Apparently it's a superstition that it will bring bad luck to the theatre.
Personally I think that it isn't true. I was reading Macbeth and talking about it at my rehearsal for a play and it went swimmingly.
Theater people believe it is bad luck. They call MacBeth the "Scottish play."
In the British theatre it is bad luck to say "Macbeth". It is normally replaced by "the Scottish play".
Go Outside A Theater Turn Around Three Times, Spit Say The Worst Word You Can Think Of Then Wait For Permission To Re-Enter The Theater.
Macdonweald. Macbeth split him from the nave to the chaps. Don't say the Thane of Cawdor; the text does not say he was captured by Macbeth and it wouldn't make any sense to say he did.
Either way is correct.
Tradition says, saying "Macbeth" in a theater will give bad luck to all the actors and the play itself. In a theater.
Theater people believe it is bad luck. They call MacBeth the "Scottish play."
In the British theatre it is bad luck to say "Macbeth". It is normally replaced by "the Scottish play".
Macbeth. By the way, professional actors have certain superstitions, and one of them is that it is bad luck to say "Macbeth" in a theater. They refer to it as "The Scottish Play".
Go Outside A Theater Turn Around Three Times, Spit Say The Worst Word You Can Think Of Then Wait For Permission To Re-Enter The Theater.
u murder them all (you dont say)
The thesis that the superstition surrounding saying Macbeth in a theater is deeply ingrained in theater culture and has a significant impact on the behavior of modern theater audiences is best supported by the evidence. The refusal to say the word is seen as bad luck and believed to bring about negative consequences, leading many to avoid it out of superstition and tradition.
Macbeth is sometimes known as "The Scottish Play" due to theater superstition that saying the name "Macbeth" inside a theater can bring bad luck.
No I Dont(:
In theater superstition, the play "Macbeth" is considered cursed. If someone says "Macbeth" in a theater, tradition holds that they must leave, spin around three times, and spit over their left shoulder to ward off bad luck. Failing to do so may invite misfortune or accidents during the production.
Macdonweald. Macbeth split him from the nave to the chaps. Don't say the Thane of Cawdor; the text does not say he was captured by Macbeth and it wouldn't make any sense to say he did.
It doesn't say that anywhere in the play. Also, Macbeth is a male.