Voodoo Macbeth

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Macbeth
Poster by Anthony Velonis
Written by
Date premieredApril 14, 1936
Place premieredLafayette Theatre, Harlem, New York
Original languageEnglish
GenreTragedy
The closing four minutes of the production are preserved in the 1937 film, We Work Again.

The Voodoo Macbeth is a common nickname for the Federal Theatre Project's 1936 New York production of William Shakespeare's Macbeth. Orson Welles adapted and directed the production, moved the play's setting from Scotland to a fictional Caribbean island, recruited an entirely Black cast, and earned the nickname for his production from the Haitian vodou that fulfilled the role of Scottish witchcraft.[1]: 86  A box office sensation, the production is regarded as a landmark theatrical event for several reasons: its innovative interpretation of the play, its success in promoting African-American theatre, and its role in securing the reputation of its 20-year-old director.

Background[edit]

The Works Project Administration provided economic stimulus during the Great Depression and, under its aegis was Federal Project Number One, was responsible for generating jobs in the arts for which the Federal Theatre Project was created. The Negro Theatre Unit was split into two halves, the "Contemporary Branch" to create theater on contemporary black issues, and the "Classic Branch", to perform classic drama.[1]: 88  The aim was to provide a point of entry into the theater workforce for black writers, actors and stagehands, and to raise community pride by performing classic plays without reference to the color of the actors.[1]: 88–89 

Concept[edit]

Shakespeare's play is about the downfall of a usurper in medieval Scotland, who is encouraged in his actions by three witches. The central idea behind Welles's production was to perform the text straight, but to use costumes and sets that alluded to Haiti in the 19th century, specifically during the reign of the slave-turned-emperor Henri Christophe.[2]: 222  Although the main reason for this choice was that it was an appropriate setting for an all-black cast, Welles felt that it also enhanced the play's realism: he thought the production's popularity was partly due to the fact that the idea of voodoo was more credible to a contemporary audience than was medieval witchcraft.[3]: 100 

In many productions, the character of Hecate, the Queen of the Witches, is often cut. Instead, Welles turned the character into a pivotal figure. Performed by Eric Burroughs as a huge man with a bullwhip,[1]: 86–88  Hecate presides over events as a ringmaster of magicians and often closes scenes.[4] Hecate ends the play with the line, "The charm's wound up", repeated from Act 1.[2]: 224  Welles's 1948 film version of Macbeth, in which Hecate does not appear, also ends with this line.

The production used a single, unchanging set of a castle in a jungle. The backdrops featured stylized palm trees and skeleton imagery.[2]: 229–231 

It is not certain whether the production removed references to Scotland from the text. Welles's promptbook keeps them intact, but in the surviving film record of the production's climax, the line "Hail, King of Scotland" is truncated to "Hail, King".[1]: 89 

Production[edit]

Designer Nat Karson (1908–54)[5]
Costume drawing for Malcolm
Costume construction by the Federal Theatre Workshop
Backdrop design for the permanent set
Set painting by the Federal Theatre Workshop

The Negro Theatre Unit of the Federal Theatre Project was formed in 1935 under the distinguished actress Rose McClendon.[6]: 59  She advised national director Hallie Flanagan that the project should begin under experienced direction and selected producer John Houseman as co-director of the unit.[6]: 62–63 [7]: 179  Their partnership was never realized; it was soon apparent that McClendon was not well, and she made only a few formal appearances before she became critically ill in December 1935.[7]: 179 [8]

Regarding the unit's name, Houseman later wrote, "the word 'black' was taboo. 'Negro' was in official and general use though there was some ideological disagreement as to whether it should be spelled with a small or a capital N."[7]: 177 

Houseman had established his credentials as general manager of the all-black production, Four Saints in Three Acts (1934).[3]: 99  On the advice of composer Virgil Thomson, Houseman divided the unit into two sections between which the project members themselves could choose and could switch between from one production to another. One section was devoted to original black-themed contemporary drama. "The other," Houseman wrote, "would devote itself to the performance of classical works of which our actors would be the interpreters, without concession or reference to color."[7]: 184 

"For this fine scheme to work," Houseman wrote, "there was one essential condition — that the quality of these 'classical' productions be exceptionally high. It would be fatal to undertake the risky and difficult business of producing Shakespeare in Harlem until I had found a director of whose creative imagination and power I was completely confident."[7]: 184–185 

