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Episode details

Radio 4,28 Jan 2021,44 mins

Voodoo Macbeth

Drama on 4

Available for 12 days

by Sharon Oakes In 1936, the newly-formed Federal Theatre Project’s Negro Unit (part of the ‘New Deal’ initiative) decided to stage a production of Macbeth. The production was the box office sensation, ‘VOODOO’ MACBETH which is regarded as a landmark theatrical event for several reasons: its radical interpretation of the play, its success in promoting African-American theatre, and its role in securing the reputation of its 20 year old director, Orson Welles. Our drama charts the impact of staging this production on both cast and director. We follow the trials and tribulations of mounting a huge production with only a handful of trained actors, an inexperienced yet wildly ambitious director, a cast of nearly 150 including Haitian voodoo drummers and a witchdoctor - as well as constant protests by Harlem Communists on the streets outside the theatre. In spite of everything, Welles’ production was not only a breath-taking, traffic-stopping, must-see success but, radically, it played to integrated audiences. Three years before his death Welles said in a BBC interview, “by all odds, it was my greatest achievement." Orson Welles – Tom Bateman Jack Carter – Ariyon Bakare Edna Thomas – Clare Perkins John Houseman – John Hollingworth Abe Feder/John Barrymore – Tom Lawrence All other parts – Adam Courting, Maggie Service, Lloyd Thomas. directed by Gaynor Macfarlane

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