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The Bard's tragic tale delivered with passion, bit of levity
The Bard's tragic tale delivered with passion, bit of levity

Winnipeg Free Press

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Winnipeg Free Press

The Bard's tragic tale delivered with passion, bit of levity

As every true-crime fan knows, there's something deeply fascinating about outwardly respectable people who dare to plan and carry out murder. Shakespeare's Macbeth still has the power to enthral audiences with its tale of a too-ambitious general who kills the Scottish king, usurps the throne and descends into increasingly depraved murders as his tormented mind fills up with 'scorpions' of guilt. Essential to the story are the three witches' prophecies about Macbeth and his honourable friend Banquo, and the eternal question of whether we control our own destinies. JOHN WOODS / FREE PRESS Lindsay Nance as Lady Macbeth and Darren Martens in the title role of Shakespeare in the Ruins's promenade production of Macbeth. In great productions, 'the Scottish play' is a horrifying tragedy. Its relevance to the current reign of the amoral, arrogant King Trump is striking. Shakespeare in the Ruins' Macbeth opened at the Trappist Monastery ruins in St. Norbert on Friday night, after its planned Thursday opening was cancelled because of wildfire smoke. Helmed by Emma Welham in her professional directing debut, the production doesn't attain the dark intimacy or intensity to truly shock or chill. This Macbeth, which runs 2 1/2 hours including intermission, also doesn't equal the overall polished professionalism of some past SiR shows. Macbeth The only music is the ominous pounding of a drum. Anika Binding's costumes and Lovissa Wiens' minimal sets have the scrounged-up look usually seen at the fringe festival. Men wear what look like polyester pants along with vaguely medieval-styled sashes, cloaks and hoods of synthetic fabric. The props include a plastic plant pot for the weird sisters' cauldron. Still, it's compelling to watch the plucky cast of just seven actors throw everything they've got into a fiercely physical outdoor performance. The action includes scaling and jumping over walls, violent killings via stabbing, slashing and neck-cracking, and expertly choreographed sword fighting. The ruins' weathered brick and stone walls make a wonderfully evocative backdrop for an era of candlelit castles. The audience, which is issued lawn chairs, is led to five locations — perhaps one chair schlep too many — in and around the picturesque ruins and grounds. Bits of levity arise from characters running in at full tilt to report the latest news, and from the witches popping up to tell the audience in rhyme that it's time to change locations. JOHN WOODS / FREE PRESS Macbeth (Darren Martens) and Lady Macbeth (Lindsay Nance) deal with the aftermath of their deadly ambition. The actors refrain from spewing rapid torrents of text, carefully pacing their delivery so most of the lines can be understood. Darren Martens as Macbeth and Lindsay Nance as Lady Macbeth make a picture-perfect couple, but lack dramatic ferocity as they proceed from entitled self-assurance to anguish and madness. Each has some strong moments, as well as too-guarded moments that don't get at the guts of their roles. Ideally, Macbeth should be so riveting that the audience can't look away. Martens could make his voice and presence much bigger. He isn't helped when the director places him too far from the audience. Weekly A weekly look at what's happening in Winnipeg's arts and entertainment scene. Nance's Lady Macbeth tends to be contained when we expect her to be furiously worked up, especially when she calls on the spirits to masculinize her, then taunts her husband into murder. It's unfortunate that Nance also has to play soldiers and other minor roles, which aren't well differentiated. Three actors display the mature technique to command the outdoor spaces. Ray Strachan is thrillingly passionate as Macduff. Tracy Penner superbly embodies both the female Banquo (as well as her ghost) and Lady Macduff, holding nothing back emotionally. The latter's screams of agony upon seeing her innocent son murdered are wrenching. Tom Keenan creates multiple distinct characters, including King Duncan, a witch and the porter (gatekeeper) who likens the castle doors to the gates of Hell. JOHN WOODS / FREE PRESS Darren Martens (left) as Macbeth and Lindsay Nance as Lady Macbeth make a picture-perfect couple in SiR's promenade production. In a funny respite from the play's 'bloody business,' Keenan's porter is a Scottish standup comic who teasingly interacts with audience members. More crowd participation ensues when folks are recruited to fill seats at the ghost-plagued banquet, but it distracts from — here's that word again — the intensity of the scene. The three witches, played by the male actors Keenan, Liam Dutiaume and Mackenzie Wojcik, are effectively conceived as shrieking, cawing, birdlike creatures in cloaks of white rags that suggest feathers. When they exploit Macbeth's ego by delivering their second set of riddle-like prophecies, they become grotesquely clownlike. The famous 'By the pricking of my thumbs, Something wicked this way comes' is broadly played for laughs. While many productions of this masterwork bring out the hags' comic dimensions, there's something to be said for a more classical approach of letting the supernatural scenes be darkly frightening. This show may be a summer outing, but it could use more creepy chill. arts@

Macbeth opening night cancelled owing to poor air quality
Macbeth opening night cancelled owing to poor air quality

Winnipeg Free Press

time4 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Winnipeg Free Press

Macbeth opening night cancelled owing to poor air quality

Shakespeare in the Ruins has cancelled its opening-night performance of Macbeth owing to poor air quality. The outdoor promenade performance was to have taken place at the Trappist Monastery Provincial Heritage Park in St. Norbert. Ticket holders for tonight's show, directed by Emma Welham, will be contacted by the company. Macbeth's run continues to July 15. The company will present Waiting for Godot starting June 13.

