The Scotsman

Is this a triumph which I see before me?

Charlene Boyd and Keith Fleming are magnificen­t in Dominic Hill’s filmed version of The Macbeths

- Joycemcmil­lan

When Dominic Hill’s radical onehour version of Shakespear­e’s Macbeth first appeared at the Citizens’ Theatre Studio in 2017, it was acclaimed by almost everyone who saw it as a ferociousl­y intense live theatre experience, difficult to imagine in any other medium. Reimagined as a shared nightmare of blood and darkness splattered across a marital bed, Shakespear­e’s terrifying­ly powerful text – cut and adapted by Dominic Hill and Frances Poet – exploded through the small studio space; and Charlene Boyd and Keith Fleming delivered performanc­es so charged with erotic energy and blazing ambition that audiences emerged into the light looking as if they barely knew what had hit them.

It was a high-risk enterprise, therefore, to try to transfer this visceral theatre experience to film; yet together with Martyn Robertson of Urbancroft Films, who co-directs, Dominic Hill has made the shift in fine style, with a mesmerisin­g filmed version of The Macbeths (✪✪✪✪✪) that also raises profound questions about whether it could ever have achieved this level of intensity, had it not been for its earlier life as a live production. Despite the importance of blood as a key image, the action is filmed almost entirely in black and white, with the quality of the blood evoked almost entirely by texture and lighting; and the effect of the absence of colour, and of the tight focus on the actors’ faces, is to throw the force of the language into high relief, despite the monochrome strength of the visual images. Boyd and Fleming are as brilliant as ever as the Macbeths; and for those who like their Shakespear­e brilliant, concentrat­ed, and brief, this version of The Macbeths offers a rare and thrilling treat, available online.

The Edinburgh Internatio­nal Children’s Festival and Take Me Somewhere in Glasgow are still in full swing, meanwhile; and one show in both programmes – and offering a semi-live experience – is Barrowland Ballet’s Family Portrait (✪✪✪✪ ), a 40-minute film installati­on viewed live at each showing by a familysize­d audience. Shown across four screens arranged in a square – with the audience in the middle on pivoting stools – Family Portrait follows Barrowland’s artistic director Natasha Gilmore, and her three children, as they explore woodland in the Cairngorms during lockdown.

The quality of the filmed images is dazzling and full of depth, creating a powerful immersive experience; and within this frame, Gilmore both allows her children to express their own responses to the environmen­t, and creates a powerful narrative, through images and movement, about motherhood and creativity, and the relationsh­ip between the two. The whole experience is magnificen­tly filmed by co-director Robbie Synge and his team, with music and sound by Davey Anderson.

There are 23 shows plus a small Buzzcut Festival included in this year’s Take Me Somewhere programme, rightly described as taking place “in Glasgow and everywhere.” A Certain Value (✪✪✪✪), created by Anna Rispoli and Martina Angelotti in Belgium, is a semi-documentar­y meditation on various experiment­s in collective living, performed live online by volunteer audience members.

The four collective settings represente­d are a prison, a “Common Wallet” experiment where a group of households pool and share their financial resources, a food collective providing accommodat­ion and shared meals for asylum seekers and refugees, and an angry school students’ campaign against singleuse plastics. The settings seem Nordic, French, Hungarian, but the political questions and anxieties are universal. How do we escape from an economic system that is destroying the planet? And are all our idealistic attempts to do so, and to change the world for the better, always doomed to failure? A Certain Value offers no answers to these burning questions, but it squarely reminds us that we in the audience are part of that struggle, which we have no right to abandon.

It’s impossible to fight on, though, without occasional moments of relaxation, communion and peace; and each night, Mamoru Iriguchi’s At The Ends Of The Day (✪✪✪✪) invites listeners to his online pirate radio station to share an hour of Zoom time that is very different from the average online meeting. Audience members are not identified by their own names, and are invited to sit in the dark, lit only by a candle. Meanwhile, as the world turns, presenters from New Zealand to Iceland play us nightfall sounds from wherever they are, whether a small farm in Palestine, a beach in Namibia, or, in Scotland’s case, theatre-maker Greg Sinclair sending a friend out to sample the sounds of Waverley Station and the Water of Leith. It’s difficult to describe how powerful this experience is, as an evocation of global community; but if you ever have a chance to join Iriguchi’s virtual night-time communion, then take it – for the sake of your soul and your humanity, which surely need this kind of gentle sustenance, now more than ever.

For informatio­n and tickets to The Macbeths see www.citz.co.uk; for Edinburgh Internatio­nal Children’s Festival see www.imaginate.org.uk; and for Take Me Somewhere 2021 see takemesome­where.co.uk

If you ever have a chance to join Iriguchi’s virtual night-time communion, then take it

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 ??  ?? Charlene Boyd as Lady Macbeth and Keith Fleming as Macbeth in The Macbeths
Charlene Boyd as Lady Macbeth and Keith Fleming as Macbeth in The Macbeths

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