In Macbeth they would be seen wearin old rags that were dirty and torn.In plays it differs but they would usually (and in macbeth) would be seen in old rags and anything to make them ugly, or purple dresses that looked torn.
According to the original script, they are withered and wild looking with skinny lips, and not quite human. They look like women, but they have beards.
Macbeth looks like whatever the actor playing him looks like. If the actor playing Macbeth in your production has brown eyes and hair, no glasses, looks like he has just been in the bush and not very cool, then that's what Macbeth looks like in your production.
Shakespeare didn't make any movies, as the technology wasn't invented until centuries after his death. There have been a lot of movies made about Macbeth in the 112-odd years people have been making Shakespeare movies, and the witches are portrayed in many different ways.
It is common to portray one witch as old, one young, and one middle-aged. But it isn't always so. In the 2006 Australian action movie version of the play they are portrayed as schoolgirls.
I don't remember the play really giving a description of the witches. It is not what they look like that is important but what they tell Macbeth of his future.
"So wither'd and wild in their attire that look not like th'inhabitants o' the earth and yet are on't . . . you should be women, and yet your beards forbid me to interpret that you are so."
they actually have long nails????
They look a bit like Jam
hw did the three figures look in Macbeth?
he felt disgusted by them and thought he needed them
They knock out the king's bodyguards with a Mickey Finn and and frame them for the crime and then execute them before they have a chance to defend themselves. Later, Macbeth suggests that they were in the pay of the King's sons who had the best motive for the crime.
Macbeth did not like what the witches had told him.
Not very honest. She is living up to her own advice: "Look like the innocent flower, but be the serpent under it".
it is a name of the Macbeth peron hahahahahaha 1 of my maths techers look like Macbeth :L
hw did the three figures look in Macbeth?
Duncan's grooms.
they are unatural because they don't look like normal people, they don't fit in as normal people either they look like they are not from earth
Do you mean Macbeth the person or Macbeth the play? Because it is possible to like the play and not like the person much.
Macbeth needs to look innocent, but underneath his fake appearance, he needs to be bold, determined, and deadly. Lady Macbeth is also telling Macbeth to pretend to be a friend, when he is actually the enemy, or to act like he is honest, when he is actually deceitful. When Lad Macbeth says, "But be the serpent underneath it", Lady Macbeth might be referring to herself, that she is the serpent under Macbeth, and that Macbeth is the mask, or screen, which diverts attention from Lady Macbeth.It shows how Macbeth needs to be the nice to Duncan to prove his innocence even though he has agreed to kill him- appearances can be deceiving.
he felt disgusted by them and thought he needed them
Lady Macbeth tells Macbeth to hide his true feelings, act innocent and welcoming when King Duncan arrives, but to be ruthless and deceitful in order to secure the throne. She encourages him to act like a loyal subject while secretly plotting to murder the king.
They knock out the king's bodyguards with a Mickey Finn and and frame them for the crime and then execute them before they have a chance to defend themselves. Later, Macbeth suggests that they were in the pay of the King's sons who had the best motive for the crime.
Macbeth's relationship with lady Macbeth was rather unique. they were like the old english bonnie and clyde. Lady Macbeth was able to talk Macbeth into killing in order for him to have higher power. in the end they both paid the price
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One example of an oxymoron in Macbeth is when Lady Macbeth says, "Look like the innocent flower, but be the serpent under it." This phrase juxtaposes the imagery of a harmless flower with that of a dangerous serpent, creating a sense of contradiction and ambiguity.