Macbeth is wicked fun
PRESS RELEASE

The notorious Scottish Play - Macbeth - gets the Shakespeare 4 Kidz treatment this autumn. The show visits the Palace Theatre, Mansfield, for a week in September to kick off its UK tour.

It’s full of weird witches and spooky spells that make Harry Potter and his friends look like amateurs. There are bloody battles, gruesome ghosts and even a forest which moves.

And because many theatre folk believe the play to be jinxed lots of celebrities have been sending the company good luck wishes, including Stephen Fry, King of the Jungle Joe Pasquale and West End actor Jonathan Pryce, who had his own bad luck stories to tell after playing Macbeth.

“When I played him in Stratford, before the first night Lady Macbeth had an accident and fractured her collar bone. I fell head first down the stairs on stage and for the first time forgot my lines in the middle of a soliloquy. At the Barbican I got stuck in the lift with the three witches and was rescued just in time to make my reappearance.”

Award-winning star Matthew Kelly told S4K: “I’m sending you loads of good luck for your forthcoming production of the Scottish Play. When I was at drama college I played the Porter – in a sort of vaudeville fashion! It’s still one of my greatest memories – doing that great play.”

And Star Wars veteran Dave “Darth Vader” Prowse said: “Don’t worry about The Play. The Force will be with you.”

The S4K Macbeth has been very well received each of the five times it has toured since its premiere in 2000 and its creator Julian Chenery is confident that the play will be a winner once again.

“The famous curse is something we’ve had our share of in the past,” he reveals. “In the autumn of 2000 we had incessant rain for three months which affected all of our get-ins and get-outs; a national fuel strike which made it nigh impossible to move the production around the UK; the actor playing Banquo hit his head on the windscreen of the cast coach; the actor playing King Duncan went down with Bell’s Palsy making half his face freeze and one of the stage crew walked into a door and fractured her skull. Apart from that the show was a huge hit and has remained immensely popular ever since!”

Shakespeare 4 Kidz plays use the most famous lines from the original texts, weave them into modern language, add some songs and dances into the mix and the result is a two hour entertainment which everyone – even the youngest primary kids – can understand.

The whole plot is retained and all the major characters are there too, to tell the blood-soaked story of the murderous Scottish warrior who, egged on by the prophecies of three weird witches and the ambitions of his evil wife, removes every obstacle in his path until he can seize the throne for himself.

Playing the role of Macbeth for the third (and hopefully lucky!) time is Jason Lee Scott, who leads the 14-strong company.

So watch out… something wicked this way comes, thanks to the Shakespeare 4 Kidz company.

Macbeth is at the Palace Theatre, Mansfield, from Tuesday September 8 to Friday September 11 with daytime performances at 10am and 1.30pm and an evening show at 7pm on the Thursday.  For further details and to book call the box office on 01623 633133.


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NOTE TO EDITORS

1.    Further information and hi-res images may be found on our marketing page at http://www.shakespeare4kidz.com/marketing
2.    The 2009/2010 theatre tour is produced by Julian Chenery and Shakespeare 4 Kidz Theatre Company in association with The Capital, Horsham with whom S4K has enjoyed an associated relationship since 2004.    



Shakespeare 4 Kidz creator, producer and director Julian Chenery, the cast and production team are available for interviews.
Please contact:
Shakespeare 4 Kidz
Drewshearne Barn, Crowhurst Lane End, Oxted, Surrey RH8 9NT
Tel:  01342 894548  Fax:  01342 893754
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What they say about us:

S4K ROMEO: "We have previously performed MSND and Twelth Night and were a bit worried about doing Romeo and Juliet with 10 and 11 year olds but it was fantastic and they really loved it. Everyone was amazed by their maturity and the way that your script enabled them to really understand the play."