Eugène Ionesco: MACBETT

Hungarian Theatre of Cluj (Romania)
November 20 19:00 - Main StageTickets
2h 30’ with intermission
In Hungarian with Romanian and English subtitles.
Age recommendation: 14+

Hungarian translation: Róbert Bognár

Macbett: Zsolt Bogdán
Banco: Gábor Viola
Duncan: Miklós Bács
Lady Duncan / Lady Macbett: Andrea Vindis
Glamiss: Áron Dimény
Candor: Lóránd Váta
Macol: József Bíró
Clown: Melinda Kántor
Maid: Anikó Pethő
Maid: Eszter Román
Soldier: Szabolcs Balla
Officer: Balázs Bodolai
Orderlies / Valets: András Buzási, Zsolt Gedő, Tamás Kiss, Csaba Marosán

Directed by Silviu Purcărete
Set design: Helmut Stürmer
Costume design: Lia Manțoc
Music composed by Vasile Șirli
Dramaturgy: András Visky
Correpetition: Péter Kolcsár
Dramaturg's assistant: Kata Demeter
Costume designer's assistant: Bogdan Dobre
Director's assistant: Alpár Fogarasi, Ádám Nyári
Stage manager: Enikő Albert, Pál Böjthe

Ionesco's Macbett is not a simple parodic, inside out reversal of Shakespeare's masterpiece, but an x-ray as well as a revelation of the type of brutalized public life that has become close to being absurd. The play presents, through relentless murder, public life that is animated and pushed into the realm of chaos by constantly stimulated hostility. At the same time, Ionesco's Macbett talks about the absurdity of conspiracies. He addresses today's spectator with surprising acuity. "Shakespeare's Macbeth is a monster, while also being a puppet at the same time, of course, and Lady Macbeth is also a monster herself. My Macbett is not a monster. He's just as cowardly, vile and power-hungry as Duncan, Banco, Glamiss or Candor. He's an ordinary man." - says Ionesco about his caustic play that displays the intellectual and moral hollowness of man. It draws our attention to the fact that the political realm, ever since the Cold War years, is invaded by dozens of petty characters, devoid of ideas, who cling to power with bloody nails and who see no further than the obtuse logic of defeating and destroying their political opponent. The chance that arose in the 1930s - that clowns permeated by their obsession with power, and who engage in politics under the spell of bloodbaths to be brought to power through free elections - is not a thing of the past, but an ever-present temptation that we better face rather than continue to repeat its horrors, permeated by the illusion of perceiving ourselves as being enlightened.

 

András Visky

 

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