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Watch this extract from the production, filmed on stage in the Royal Shakespeare Theatre in 2004. Below you'll find links to two further extracts from this scene, and more video clips where the director, designer and actors discuss issues raised by this scene.
Act 1 Scene 5
Lady Macbeth resolves to do everything she can to help her husband achieve his ambition to become king. In this famous speech, she urges the spirits to help her put aside her natural feminine kindness so she can support Macbeth's plan to murder Duncan.
Lady Macbeth - Sian Thomas
Filmed, edited and produced for the RSC by Cornucopia Productions.
Watch this extract from the production, filmed on stage in the Royal Shakespeare Theatre in 2004. Below you'll find links to two other extracts from this scene, and more video clips where the director, designer and actors discuss issues raised by this scene.
Macbeth has arrives. Lady Macbeth tells him to be patient and to leave the plan to murder Duncan to her.
Macbeth - Greg HicksLady Macbeth - Sian Thomas
When Macbeth tells her that Duncan plans to leave the following day, Lady Macbeth says that the king will not see tomorrow.
Director Dominic Cooke discusses how he 'sets the scene' in this extract, allowing the audience to see what Lady Macbeth's life is like when Macbeth isn't there.
What is Lady Macbeth asking for in this extract when she says, 'Unsex me here'?
'She's an amateur,' says actor Sian Thomas, who plays her. In this clip, Sian explains that who Lady Macbeth is appealing to in this extract isn't made clear, but her intentions are the same as when any of us appeals for help to make us stronger than we feel.
In this production, Macbeth and Lady Macbeth greet each other with a kiss at the start of this scene. But later on in these extracts, she refuses to let him kiss her. Why? Greg Hicks explains how this moment arose in rehearsals and demonstrates Lady Macbeth's dominance over her husband from this point onwards.
Lady Macbeth says, 'Your face, my thane, is as a book where men may read strange matters.'
Actor Sian Thomas, who plays Lady Macbeth, explains how Macbeth can't hide this feelings and she thinks that this is one of the reasons that Lady Macbeth loves him.
Could Macbeth have become king in another way? Greg Hicks discusses this 'spiritual conundrum'.
Robert Innes Hopkins, designer of this production of Macbeth, uses the model box to explain the set design which we see in these extracts.
For the RSC's 2004 Tragedies season, there was an overall design for the shape of the RST stage which had a straight front edge. Each of the three productions had to fit its design to this overall shape.
For Macbeth, this stage shape with its square feel, contributed to the blunt masculine strength of the play. The designer of any production needs to consider practicalities like exits and entrances, how the action will work and more abstract issues such as the use of texture or colour to create atmosphere. In this production, Robert Innes Hopkins used a dark-grey tone to create a feeling of harshness.
Most designers create a model box for the production - a 1:25 scale model which helps to inform the workshop team as they manufacture the set. The model box is also an essential tool enabling the designer and director to communicate ideas easily so the design will support and enhance the action.
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