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Macbeth

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on September 24, 2012 at 2:27:33 pm
 

The Macbeth  Project

 

The Rationale:

  • Shakespeare's plays-- or any plays, for that matter-- are meant to be seen and performed. They are meant to be experienced. Theater is a visual and auditory medium. It is a communal experience.

 

The Goals:

  • We are going to read Macbeth, but we will also produce it (well, some of it).
  • By doing that, we are going to learn about Shakespeare's language-- its meaning, its structure, and its depth. We will also learn about Shakespeare's characters--  their personalities, their hopes, even their delusions-- and we will understand how the words Shakespeare wrote for those characters are the raw materials at our disposal for creating them.
  • We are going to learn that theater is the creation of a mood, a tone, and an attitude. The plot is just the plot. The story goes deeper than the succession of events.

 

The Process:

  • Read the play, on your own and in your karass.
  • Watch the play. I have the movies and the links. Here is the PBS version with Patrick Stewart as Macbeth: http://video.pbs.org/video/1604122998
  • Each karass will be assigned an act of Macbeth. 

 

Karass work:

  • The karass will discuss the play.
    • Help each other understand the words, the images, and what the characters are saying. Mr. M will help you with that. 
    • Understand the plot, but discuss the story:
      • What is going on that the characters are NOT talking about?
      • What are characters NOT saying?
      • What is the mood and the tone of the act? 
  • The karass will choose the two scenes it feels are the most crucial scenes for communicating the story. 
  • The karass will produce those scenes for viewing and filming.

 

Production choices:

  • Live theatrical performance, a maximum of ten minutes on stage for each karass.

 

Elements to consider:

 

  • Costuming

    • Keep it low-key. No need for authentic period costuming. Simple yet thematic. 
    • Thematic: No need for period costuming. Note how many versions of Shakespeare are in modern dress. 
  • Props, sets

    • Same as above. Free stuff that is not too involved. Shakespeare's sets were practically bare.
  • Music often complements a good theater experience. 

 

A note on acting and lines:

  • No one in either class is a professional actor, so no one will be expected to perform like one. Everyone will be expected to exhibit commitment, preparation, and energy.
  • Try to remember your lines, but also remember:
    • There are lots of ways to cheat. I will show you some tricks and invite you to devise some of your own. All I ask is no reading from books in performance.  

 

 

Grades:

  • Everyone will take the quiz on the play.
  •  When the karass delivers the performance on time with a full company-- 50 points.
  • If a member of the company is absent, that member (not the company) loses points. 
  • Absent for the performance? You will perform by yourself after Thanksgiving. 
  • "SCOTTY" Awards:
    • Best performance: the entire company is exempt from the quiz
      • runners up: 10 points on the quiz
    • Best actor / actress: week of free daily questions
      • runner up: 2 free ones  

 

 

Perfection is not the goal here. Make mistakes. Have fun with it.


Introductory Power Point: http://www.box.net/shared/flb1mrnku4

 

Iambic pentameter:

http://docs.google.com/Doc?docid=0AdO1wSQ9FImjZGNucWN2NjRfMTExY24ycjRqZGI&hl=en

 

Macbeth Full Text: http://www.bartleby.com/70/index41.html

 

Open Source Shakespeare (highly recommended): http://www.opensourceshakespeare.com/

 

Emblems

 http://www.box.net/shared/rybygsev1s

 

"The Ambassadors," an emblematic painting by Holbein (1497-1543), Henry VIII's court painter.

 

Alciato's Book of Emblems: http://www.mun.ca/alciato/

 

Macbeth character analysis based on emblem analysis: Macbeth character analysis

 

Study Guide http://www.sparknotes.com/shakespeare/macbeth/

 

No Fear Shakespeare: http://nfs.sparknotes.com/

 

 

Freud on Macbeth; Sigmund Freud's famous essay that subjects Macbeth and Lady Macbeth to some good old-fashioned psychoanalysis

 

Macbeth Acts 1-2 quiz

 

Macbeth Seminar

How does the phrase "restless ecstasy" (3.2) describe Macbeth as a character? Consider connotations, metaphor, and oxymoron.

 

Macbeth Quiz Alternatives for Acts 3-5

 

Medieval Bestiary: http://bestiary.ca/

 

Act 4 stunts:

Chatham: Perform Act 4 in less than 5 minutes. No talking. Use items around the room as props and costumes.

 

Lynnewood: Sing a synopsis of Act 4 to the tune of 'Old McDonald"-- at least three verses.

 

Coopertown: Perform a short scene that could be logically inserted in to Act 4. (Meanwhile, back at the ranch...)

 

Manoa: Make up a 5-question bonus point quiz on Act 4. Every one Mullen gets wrong, the class gets a bonus point.

 

Oakmont: Perform a 30-second commercial with Macbeth or Lady Macbeth as the celebrity spokesman. Allude to the play to make your pitch.  


Animated Macbeth:

 

Part I

 

Part 2

 

Part 3


 

 

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