coming2atvnearu wrote:
Get rid of his plays? Are you kidding? Then what are us theatre students supposed to do?
Shakespeare's plays are the absolute best possibility for Theatre students for one very important reason: No royalties.
And they're also very nice plays to perform. There's a lot less to worry about with the words as they have their own natural rhythm.
Anyway, a stupid question. No person is all good or all evil.
Macbeth is essentially a human. He is actually fairly kind hearted, but also weak spirited and greedy. He is easily persuaded to do bad things and the seed is planted in his mind by the witches, originally. No, they don't tell him to kill anyone, but they start the ball rolling. If it hadn't been for the witches, why would Lady Macbeth have come up with the plan?
Lady Macbeth has to call on 'evil spirits' to help her do the deed, so obviously she isn't all bad. She fears his nature because she fears that Macbeth's natural kindness etc. will make him not go through with it. Both characters are driven by ambition, and yes, Lady macbeth's ambition is the bigger of the two. As a woman in that society the only way she can hope to achieve status is through her husband. That said, she also wants to see her husband do well because she loves him.
They are both human and curruptable as such. But Matt, without the witches, it never would've happened
Or without the Thane of Cawdor being a trecharous git, I suppose. One of my favourite pieces of dramatic irony comes from this play, when Duncan says they shall never be bothered by Cawdor anymore. Oops. Spoke to soon good sir.
I've much more to say, but my brother wants me off the PC