Houseman invited his recent collaborator, the 20-year-old Orson Welles, to join the project. Welles declined at first, since the work would cut into his lucrative radio career and he feared being put back into insolvency, but his young wife Virginia persuaded him to take the job.[9]: 80  In the autumn of 1935, Welles called Houseman after he and Virginia had an inspiration.[9]: 82  Welles proposed staging an all-black production of Macbeth, transposed from Scotland to a mythical island setting inspired by 19th-century Haiti and the fantasy world of The Tempest. The idea offered creative advantages in music, costumes and settings — and the ability to make the role of witchcraft credible to modern audiences by substituting Haitian voodooism.[3]: 100  The production was universally known as the Voodoo Macbeth in advance of its presentation.[2]: 229 

At Welles's request, Houseman stayed away from early rehearsals,[7]: 189  leaving him able to concentrate on the first two Negro Theatre Unit productions, both from the contemporary wing. Walk Together Chillun, written and co-directed by actor Frank Wilson, was the modestly received first production presented in February 1936.[7]: 186  The second was Rudolph Fisher's Conjur' Man Dies, a comedy-mystery starring Dooley Wilson (and directed by Joseph Losey) that was a smash hit.[7]: 189 

In fact, since Conjur' Man Dies was playing onstage while the 150-person cast of Macbeth was rehearsing, their rehearsals had to start at midnight and run much of the night.[10]

The settings and costumes were designed by Nat Karson.[11]: 3  Welles and Karson researched Directoire style, uniforms of the Napoleonic era, and tropical vegetation.[7]: 185  The sets and costumes were executed by the Federal Theatre Workshop at a cost of $2,000.[11]: 8 [12]: 182 

The lighting was created by Abe Feder, later regarded as a founder of lighting design profession.[13] Feder had a difficult relationship with Welles, who he believed was too young and ignorant of the practicalities of theatre; he continued to hold this opinion when interviewed decades later.[2]: 232 

Welles also faced some difficulties in asserting authority with the black cast and crew but won them over with his energy and warmth,[2]: 224  and pleased everyone by cramming the rehearsal space with food and drink.[3]: 103  Black cast and crew members interviewed decades later said that Houseman and Welles had their full confidence.[1]: 88 

"I never would have amounted to anything in the theatre if it hadn't been for Orson Welles," Canada Lee recalled. "The way I looked at acting, it was interesting and it was certainly better than going hungry. But I didn't have a serious approach to it until … I bumped into Orson Welles. He was putting on a Federal Theatre production of Macbeth with Negro players and, somehow, I won the part of Banquo. He rehearsed us for six solid months, but when the play finally went on before an audience, it was right — and it was a wonderful sensation, knowing it was right. Suddenly, the theatre became important to me. I had a respect for it, for what it could say. I had the ambition — I caught it from Orson Welles — to work like mad and be a convincing actor."[14]

Run[edit]

The production opened April 14, 1936, at the Lafayette Theatre in Harlem. A free preview two days before drew 3,000 more people than could be seated.[7]: 198 

"By all odds my great success in my life was that play," Welles told BBC interviewer Leslie Megahey in 1982. "Because the opening night there were five blocks in which all traffic was stopped. You couldn't get near the theater in Harlem. Everybody who was anybody in the black or white world was there. And when the play ended there were so many curtain calls that finally they left the curtain open, and the audience came up on the stage to congratulate the actors. And that was, that was magical."[15]: 180–181 

Macbeth played for ten sold-out weeks at the Lafayette Theatre (April 14–June 20, 1936).[7]: 203 [16]: 333  The production then moved to the Adelphi Theatre (July 6–18).[16]: 333 [17] On July 15, Jack Carter completed only the first act, and the performance was completed by understudy Thomas Anderson.[17] Beginning July 16 Maurice Ellis played the role of Macbeth, with Charles Collins succeeding Ellis in the role of Macduff.[18]

The production then toured WPA venues throughout the country, beginning with engagements in Bridgeport (July 21–25)[19] and Hartford, Connecticut (July 28–August 1).[17] Macbeth was performed in Dallas beginning August 6,[17][20] and the production was featured at the Texas Centennial Exposition August 13–23. Performances were presented in the new bandshell and 5,000-seat open-air amphitheatre,[21] where integrated seating was a unique experience for Dallas theatergoers.[22]: 64  The production was one of the most talked-about features of the exposition and drew large, enthusiastic audiences. For many it was their first opportunity to see a professional dramatic performance by African American actors.[22]: 96 

