LONDONâ"The recent press conference announcing the 2013 season at Shakespeareâs Globe on one level seemed like variations on an ongoing theme.
A onetime Falstaff at this address, Roger Allam, is returning to open the season as Prospero in âThe Tempest,â directed by Jeremy Herrin, while the perennial favorite, âA Midsummer Nightâs Dream,â will be seen in May in a new staging, this time from the Globe artistic director Dominic Dromgoole. The 2011 Olivier winner Michelle Terry (âTribesâ) will play Titania.
The international season that so galvanized the space for six weeks last spring will return in a greatly pared-down form, and there will be three new plays, including one, âBlue Stockingsâ by Jessica Swale, that tells of the first female students at Cambridge University.
But itâs the last in the trio of supernaturally charged Shakespeares that promises to break fresh theatrical ground. In what represents her first-everstab (youâll forgive the word in context) at directing, the much-laureled actress Eve Best will stage a new production in June of âMacbeth.â Joseph Millson and Samantha Spiro have signed on as the murderous couple at the playâs black, bleak heart.
What prompted one of the most accomplished stage performers of her generation (an actress with an Olivier Award and two Tony nominations) to make the shift The answer was arrived at via a lengthy phone call to a remote island in Denmark, where Ms. Best, 41, is currently filming âSomeone You Loveâ for the director Lars von Trierâs Zentropa production group. This filmâs specific director is Pernille Fischer Christensen.
To hear Ms. Best describe it, she thought her time at the Globe was finished, at least for a while, following a triumphant 2011 production of âMuch Ado About Nothingâ in which she played Beatrice opposite Charles Edwardsâs no less witty and scintillating Be! nedick. (That staging opened within days of a contrasting commercial production of the same play, with David Tennant and Catherine Tate, and trumped its starrier competitor hands down.)
âI love the Globe so much,â recalled Ms. Best, âand wanted any excuse to spend some time there, having played Beatrice which was just my most favorite part ever. But I did think I was sort of running out of parts to play for a little while until I get into the world of Cleopatra and those kinds of partsââ"thatâs to say, Shakespeareâs more senior women.
But all that was before Mr. Dromgoole surprised Ms. Best with an offer to take on the directing of the Shakespeare tragedy in which she had made her Globe debut in 2001, opposite Jasper Britton.
âI put myself forward to direct something thinking that they might say yes in a couple of years and that if they did say yes they might start me off with something light or something simpler or more obscure,â she said.
âI was not prepared forthem to turn around and say, âYes, all right, and what about âMacbethââ Ms. Best continued, delight evident in her voice. âIt took me back. My first response was: âAbsolutely no way; you must be kidding!ââ
The play is particularly challenging at the Globe. Open to the elements, the theater is a tricky fit for a text suffused with darkness, and it can be hard to focus the gathering intensity of the Macbethsâ toxic rise and fall.
âWe are in the broad daylight and the open air,â Ms. Best acknowledged, âand that particular circular shape is certainly going to have a significant effect on the kind of production ours is. We canât set it in the dark with candles, so we just have to embrace what it is that the Globe will give us: Iâm very interested in just seeing the play as clearly as we possibly can and focusing on the human relationships within it.â
Mr. Dromgoole for his part said he thought Ms. Best would be able to meet the play head-on without lots of! addition! al mumbo jumbo. âI wanted someone who I thought could just let [âMacbethâ] play itself rather than forcing it down a tunnel of darkness.â
As it happens, Ms. Best has firsthand knowledge of both central roles. In addition to acting Lady Macbeth at the Globe, she participated in workshops of the play in New York with the Scottish actor Alan Cumming in which she played the title role opposite Mr. Cummingâs Lady. Mr. Cumming is soon to open his own solo take on the play on Broadway.
(For those collecting âMacbeths,â the West End is now hosting the film actor James McAvoy in a modern-dress, gory, commendably visceral version. That one, at the Trafalgar Studios, will have finished roughly two months before Ms. Bestâs begins.)
âWhatâs really lovely about this playâ"and all Shakespeare plays obviouslyâ"is that they are so magnificently and eminently fexible,â said Ms. Best, who was sounding in no way deterred by other productions arriving before hers. âThey can encompass 6 or 8 or 10 productions all going on at the same time, all equally fascinating, all equally interesting, with all kinds of different approaches.â
Nor was she sounding spooked by a famously hexed play that has on occasion brought disaster in its wake. Whereas theater lore, for instance, often insists that those involved with this text refer to it as âthe Scottish play,â Ms. Best was having none of that.
âIâve been saying it like mad,â she said. âIf weâre going to be working on it for two months, lifeâs too short to be worried.â