Is There a Real Witches' Curse in Shakespeare's 'Macbeth'? - podcast episode cover

Is There a Real Witches' Curse in Shakespeare's 'Macbeth'?

Dec 19, 20173 min
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episode description

You may have heard that the Bard's tragedy "Macbeth" is cursed. Learn how this superstition came about in this episode of BrainStuff.

Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff from How Stuff Works. Hey, they're brain stuff, Lauren Vogel bomb here. If you're listening in a theater, you might want to save this one for later, because today we're talking about the Scottish play. William Shakespeare's tragedy Macbeth is steeped in deceit, murder, and manipulation, and surrounded by real life superstitions enough that plenty of theater professionals and enthusiasts won't even say the word Macbeth outside

of the actual staging of a show. In the play, the Scottish general Macbeth returns home from the battlefield and encounters three witches who make a trio of prophecies. Many playgoers and performers believe that incantations in Macbeth were genuine curses taken from an actual coven. It's certainly one explanation for all of the injuries, accidents, and illnesses that have befallen so many of the people involved with its productions.

For example, during the first performance of Vicbeth and the early six hundreds, the actor portraying Lady Macbeth fell ill and died on stage, forcing Shakespeare to take over the role. In later performances, theatergoers sometimes became so caught up in the action that they formed angry mobs and tried to exact justice on the antagonist, Lady Macbeth. Once in eighteen forty nine, more than thirty people died when rioting occurred part way through the play. Legendary actors like Laurence Olivier

and Charlton Heston experienced close calls during performances. Olivier, who played Macbeth in nineteen thirty seven, was nearly crushed to death by a stage light. Heston, who took the role on in nineteen fifty three, was severely burned on his lower extremities after his tights were somehow dusting Kerosene, the eddy of misfortunes swirling around Macbeth, seems to mimic the tragedies that take place on stage. Lady Macbeth, in an effort to speed her husband's rise to the throne, encourages

him to murder the reigning king. When Macbeth does, he enters into a state of paranoia. He murders his best friend, whose children are prophesies to take the throne in the future, as well as an entire family who sees his competition. In the end, a lady Macbeth dies of guilt and

Macbeth is killed two. Meanwhile, audiences have been left to wonder whether the witches after whom the Macbeth rolls were patterned might have stolen into the theater, watched the first dress rehearsal, and left a curse that has endured for centuries. Perhaps they didn't appreciate their spells being put on display for public consumption. Maybe they just weren't fans of the theater. Whatever the reason, legend has it that they've banded together

and cursed the play's future productions. There are other, perhaps more plausible explanations, though for starters, most of the plays performed in dimly lit and foggy conditions, which have probably led to many of the on stage accidents that have plague productions. And then there are the fight scenes. Macbeth has more skirmishes than most plays, which increases the odds that something will go wrong. Condense all this strife into the Bard's shortest tragedy, it's no wonder that people have

gotten hurt. All live productions flirt with mishaps, both large and small. Costumes can malfunction, actors can get sick, crew members of stained injuries. When multiplied by the thousands of times Macbeth has been performed throughout the last four centuries, these problems are bound to add up and perpetuate the belief that the play is cursed. But if anything weird happens to me after this episode, y'all take heat and

just be carefu well with that name. Yeah. Today's episode was written by Laurie L. Dove and produced by Tristan McNeil. For more on this and lots of other dramatic topics, visit our home planet, how Stuff Works dot com.

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android