- Duncan (king)
- Two guards
- Banquo (Macbeth tried tried to kill Flence, Banquo's son, but he escaped)
- Lady Macduff and her son
- young siward (son of the leader of the army that will kill Macbeth)
In Act 4 of Macbeth, Hecate appears but no characters die on stage. The most notable offstage deaths in Act 4 are those of Lady Macduff and her son at Macbeth's orders.
Let's see according to the the page, it's five women , four of them are 40-50 and one is 20. Thankyou for asking !
In Macbeth, Macbeth, Lady Macbeth, Banquo, Duncan, Duncan's servants, young Siward, and the traitorous Thane of Cawdor.
King Macbeth and his Queen (Lady Macbeth), Banquo, Ross, Lennox, two murderers and sundry Lords, Ladies, and other courtiers as might be expected to be hanging around the king.
Act 5 scene 5 when they hear a scream
Shakespeare's female characters frequently make it to the last act. This is especially true in the comedies, where the last act ends with all of the female characters getting married. As You Like It features a female character, Rosalind, who is the last person on stage. Among the tragedies, female characters do not make it to the last act of Macbeth or Julius Caesar. The female parts in Caesar are only bit parts anyway. Gertrude and Desdemona make it to the last acts of their respective plays only to die in them. Volumnia is instrumental in the last act of Coriolanus, and Lear's daughters make a mass exit in the last act of King Lear. The history plays are more hit-and-miss. The last Act of Henry V, however, is all about Henry and Katherine, and she is there to the end. Basically, just because Lady Macbeth doesn't appear in the last act, you can't draw conclusions about all of Shakespeare's female characters. Remember, Duncan and Banquo don't make it to the last act either.
Duncan's death technically occurs off-stage, in Act 2 between Scenes 1 and 2. Macbeth states at the end of 1.1 "I go, and it is done. The bell invites me./Here it not, Duncan, for it is a knell/That summons thee to heaven or to hell." (1.1.63-65) When 2.2 opens, Macbeth has already killed Duncan, and is giving the news to Lady Macbeth.
In Shakespeare's play "Macbeth," Macbeth is killed in a duel by Macduff. Macduff reveals that he was not "of woman born" as his mother had a caesarean birth, fulfilling the witches' prophecy that Macbeth could only be killed by someone not born of a woman.
Lady Macduff is killed offstage in Act 4, Scene 2 of Shakespeare's play Macbeth.
No, Banquo didn't die in Act 5 of the Shakespearean play. Macbeth [c. 1014-August 15, 1057] planned Banquo's death, in Act 3 Scene 1. The murderous plan was carried out in Scene 3. Three murderers waylaid Banquo on his way back to Macbeth's post-coronation banquet. They left him, with his throat slit, in the park near the royal palace at Forres.
Ann Macbeth died in 1948.
George MacBeth died in 1992.
Florence Macbeth died in 1966.
One example of dramatic irony in Act 3 of Macbeth is when Macbeth decides to have Banquo and Fleance killed in order to secure his throne, without knowing that Fleance will escape. Another example is when Macbeth expresses concerns about not being able to enjoy his newfound power, unknowingly foreshadowing his descent into paranoia and guilt.
His body was taken to the island of Iona, where he was buried at Iona Abbey, considered by Celtic Christians to be the most holy site in Scotland. According to the records of Iona abbey, there are 60 kings buried there (48 Scottish, 8 Irish, and 4 Norwegian); and at least 4 saints.
No, Macbeth killed Macduff's family but not Macduff. Macduff kills Macbeth after telling Macbeth that he wasn't born of a woman; he was born of a C-section or "untimely ripped" from his mother's womb as it says in the play. After Macduff reveals this it appears that Macbeth gives up on fighting because he realizes that it is his destiny to die at the hands of Macduff and then he makes an effort to die an honorable fighting death. Macduff kills and beheads Macbeth off stage, and then he brings Macbeth's head on a pole and presents it to Malcolm the new and rightful king of Scotland.