Macbeth, Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon, review: A powerful take on the Macbeth marriage

Richard Davenport
Richard Davenport

Lost children – those that have died; those that will never be born – haunt Macbeth. So it's a pointedly disturbing touch in her creepy, intelligent modern-dress production of this tragedy that director Polly Findlay has cast three young girls as the trio of witches. They dart about in hooded crimson onesies, each cradling a doll, their prognostications sounding an eerie sing-song note of innocence knocked, snaggingly, out of kilter.

Christopher Eccleston, here making his debut for the RSC, impressively conveys the horrible clash between the bluff, no-nonsense, northern-accented soldier and the inner man who is psychologically tormented by the implication of his deeds. He and the excellent Niamh Cusack give you a strong sense of the damaged hinterland of their marriage – in which being King and Queen is the consolation prize for the failure to have a family. Stalking around in sequinned sheaths and hobbling heels, Cusack signals a perturbing rapture of ambition and a nerve-jangling impatience with her cowering consort. The pain and strain of this double life come through alarmingly and the emotional deterioration of Lady Macbeth is here complicated by some canny touches. The death cries of Macduff's slaughtered children are accidentally relayed to her mobile phone – unhinging her to a drastic degree.

Sometimes, Findlay's ideas are too overt or obvious for my taste. There's a digital clock running implacably backwards from the moment of Duncan's murder to the death of Macbeth. With the crown suspended over Malcolm at the end, this chronometer is re-set and the witches appear again, with the implication that Banquo's heirs will start afresh the countdown to tragedy. Equally, there are moments of unadorned emotional power – I don't think I have ever seen Macduff's dazed reaction – “All my pretty ones? Did you say all?” – to what has happened to his family communicated with the understated devastation achieved here by Edward Bennett.

Christopher Eccleston delivers a fine study of a man struggling to disguise a terminal exhaustion of spirit with a display of match-fit bravado. This RSC version strikes me as notable for its powerful take on the Macbeth marriage and for the pungency of its hit-and-miss ideas.

Until 18 September (rsc.org.uk); Broadcast live in cinemas 11 April