it for a long time. It is a fantastic opportunity to direct in
conjunction with The Lyceum, the ‘Scottish play’ performed in Scotland couldn’t
be a greater opportunity.
WHAT WILL BE FRESH AND NEW ABOUT YOUR PRODUCTION AND HOW WILL
 IT BE RELEVANT TO TODAY’S AUDIENCE?
I like to let the play do all the talking. The play is the thing. When approaching
Macbeth I see it in a traditional way. We are creating our own version of medieval
Scotland and accepting what the play has given us.
In rehearsals today we have been discussing current parallels with David Milliband
and what is happening between him and Gordon Brown. Not that I’m suggesting he
will attempt murder! The power struggle to be leader is always a current one
whether it is a civilised one or not.
Macbeth becomes distant and removed from himself and there are parallels with
President Mugabe. We have been looking at photos of how he is currently looking,
almost as if he is wearing a mask, unconnected with himself. The nature of power
is how you get it and how you then use it when you have it. Macbeth is a hero at the
beginning of the play and a tyrant at the end.
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AN INTERVIEW WITH DIRECTOR:
LUCY PITMAN-WALLACE CONT.
WHAT SHOULD YOUNG PEOPLE, ESPECIALLY SCHOOL GROUPS, LOOK OUT FOR
WHEN COMING TO SEE THIS PRODUCTION?
The stage should be seen as the witches’ space with Macbeth stepping into their
territory rather than the other way round. Man’s attempts have been to control
nature, to build a castle on their space, but man still cannot control it. Our designer
has created a space where people can appear and disappear easily. We are featuring
all the natural elements – smoke, wind and fire – penetrating the man-made world
and gradually destroying it.
The witches are very central to this version of the play. They are interested in death.
They see Macbeth as a killing machine. The witches will become involved with the
bodies on the stage. The gauzes at the back of the stage will be similar to the witches’
dresses and the blankets which cover the dead soldiers.
Also, look out for the relationship between Banquo and Macbeth. One dismisses
the witches and chooses the right path and the other doesn’t. Macbeth’s addictive
personality means he can’t say no to the thing that terrifies him. There are many
crossroads moments where Macbeth has choices, he could choose the right path
but doesn’t. It could be paralleled with drug taking where two friends are offered
a substance and one declines while one just can’t help but accept it.
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MEDIEVAL MACBETH –
PRODUCTION AND COSTUME DESIGN
THE SET HAS BEEN DESIGNED BY LUCY OSBORNE AND IS VERY SYMBOLIC
OF THE PLAY’S THEMES.
On one hand, the set represents rustic Scotland, with wooden poles around the
back to represent trees. The structured layout of the set is to show the human
need to build and cultivate, almost as if a clearing in the wood had been found
and improved to make a liveable space for people.
The circular space in the middle of the stage represents the crown, with the copper
edge to represent power and an ‘electric heat’ symbolic of the heat of the action
taking place.
The witches are very much in charge of the space, lurking in the shadows and at
the front of the stage. Therefore, death is ever present, represented by the banners
hanging up around the stage; each banner is a mantle hung up in memory of a
soldier who has lost his life in battle.
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COSTUME DESIGNED BY LUCY OSBORNE
MEN
The male characters wear a mantle or large blanket over their clothes. This is an
artistic interpretation of the kind of clothes that would have been worn in medieval
Scotland. The men would keep their mantles with them during battle and would sit
on them and sleep under them at night. The colour of the mantle would depend on
the dye their wives would have used and would have been a lot duller in colour than
the colours used in the production. It is possible that the colour of the mantle is an
‘ancestor’ of tartan as families would have tended to wear the same colour.
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WOMEN
The women wear very similar clothes to the men, although more fitted and a longer
dress. The most well-off characters wear the brightest colours. In medieval Scotland
it would have been very difficult to find bright blue and purple dyes as these do not
readily occur in nature; greens and yellow would have been easier to make. Often
clothes were dyed using horse urine.
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WITCHES
The witches’ human forms are hidden by their costumes. Although they most
definitely have a human shape, their hands and feet are bound and heads covered,
this is to make it appear as if there is something supernatural about them. Their
costumes match the earthiness of the set design as if they have come from the earth
and control the area.
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 THEMES OF MACBETH
                                                            19
SYMBOLISM USED IN MACBETH
BLOOD                                         ROYALTY AND CROWNS
Shakespeare uses the word ‘blood’             Over 40 references to royalty and crowns
over 40 times in Macbeth. Blood is            makes sure that the audience understand
also referenced without actually being        exactly what Macbeth is focussed on
mentioned. For example, the witches           gaining through his murders. The number
refer to ‘killing swine’. Also, ‘out damned   of times royalty is mentioned in one form
spot’ could also be a reference to Lady       or another heightens the importance of
Macbeth trying to wash the blood from         power-lust and Macbeth’s need to become
her hands.                                    king as an overall theme of the play.
Meaning: treason, guilt, murder, death,       Meaning: Power, drive, ambition,
bravery (bloody man = compliment),            power-lust.
life, guilt.
                                              BIRDS
SLEEP AND DREAMS                              Shakespeare often uses birds
A powerful symbol referenced                  throughout his plays. He uses the
approximately 35 times in this production.    poetic characteristics of birds to
Macbeth murders the innocent Duncan           describe and represent some of the
in his sleep when he is at his most           characters and situations in Macbeth.
vulnerable. Lady Macbeth has terrible
                                              References and meanings include:
dreams and sleepwalks as she is
                                              Vulture – hunger, death (the presence
consumed with guilt.