Welles was sent to join the company during the play's run in Indianapolis (August 25–29), to soothe inter-company quarrels that threatened the production after racial tensions escalated during the segment of the tour through the segregated South. Incognito, he performed the role of Macbeth at one performance there,[23] when Ellis became ill.[16]: 333  The 4,000-mile tour continued to Chicago, (September 1–13)[24] Detroit, and Cleveland, finishing in Syracuse, New York (September 23–25).[25]

After the company's return to New York, the final performances of Macbeth were presented October 6–17 at the Majestic Theatre in Brooklyn.[6]: 393 [26] The production was invited to London by impresario Charles B. Cochran, but Welles declined because he was trying to secure his career in New York.[3]: 110 

The closing four minutes of the production are preserved in a rare 1937 film, We Work Again, a WPA documentary that is in the public domain and can be viewed online.[27] Maurice Ellis and Charles Collins appear as Macbeth and Macduff, indicating that the filming took place after July 16, 1936.[18]

Houseman produced only one more play for the Federal Theatre Project's Negro Theatre Unit. After ten months as the project's director he assured Hallie Flanagan that the unit was viable and should be directed by a triumvirate[7]: 208–209  comprising West Indian intellectual Harry Edward,[28]: 98–99  Carlton Moss and Gus Smith. He and Welles were authorized to create a new Classical Theatre unit[7]: 208–209  that became known as Federal Theatre Project 891. Its first production, Horse Eats Hat, opened in September 1936.[16]: 334 

Cast[edit]

King Duncan arrives at Macbeth's palace

The cast of Macbeth numbered 150 people,[29][10] but only four were professional actors: Jack Carter, Edna Thomas, Canada Lee, and Eric Burroughs.[12]: 66 [dubious ]}

Juano Hernandez was first cast as Macbeth, but he left the production after just three rehearsals to play the lead in an NBC radio series.[30]: 97  Jack Carter, who played Crown in the original stage production of Porgy, was chosen for the role.[7]: 189  Rose McClendon was to have portrayed Lady Macbeth, but when she became critically ill, Edna Thomas inherited the role.[3]: 101–102  Both Carter and Thomas were light-skinned and wore dark makeup in order to avoid looking different from the rest of the cast.[3]: 102  Thomas played Lady Macbeth as a mother figure to Macbeth.[3]: 102 

Carter was a former criminal and an alcoholic, but Welles cast him despite being warned of his habit of disappearing for weeks on binges. Carter understood the importance of the production to his career and kept his drinking under control during the Harlem run.[3]: 101  Welles expended a great deal of time on helping Carter channel his adrenalin into his performance.[2]: 226  The two men bonded and hit the nightspots of Harlem together after rehearsals.[2]: 226–228  His behavior became so troublesome during the Broadway run that he was replaced by Maurice Ellis, who had held the role of Macduff.[3]: 101–102 

Canada Lee played Banquo.[1]: 86–88  Lee met Welles prior to his involvement with the production, at a performance of Stevedore. The audience had been whipped into a frenzied shouting match, and Lee rescued Welles from being attacked by another audience member wielding a knife.[31]

The role of Hecate, which Welles changed from the witch queen of the original to that of a male Voodoo priest, was played by Eric Burroughs, trained at London's Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.[7]: 189  The New York Times noted that Burroughs' concluding line, "The charm’s wound up!" at the fall of the closing curtain prompted a 15-minute frenzy of cheering throughout the 1200-seat Lafayette Theatre.[32]

Despite the fact that few professional African-American actors were available and many of the cast members had never acted in Shakespeare before, Welles believed that they showed a better understanding of the rhythm of the iambic pentameter than many professionals.[3]: 102 

Welles also hired African drummers and dancers, led by Sierra Leonean drummer and choreographer Asadata Dafora.[2]: 223  [33] Dancer Abdul Assen, a member of Dafora's Shogola Aloba dance troupe who is credited only as "Abdul" on the program,[11] was widely praised by reviewers in his role as the Witch Doctor.[34] Dafora and Assen's presentation of voodoo practices and musical accompaniment of the witches' speeches with drumbeats were popular with audiences, critics, and with Welles himself.[3]: 108  The involvement of Assen, Dafora, and diasporic African musical and dance tradition added a powerful feeling of authenticity to the Haitian setting that became part of the folklore surrounding the production.[34]

