Macbeth (1960 Australian film) explained

Based On:play by William Shakespeare
Director:William Sterling
Music:Robert Hughes
Country:Australia
Language:English
Runtime:90 minutes
Company:ABC
Network:ABC
Released: (Melbourne)[1]
Released2: (Sydney)
Released3: (Brisbane)[2]

Macbeth is a 1960 Australian TV film based on the play by William Shakespeare. It was directed by William Sterling.

The ABC would present another version of the play in 1965.

Cast

Production

The play was filmed in conjunction with The Life and Death of Richard II which was shot in Sydney. Macbeth had several months of planning and rehearsals. Nine sets were used. There was location filming at Beaconsfield and Cape Schank (for the witches scene).[3] It was set in the eleventh century and was described as akin to Orson Welles' 1948 film production of the play.[2]

Barry Creyton has a small role. "I literally carried a spear," he later said.[4]

Reception

The Sydney Morning Herald wrote that the production as "visually efficient" but also "a dreadful warning of what can happen when a producer becomes frightened of a great text... a torrent of gabble and shouting. Some of the most concise dramatic poetry in all Shakespeare received treatment worthy of the race results."[5]

The Age said it was an "inordinately successful presentation."[6] In its year review of drama, that paper said it was one of the "outstanding" productions of the year.[7]

Notes and References

  1. News: The Age. Music for MacBeth. 28 July 1960. 13.
  2. TV Times. Savage realism. 19 August 1962. 10.
  3. News: The Age. Untitled. 1 September 1960. 25.
  4. Filmink. Stephen. Vagg. Barry Creyton Live!. October 11, 2020.
  5. News: Macbeth on television. The Sydney Morning Herald. 20 October 1960. 25.
  6. News: MacBeth sets high standard for TV. The Age. 15 September 1960. 14.
  7. News: Year ABC Gave Us a Heart Attack - and Remedy. The Age. 29 December 1960. 9.