Macbeth is a live television adaptation of the William Shakespeare play presented as the November 28, 1954 episode of the American anthology series Hallmark Hall of Fame.[1][2][3][4][5] Directed by George Schaefer, and starring Maurice Evans and Dame Judith Anderson, the production was telecast in color, but has only been preserved on black-and-white kinescope.[6]
Macbeth | |
---|---|
Based on | Macbeth by William Shakespeare |
Directed by | George Schaefer |
Starring | |
Music by | Lehman Engel |
Original release | |
Release | November 28, 1954 |
In 1960, Evans and Anderson starred in a filmed made-for-television production of the play, also directed by Schaefer for the Hallmark Hall of Fame, but with an entirely different supporting cast. That production was filmed in color on location in Scotland, and was released theatrically in Europe.
Cast
edit- Maurice Evans as Macbeth
- Judith Anderson as Lady Macbeth
- Jane Rose as First Witch
- Frieda Altman as Second Witch
- Maud Sheerer as Third Witch
- House Jameson as Duncan
- Roger Hamilton as Malcolm
- William Woodson as the Sergeant
- Guy Sorel as Ross
- Staats Cotsworth as Banquo
- Michael Kane as Angus
- Basil Langton as Seyton
- John Reese as Fleance
- J. Pat O'Malley as the Porter (credited as Pat O'Malley)[7]
- Richard Waring as Macduff
- Peter Fernandez as Donaldbain [sic]
- Noel Leslie as the Doctor
- George Ebeling as First Murderer
- Robert Carricart as Second Murderer
- Ford Rainey as Menteith
- Margot Stevenson as Lady Macduff
- Rhoden Streeter as Young Macduff
- Nan McFarland as Gentlewoman
- Edwin Jerome as Caithness
- Val Wrenne as the Servant
- Roy Dean as the Messenger
References
edit- ^ Foster, Bob. "TV – Radio / Two Hours of Macbeth" (San Mateo Times, August 25, 1954, page 23)
- ^ "Macbeth on Color TV / Hallmark Will Sponsor Production November 28 / WDAF-TV Will Carry the First Classic Drama in New Medium — Roles for Maurice Evans and Judith Anderson" (The Kansas City Times, September 28, 1954, page 3)
- ^ "'Macbeth' set in 2-Hr. Show" / Judith Anderson, Evans to Co-Star" (Charleston Daily Mail, November 28, 1954, page 41)
- ^ Gould, Jack. "Television in Review / Adaptation of 'Macbeth' Shown on N.B.C." (The New York Times, November 29, 1954, page 32)
- ^ Crosby, John. "Third TV 'Macbeth' Is the Best" (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (December 4, 1954, page 19)
- ^ John Crosby's Column. "Video Discovering Literary Classics / Millions View a Single Show" (Toledo Blade (January 19, 1955)
- ^ Macbeth at IMDb
External links
edit