Cast list[edit]

The cast and crew of Macbeth are credited in the original production notebook[11]: 4–5  and in The Theatre of Orson Welles by Richard France.[12]: 181–182 

  • Duncan (The King) … Service Bell
  • Malcolm (Son to the King) … Wardell Saunders
  • Macduff … Maurice Ellis
  • BanquoCanada Lee
  • Macbeth … Jack Carter
  • Ross … Frank David
  • Lennox … Thomas Anderson
  • Siward … Archie Savage
  • First Murderer … George Nixon
  • Second Murderer … Kenneth Renwick
  • The Doctor … Laurence Chenault
  • The Priest … Al Watts
  • First Messenger … Philandre Thomas
  • Second Messenger … Herbert Glynn[11]: 4 
  • The Porter … J. Lewis Johnson
  • Seyton … Larrie Lauria
  • A Lord … Charles Collins
  • First Captain … Lisle Grenidge
  • Second Captain … Ollie Simmons[11]: 4 
  • First Chamberlain … William Cumberbatch[11]: 4 
  • Second Chamberlain … Benny Tattnall[11]: 4 
  • First Court Attendant … Chauncey Worrell[11]: 4 
  • Second Court Attendant … George Thomas
  • First Page Boy … Sarah Turner[11]: 4 
  • Second Page Boy … Beryle Banfield[11]: 4 
  • Lady Macduff … Marie Young
  • Lady Macbeth … Edna Thomas
  • The Duchess … Alma Dickson[11]: 4 
  • The Nurse … Virginia Girvin[11]: 4 
  • Young Macduff … Bertram Holmes[11]: 4 
  • Daughter to Macduff … Wanda Macy[11]: 4 
  • Fleance … Carl Crawford[11]: 4 
  • Hecate … Eric Burroughs[11]: 4 
  • First Witch … Wilhelmina Williams
  • Second Witch … Josephine Williams
  • Third Witch … Zola King
  • Witch Doctor … Abdul
  • Court Ladies — Helen Carter, Carolyn Crosby, Eveyln Davis, Ethel Drayton, Helen Brown, Aurelia Lawson, Margaret Howard, Olive Wannamake, Evelyn Skipworth, Aslean Lynch[11]: 4 
  • Court Gentlemen — Herbert Glynn, Jose Miralda, Jimmy Wright, Otis Morse, Merritt Smith, Walter Brogsdale, Harry George Grant
  • Soldiers — Benny Tattnall, Herman Patton, Ernest Brown, Ivan Lewis, Richard Ming, George Spelvin, Albert Patrick, Chauncey Worrell, Albert McCoy, William Clayton Jr., Allen Williams, William Cumberbatch, Henry J. Williams, Amos Laing, Louis Gilbert, Theodore Howard, Leonardo Barros, Ollie Simmons, Ernest Brown, Merritt Smith, Harry George Grant, Herbert Glynn, Jimmy Wright, George Thomas, Clifford Davis, Frederick Gibson,[11]: 5  Emanuel Middleton, Thomas Dixon[12]: 182 
  • Witch Women — Juanita Baker, Beryle Banfield, Sybil Moore, Nancy Hunt, Jacqueline Ghant Martin, Fannie Suber, Ethel Millner, Dorothy Jones,[11]: 5  Mildred Taylor, Hilda French,[12]: 182  Rosetta LeNoire[citation needed]
  • Witch Men — Archie Savage, Charles Hill, Leonardo Barros, Howard Taylor, Amos Laing, Allen Williams, Ollie Simmons, Theodore Howard
  • Cripples — Clyde Gooden, Clarence Potter, Milton Lacey, Hudson Prince, Theodore Howard,[11]: 5  Cecil McNair[12]: 182 
  • Voodoo Women — Lena Halsey, Jean Cutler, Effie McDowell, Irene Ellington, Marguerite Perry, Essie Frierson, Ella Emanuel, Ethel Drayton, Evelyn Davis
  • Voodoo Men — Ernest Brown, Howard Taylor, Henry J. Williams, Louis Gilbert, William Clayton Jr., Albert McCoy, Merritt Smith, Richard Ming,[11]: 5  Halle Howard[12]: 182 
  • Drummers — James Cabon, James Martha, Jay Daniel,[11]: 5  Moses Myers, McLean Hughes[12]: 182 
  • Reception[edit]

