Dashing though to Stratford last Monday, I managed to squeeze in a brief visit to 'The Play's the
Thing' exhibition, which changes some of its exhibits each year around the end of
March. I was keen to see if there was a 'new' Benson costume, and was
delighted to see that it was the red Lady Macbeth dress I'd missed the last
time it was on display, along with a sumptuous red velvet cloak. Sadly,
the label was entirely wrong - it actually referred to the pink and purple
dress which was displayed two years ago - and I found myself feeling a tad
indignant on CB's behalf: how much more effort would it have taken to create the
right label? And does no one ever check these things?
So, to keep the record straight, this is the description of
the costume from 'Stage Costumes and Accessories in the London Museum' by M. R.
Holmes, published by HMSO in 1968.
Dress of deep red silk, with full skirt and very wide
bell sleeves gathered into a body made of oriental brocade and three horizontal
bands of green silk and gold braid. Sleeves edged with gold fringe.
Long train of vermillion velvet lined with yellow silk and augmented with
elaborate gold embroidery and jewels. Worn by Constance Benson in the
Banquet scene.
This costume was actually chosen as the frontispiece of the catalogue
- the ONLY colour plate in the volume - and Holmes writes about it more fully
in his introduction. He begins by referencing the fire in Newcastle and then
continues:
"Irving was touring in America, but cabled his
agents and had baskets of rich dresses and materials sent from his own store,
and one of Constance Benson's dresses as Lady Macbeth shows what ingenious use
was made of them. In the banquet scene of the third act, she wore a
magnificent mantle of vermillion velvet, rich with embroidery and jewels, and
with it, a gown made by combining a bodice made of rich-looking oriental fabric
with sleeves and a skirt of deep red silk. The two make an impressive and
harmonious whole and it is only a detailed scrutiny of the embroidery on the
mantle that reveals it as having been intended originally for a court train of
the [French] First Empire, presumably in the scene of the Napoleonic reception
in Madame Sans-Gene which Irving had produced a little before [in 1897], but
was not likely to revive."
Brackets are my additions.
My photographs suffer from the usual light glare on glass -
it was a very sunny day and the Benson window was positively glowing! - and I
was very aware that I was running late for getting food and catching my train back so they are not quite as
crisp or detailed as I would have liked.
I returned to Stratford on Friday for the Shakespeare Institute Induction day, one of the highlights of which was a tour of the absolutely wonderful library! I'm now plotting and planning a return in order to browse the shelves at greater leisure.
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