“The Comedy of Glamis,” “The Scottish Business,” or simply
“That Play” are just a few of the euphemisms actors use to avoid mentioning the
title of William Shakespeare’s use to avoid mentioning the title of William
Shakespeare’s Macbeth, one of the
most ill-starred plays in theatrical history.
Indeed, many professionals believe that “The Unmentionable”
(another of its nicknames) – with its bloodshed, ghosts, and witchcraft, is one
of the darkest dramas ever written.
If an actor does happen to mention the name, or quotes from
the play while he is backstage, tradition requires him to leave the dressing
room, turn around three times, spit, and then knock for reentry. Theatrical
history is littered with the many misfortunes of those who have chosen to
ignore these rites of exorcism.
Macbeth seemed doomed from the beginning. It was first
performed before James I, a descendant of both the historical Duncan and Banquo,
who killed in the play. The curse apparently struck during that original
performance on August 7, 1606, when Hal Berridge, the boy actor cast as Lady
Macbeth, collapsed from a fever and later died. Shakespeare himself had to step
in and play the role on short notice.
The play was rarely performed again for nearly a century.
The day of its London revival in 1703 was noteworthy for one of the most severe
storms in English history. Because of its blasphemous content, the play was
blamed for the storm’s calamities, and Queen Anne ordered a week of prayer
during which all theaters were closed.
Over the next two centuries the disasters continued, the
curse taking its greatest toll after the Astor Place riots in New York City in
1849. During a performance of Macbeth by British actor William Charles
Macready, supporters of his American rival, Edwin Forrest, clashed with police.
Twenty-two people were killed and some 36 more injured.
Probably the most famous person to suffer the Macbeth curse
was not an actor but a U.S. president. Macbeth was Abraham Lincoln’s favourite
play, and he spent the afternoon of April 9, 1865, reading passages aloud to a
party of friends on board the River Queen on the Potomac River. The passages
Lincoln chose happened to follow the scene in which Duncan is assassinated.
Five days later Lincoln was shot.
In the 20th century numerous other calamities
associated with the fatal play have been recorded. In the early 1920’s, Lionel
Barrymore’s portrayal of Macbeth received such harsh reviews that Barrymore
never performed on Broadway again.
During the first modern-dress production at the Royal Court
Theatre in London in 1928, a large set fell down, causing serious injury to
members of the company, and a fire broke out in the dress circle.
In 1937, the career of 30-year-old Laurence Olivier almost
came to an abrupt end when a heavy weight crashed down from the flies while he
was rehearsing at the Old Vic. The weight missed him by inches. Later
rehearsals were interrupted when the director and the actress playing Lady
Macduff were involved in a car accident on the way to the theater. Worse, the
theater’s proprietor died of heart
attack during the dress rehearsal.
In a 1953 open-air production in Bermuda, starring Charlton
Heston, the soldiers storming Macbeth’s castle were to burn it to the ground
onstage. On opening night the wind blew smoke and flames into the audience,
which fled in terror.
And in 1980 Peter O’Toole, playing Macbeth for the first
time at the Old Vic, was careful never to refer to the play by name. His
precautions were in vain. Beset by numerous problems and accidents during
rehearsals, when the play opened the critics called his work an artistic
disaster.
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