    Before the production opened, the Harlem Communists tried to agitate the community against the project, wrongly believing that Welles had cast black actors in order to create a comic or burlesque version of Shakespeare. The theatre was picketed throughout rehearsals. One man attempted to slash Welles's face with a razor, but Canada Lee, a former boxer, stopped him.[3]: 104 

    According to Welles, the anger was suddenly replaced "for no reason at all" by widespread excitement and pride in the community as the opening night approached.[3]: 105  The "Voodoo Macbeth" defied all expectations, becoming a box office sensation. Seventh Avenue had to be closed for 10 blocks on either side of the theatre on opening night.[3]: 107 

    Most reviewers, including those from The New York Times and the New York Daily News, loved the production, praising its energy and excitement. However, Carter was criticized for poor verse delivery, and for seeming more interested in displaying his physique than acting. One reviewer, Percy Hammond of the Herald Tribune, was negative about the entire cast, accusing the actors of being inaudible and timid. In response, one of the African drummers created a voodoo doll of Hammond, stuck pins in it, and encouraged Welles to take responsibility for any torments Hammond suffered as a result. Welles says he found this amusing, until Hammond died shortly afterward.[3]: 109 

    Gallery[edit]

    Opening night[edit]

    Production stills[edit]

    Cast portraits[edit]

    Revivals[edit]

    Using the original 1936 promptbook, in 1977, the Henry Street Settlement's New Federal Theatre revived the production, starring Lex Monson and Esther Rolle.[1]: 87–88 

    In 2001, Lenwood Sloan created the Vo-Du Macbeth, inspired in part by the 1936 Federal Theatre production.[35]

    The National Black Arts Festival announced their plans to revive the play in 2012 in Atlanta, with funding from the National Endowment for the Arts.[36]

    The American Century Theater produced the play in 2013.[37]

    Influence[edit]

    In 2021, a biopic titled Voodoo Macbeth premiered at the Cleveland International Film Festival. Produced by the USC School of Cinematic Arts, it chronicles the creation of the original 1936 production, starring Inger Tudor as Rose McClendon and Jewell Wilson Bridges as Orson Welles.