Wait no more
Wait no more

Winnipeg Free Press

time4 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Winnipeg Free Press

Wait no more

On a sweltering May afternoon, with an apocalyptic smokescreen descending upon the ruins of a burned-down monastery in St. Norbert, director Rodrigo Beilfuss leads rehearsals for a play that's frustrated him every day since preparation began in April. 'It's killing me in a beautiful way,' the artistic director of Shakespeare in the Ruins says with a smile. The work he's discussing is Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot, a play that since its première has confounded, confused, delighted and enlightened audiences the world over. JOHN WOODS / FREE PRESS Macbeth (Darren Martens, left) and Lady Macbeth (Lindsay Nance) are the sensual heart of Shakespeare's classic murder mystery. Called an 'acrid cartoon of the story of mankind' in 1956 by New York Times reviewer Brooks Atkinson, Godot opens on June 13 in St. Norbert, with an estimable cast led by Arne MacPherson's Vladimir, Cory Wojcik's Estragon and Tom Keenan's Pozzo. This season at the Ruins, the company is producing Godot in repertory with Macbeth, which opens tonight, directed by Emma Welham. Last produced by SiR as an award-winning feature film in 2020 as a pandemic pivot project, the Scottish-based play features Darren Martens in the titular role, alongside Lindsay Nance (Lady Macbeth), Tracy Penner (Banquo), Ray Strachan (Macduff) and three actors — Keenan, Liam Dutiaume and Mackenzie Wojcik (Cory Wojcik's son) — who will straddle the worlds of Beckett and Shakespeare by appearing in both productions. Welham, making her professional directing debut, says that like Godot, Macbeth is a challenging, layered piece of theatre that demands consideration of tragic structure, the presence of the supernatural and the masks its characters wear to cover their private selves. In complementary ways, both directors agree, the works wrestle with human nature, trust and the fallibility of the universe. JOHN WOODS / FREE PRESS Emma Welham takes on the challenge of directing Macbeth. 'Throughout the course of the play — spoiler alert — Macbeth becomes a tyrannical ruler, and this show really asks the question of how we're willing to stand up to it. What are we willing to do to stand up against injustice? It asks the question of who we put our trust in and why,' says Welham, who just finished her first year at the National Theatre School's directing program in Montreal. 'The central image of the show I return to is when Lady Macbeth says, 'Look like the innocent flower / but be the serpent under't.'' Nothing is exactly as it seems, and as in Godot, the work calls into question what is ever knowable about the characters we watch onstage or meet in day-to-day life. At the rehearsal for Godot, the cast and crew are working their way through the particularities of the movement and dialogue in Beckett's two-act tragicomedy, so clearly described in the script that each time the slavish Lucky (Dutiaume) moves a muscle, it must perfectly follow — or blatantly ignore — the orders of Keenan's prim Pozzo. 'It's relentlessly specific,' Beilfuss says, again smiling. JOHN WOODS / FREE PRESS Director Emma Welham (right) works with Darren Martens and Lindsay Nance prior to the opening of Macbeth. 'Can you propose a rhythm for us?' MacPherson asks the director after his Vladimir and Wojcik's Estragon ran through a playful tête à tête. Moments later, Keenan tests his character's coachmen's whip, and soon, Pozzo is smoking a pipe and discarding the bones from a bucket of freshly consumed St. Norbert fried chicken. Sundays Kevin Rollason's Sunday newsletter honouring and remembering lives well-lived in Manitoba. Nearby, Mackenzie Wojcik, his father and Dutiaume kick around a hacky sack in the shade of a monastery wall. After about an hour, stage managers decide it's time for a break, suggesting the cast drink water and take respite from the sun. 'I don't know where a logical place to break is,' Keenan says. JOHN WOODS / FREE PRESS Darren Martens and Lindsay Nance get up to a bit of mayhem and murder in Macbeth. 'That's the problem with this play,' says Beilfuss, laughing. Ben WaldmanReporter Ben Waldman is a National Newspaper Award-nominated reporter on the Arts & Life desk at the Free Press. Born and raised in Winnipeg, Ben completed three internships with the Free Press while earning his degree at Ryerson University's (now Toronto Metropolitan University's) School of Journalism before joining the newsroom full-time in 2019. Read more about Ben. Every piece of reporting Ben produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

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