Abstract

This article examines in detail the project that will be carried out in Murcia (Spain) in 2021 involving Mickey B (dir. Tom Magill, 2007), a full-length film adaptation of Macbeth, filmed and created by the inmates of a high-security prison in Northern Ireland, Her Majesty’s Prison Maghaberry. As part of my collaboration with the Educational Shakespeare Company (ESC, now rebranded as esc films), a charity with branches in Northern Ireland and the US, I translated Mickey B into Spanish. Through this translation, I intend to introduce esc film’s work with socially excluded groups to both marginalized groups themselves and to academia in order to bring into focus the possibilities of community engagement and the necessary interlinks between academia and what happens beyond the academic world. This case study is the first to examine a finished Prison Shakespeare film project (Mickey B) outside Northern Ireland. It aims to analyze the process and artistic outcome of the project and to introduce into a Spanish context some of the ideas promoted by the film (the choice of Shakespeare’s plays to promote a reparative cultural work or the notion of inmates as victims as well as perpetrators). However, my aim is to go beyond prison Shakespeare, and to explore the numerous possibilities a film adaptation like Mickey B could have, not only in a prison context, but also within academia and film theatres. The constant and ongoing interconnections between the different scenarios and agents make this project the first of its kind in Spain.

Highlights

  • My first encounter with prison Shakespeare took place in Belfast in November 2008

  • Mark Thornton Burnett when I attended a screening of Mickey B, an adaptation of Macbeth filmed in a maximum security prison (Her Majesty’s Prison, Maghaberry) with a group of serving lifers

  • I still remember that day at Queen’s Film Theatre when I was struck by the suicide of Ladyboy (Lady Macbeth’s counterpart), impressed by the quality of the adaptation, and literally amazed during the Q & A when I heard the director of the film and of the Educational Shakespeare Company, Tom Magill and the actor playing the role of Duncan (Sam McClean) talk about their experiences and the challenges involved

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Summary

Origins

My first encounter with prison Shakespeare took place in Belfast in November 2008. I was at Queen’s University Belfast as a visiting Ph.D. student under the supervision of Prof. In September 2019, again in Belfast, I met the Artistic Director, Tom Magill, and CEO, Kirsten Kearney, of esc films as I was going to do a secondment with them as part of my Marie Curie Fellowship. This meeting and subsequent meetings were the grounds for the current project.. Mickey B/Macbeth: Bringing Shakespeare to Prisons and Academia via Film Adaptation 107 with socially excluded people It is the aim of the project to foster community engagement and further exchanges between academia and wider society so that a positive social transformation can take place

The lack of Prison Shakespeare programmes in Spain
My Project
Why Shakespeare?
Challenges
Conclusion
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