                                              of a vulture means there has been a
Meaning: The meaning of this symbol           death), voracity, feeding on the death
changes through the play, starting            of others.
out as representative of innocence            Owl – eerie, night time, wise.
and peace and evolving to represent           Wren – small but fiercely protective.
discomfort and fear.
                                              Raven – evil, bewitching, dark, predatory.
                                              Martlet – A fictional bird similar
                                              to a house martin, swallow or swift.
                                              It has no legs and is often pictured
                                              on shields or on coat-of-arms.
                                              Represents wealth, salubrity, royalty.
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FAMOUS LADY MACBETHS: THE STRONG
ICONIC CHARACTER THROUGH THE AGES
               Edna Thomas in 1936 New Lafayette Theatre production, directed
               by Orson Wells. ’Voodoo’ Macbeth.
Vivien Leigh in the 1955 RSC production, directed by Glen Byam Shaw.
Laila Robins in the 2004 New Jersey’s production, directed by Bonnie J, Monte.
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AN INTERVIEW WITH LADY MACBETH:
ALLISON McKENZIE
                       WHO IS LADY MACBETH?
                       Who Lady Macbeth is is a huge question. I think first and
                       foremost she’s a wife, she’s a homemaker, she’s a very, very
                       intelligent woman. I think that the audience have to have an
                       affection for this woman to be able to see how far she and her
                       husband fall.
HAS YOUR CONCEPTION OF WHAT THE PLAY IS CHANGED, NOW THAT YOU ARE
REHEARSING IT?
Well, we are very early in rehearsals but I think Macbeth is basically what it says on
the tin. It’s very straightforward, the language is not too convoluted, it’s blood, it’s
gore, it’s power and strength and greed and all that kind of stuff. A lot of testosterone
on that stage... and in rehearsals, yes a lot of testosterone!
A lot of people have studied it at school and whether they had a good teacher or
a bad teacher really influences their love of Shakespeare. People do have a love/
hate relationship at school – if you have a bad teacher then maybe you didn’t get it,
didn’t understand it and didn’t like it. Whereas, if you have a good teacher, with a love
of the language and how fabulous a play it is, it opens up. So that’s what we’re trying
to do here – it’s a very bold production we’re doing, but deeply understandable.
YOU‘VE WORKED WITH LIAM BEFORE, WHAT WILL HE BRING TO THE ROLE OF
MACBETH AND THE ONSTAGE DYNAMIC BETWEEN YOUR CHARACTERS?
Liam and I have worked together before – he was Hamlet to my Ophelia so another
two major iconic parts! The great thing is that we just work so well together and I’m
not scared by him and he’s not scared by me, so the first day of rehearsal there was
snogging, there was throwing each other around the room, we’re very free with each
other. Liam’s just such a fabulous actor to play Macbeth. He has played him before
and I think he’s kind of grown into the part now. It’s great to be in the rehearsal room
with him because we’ve just such an electricity and there is such a passion.
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FURTHER STUDY QUESTIONS
Here are some questions to help students analyse this production of Macbeth.
How did the set on the stage compare with the design pictures and description in
this resource pack?
How did the actors make use of the different areas of the set?
Describe an actor’s appearance. Why do you think this actor was cast in this role?
What did their physical appearance tell us about their character?
Describe the physical appearance of the Three Witches. How did they use their
body to tell us about their characters? Did anything they did physically help to tell
the story?
What kind of music and sound effects were used? Where did the sound come from?
What different kinds of atmosphere did the sound produce?
Did you notice any special lighting effects? What kind of atmosphere did these
produce?
Choose two characters who had a relationship on stage, for example, Macbeth and
Lady Macbeth. What was their relationship like? Did it change? What did the actors
do to show this?
These questions are to help with further study of the play text.
Macbeth can be described as a tragic hero. What is a tragic hero and how does
Macbeth fit that role?
Who do you think controls the action in the play? Who is the main protagonist
and why?
What do you think is the significance of the Porter? In what way does Shakespeare
use this character?
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PRACTICAL EXPLORATION:
DRAMA EXERCISES
Practical drama activity is a great way to look further at some of the characters,
text and themes of the play. These exercises can be done in the classroom and
need no previous experience of drama.
Lady Macbeth reads the letter from her husband out loud.
Now try Macbeth reading the letter, off stage, while we see Lady Macbeth’s reaction
to the words. If the person playing Lady Macbeth thinks any of the words to be
important, she could speak them out loud after Macbeth has said them.
Next try swapping over, so that Lady Macbeth reads the letter and reacts to the words
but Macbeth echoes some of the most important words out loud.
Verse
Pick a section of text that is written in verse, about six lines will do.
Mark the lines to show where the heavy syllables are (see box below for help).
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Macbeth Education Resource Pack was compiled by Sarah Stephenson, Education Officer
at Nottingham Playhouse and Philippa Tomlin, Education Officer at the Lyceum Theatre.
With thanks to Lucy Pitman-Wallace, Liam Brennan, Allison McKenzie, Michael Thomas
and members of the Company.
For further information on workshops, events and back catalogue of packs, please contact:
Philippa Tomlin, Education Officer on 0131 248 4834 or email ptomlin@lyceum.org.uk
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