    In 2017, Bob Devin Jones directed a production of Voodoo Macbeth inspired by Welles's version, but different from it.[38]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ a b c d e f g h Kliman, Bernice W. (1992). Macbeth. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 0719027314.
    2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Callow, Simon (1996). Orson Welles: The Road to Xanadu. New York: Viking Press. ISBN 0670867225.
    3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Leaming, Barbara (1985). Orson Welles, A Biography. New York: Viking Press. ISBN 978-0-618-15446-3.
    4. ^ Rippy, Marguerite H. (2009). Orson Welles and the unfinished RKO projects : a postmodern perspective. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press. ISBN 9781441623423. OCLC 459794779.
    5. ^ "Nat Karson designs 1931–1949". Archives and Manuscripts, Billy Rose Theatre Division. New York Public Library. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
    6. ^ a b c Flanagan, Hallie (1965). Arena: The History of the Federal Theatre. New York: Benjamin Blom, reprint edition [1940]. OCLC 855945294.
    7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Houseman, John (1972). Run-Through: A Memoir. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-671-21034-3.
    8. ^ "Rose McClendon Ill". The New York Times. 9 December 1935.
    9. ^ a b Brady, Frank (1989). Citizen Welles: A Biography of Orson Welles. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. ISBN 0-385-26759-2.
    10. ^ a b "WPA Players Set to Give 'Macbeth' with Tropical Locale to Give Color: Edna Thomas to Essay the Role of Lord's Lady--Known as Veteran PREMIER THURSDAY Jack Carter in Title Role--150 in Shakespeare's Immortal Tragedy". The New York Amsterdam News. 4 April 1936.
    11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w "Production Notebook from New York production of Macbeth". American Memory: New Deal Stage. Library of Congress. Retrieved 12 January 2015.
    12. ^ a b c d e f g h France, Richard (1977). The Theatre of Orson Welles. Lewisburg, Pennsylvania: Bucknell University Press. ISBN 0-8387-1972-4.
    13. ^ Gussow, Mel (26 April 1997). "Abe Feder, Master of Lighting in All Its Forms, Dies at 87". The New York Times. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
    14. ^ "Actor credits Orson Welles for training". Los Angeles Tribune. 15 November 1943. p. 18.
    15. ^ Estrin, Mark W., and Orson Welles. Orson Welles: Interviews. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2002. ISBN 1578062098
    16. ^ a b c d Welles, Orson; Bogdanovich, Peter; Rosenbaum, Jonathan (1992). This is Orson Welles. New York: HarperCollins Publishers. ISBN 0-06-016616-9.
    17. ^ a b c d "News of the Stage". The New York Times. 16 July 1936.
    18. ^ a b "News of the Stage". The New York Times. 17 July 1936.
    19. ^ "Playbill from Bridgeport production of Macbeth". Library of Congress American Memory Collection. Retrieved 15 February 2015.
    20. ^ "Playbill from Dallas production of Macbeth". Library of Congress American Memory Collection. Retrieved 15 February 2015.
    21. ^ "All-Negro Cast to Produce Macbeth". The Olney Enterprise. 14 August 1936.
    22. ^ a b Thomas, Jesse O. (1938). Negro Participation in the Texas Centennial Exposition. Boston: Christopher Publishing House. OCLC 2588921. Retrieved 17 February 2015.
    23. ^ Perry, Edward G. (25 October 1943). "Actor lauds Orson Welles for work in Negro theatre". Los Angeles Tribune. p. 18.
    24. ^ Collins, Charles (30 August 1936). "'Macbeth' as Negro Play Comes to Great Northern Theater". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 14 February 2015.
    25. ^ "No title". Syracuse Herald. 27 August 1936. p. 12. "Syracuse will be the last stop for the touring 'Macbeth' production … closing a 4,000 mile jaunt with a three-day run at the Civic University, opening Sept. 23."
    26. ^ "Poster from Brooklyn production of Macbeth". Library of Congress American Memory Collection. Retrieved 14 February 2015.
    27. ^ "Preserved Films: Footage of Orson Welles's "Voodoo" Macbeth (1937)". National Film Preservation Foundation. Retrieved 14 February 2015.
    28. ^ Fraden, Rena (2004). Blueprints for a Black Federal Theatre, 1935–1939. Cambridge, New York: Cambridge University Press [1996]. ISBN 9780521565608.
    29. ^ Collins, Charles (30 August 1936). "'Macbeth' as Negro Play Comes to Great Northern Theater". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 17 February 2015.
    30. ^ France, Richard (2002) [1990]. Orson Welles on Shakespeare: The W.P.A. and Mercury Theatre Playscripts. New York: Routledge. ISBN 9780415937269.
    31. ^ Quinn, Susan (2008). Quinn, Susan. Furious Improvisation: How the WPA and a Cast of Thousands Made High Art Out of Desperate Time. New York: Walker & Co.
    32. ^ Smith, Wendy (January–February 1996). "The Play that Electrified Harlem". Civilization. reproduced online by the Library of Congress. Retrieved 6 March 2015.
    33. ^ "Federal Theatre Project". memory.loc.gov. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
    34. ^ a b Marguerite Rippy, "The Death of the Auteur: Orson Welles, Asadata Dafora, and the 1936 Macbeth" in Orson Welles in Focus, eds. James N. Gilmore and Sidney Gottlieb. IU Press, 2018, p. 16–17 ISBN 9780253032966
    35. ^ Sloan, Lenwood (2016). "The Vo-Du Macbeth!: Travels and Travails of a Chorco-Drama Inspired by the FTP Production". In Newstok, Scott L.; Thompson, Ayanna (eds.). Weyward Macbeth: Intersections of Race and Performance. New York: Springer. pp. 101–112. ISBN 9780230102163.
    36. ^ Brock, Wendell (10 October 2012). "Georgia Shakespeare Company's Macbeth: gorgeous, chilling and thrilling". ajc. Retrieved 8 July 2018.
    37. ^ White, Andrew (24 March 2013). "Theatre Review: 'Voodoo Macbeth' at American Century Theater". MD Theatre Guide. Maryland, USA: MD Theatre Guide, LLC. Retrieved 27 March 2018.
    38. ^ "Events Archive".

    External links[edit]