#Denzel Washington Did More Than Act On The Tragedy Of Macbeth Set

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“Denzel Washington Did More Than Act On The Tragedy Of Macbeth Set”
That actor is Denzel Washington, one of the finest film actors of his generation. In this new version of “Macbeth,” shot in a dazzling black and white, and featuring a fraught, funeral-on-caffeine tone, Washington played the title character not like a panic-stricken cautionary tale, but a sad sack, who only realizes the weakness of his will after it’s far too late. This is against type for Washington, who more typically plays characters who are resolute and often are men of action. As Macbeth, Washington took advantage of a rare opportunity to watch another director at work in order usurp some ideas of his own.
In a recent interview with Collider, Washington confessed to as much, admitting that he was tempted to put on his directors hat — Washington has directed four feature films to date: “Antwone Fisher,” “The Great Debaters,” “Fences,” and “A Journal for Jordan” — and grill Coen about his thought processes as a director.
Stealing from the master
Everything. I was stealing too. I mean, he’s a master. So you wonder sometime, why over here? I remember asking him one time he was setting up a shot and I wasn’t in it. I had my directors hat on, because I wasn’t in that part of the scene. So I said, “Now, I noticed you put the camera down here, like a lower angle. Are you making a statement? Is that a psychological thing? Or why’d you put the camera so low?” He said, “Actually I just like the ceiling.” I was like, “You like the ceiling?” He said, “Yeah, look up.” I was like, “Oh yeah.” He said, “Yeah, I like the way the ceiling looked.” I said, “So it was as simple as that?”
Often, fans spend more time analyzing a work of art than the artist ever did, making for an amusing, eternal conflict between the creator and their audience. Judging by Washington’s words, by the time shooting was taking place, Coen had already laid the creative groundwork and had permitted himself to improvise smaller details.
Basically what he said was, he didn’t say this word for word, but what I got from it was, it was as simple as that now, because he had done everything else. He was prepared. He had thought about it every way. He storyboarded, he thought about every angle and then at that moment he said, “No, I like this.” So he had done the work, but then he was still open to improvisation or another way of looking at it, reinterpreting.
The idea room
Well, he had photographs and ideas up everywhere. When you went to the production office, you could see the movie on the wall. You could see where he was going or where he wanted to go and what influenced him and he was open. He just had pictures and drawings and stuff everywhere, so there was so much to absorb. It was fun because maybe the question I had wasn’t for him. Maybe once I saw a drawing, I was like, “Oh, let me talk to the production designer,” what they had in mind since they drew that, or the art director and just going to the different departments. It was just such a great collaboration. Again, Joel’s a master and he brings in all these great people around him. I’m in this building with all these people that are really good at what they do, they’re all masters. So you are like, “Okay, we’re in here with the best. I got to bring my best.”
Washington is currently producing “The Piano Lesson,” the third feature film he’s been involved with that is based on a play by Tony-winning playwright August Wilson, which follows “Fences” and “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom.” Ten of Wilson’s plays are part of what is commonly called the August Wilson Century Cycle, and Washington is determined to make film versions of all ten. Audiences may want to keep an eye out for any “Tragedy of Macbeth” influences on his next directorial project.
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