With so much interesting research emerging attesting to Magick-Workers in Early America, it seems undeniable that the Magickal Traditions of the Old World made their way into America through the immigration of European settlers. While such people may not have exerted monstrous amounts of influence in the settling of the New World (preferring, apparently, to seek out relatively unpopulated places such as the Appalachian mountains, or the mountains of the American Northeast, or at least in one case- to judge from the “Joshua Gordon Witchcraft Book” held at the University of South Carolina- the 1600s Southern frontier), it is noteworthy that we- meaning, Magickally-minded Folks, inclined towards the Old Ways- have had our place in America (hidden, secret, living “on the down-low”), but there, and hence, here.

Fascinating as that is, what really intrigues me is the extent to which early American Magick-Use reflects back upon the Europe of the late 1500s/ early 1600s- still the Age of Magick, with the Burning Times still going on (the 1600s, the first period of settlement in the New World, is also the last century of the Witch-Burnings). Early American Magick-Use provides another prism through which to judge the Magickal beliefs and practices of the Old World; what is most intriguing is the degree to which these beliefs and practices appear to involve Circle-Casting, or the Formation of a Magickal Circle-Space.

For instance, in The Silver Bullet and Other American Witch Stories, we learned of Magickal Folk-Beliefs carried into the Appalachian mountains by Irish, English, Scots, and German settlers- which apparently were preserved long enough to be recorded in the stories found in this book, which were generated in the 1930s. Another book, Signs, Cures, & Witchery, also finds copious amounts of Old World Magick-Belief transported into Appalachia- this time, specifically looking at the activities of German pioneers. What is especially interesting (to my mind) is the number of times that someone in The Silver Bullet describes casting a Magick Circle in order to perform Magick: casting a Magick Circle exactly as we are accustomed to casting Circles, but described in the context of Depression Era mountaintop Folk-Magick.

However, not surprising: if one considers the evidence that Circle-Casting was widely associated with Magick-Work in England during the Elizabethan Age of the late 1500s and the Jacobean Age of the early 1600s.

Circle-Casting- or Circle-Formation, as perhaps the case may be- divides in the Time into two categories: (1) the Grimoire-Tradition, carried in medieval grimoires innumerable issued throughout the Middle Ages; these will be the Traditions that seem to us most like those of the Gardnerians, the Alexandrians, and all those influenced by the writings of Gardner, Valiente, Crowther, the Sanders, the Farrars (et al), and which will be reflected by the learned elite of the medieval period, able to read said written occult-works, the Grimoires (2) as well as the Oral-Folk Culture Traditions carried by Oral-Folk Culture practitioners such as village Wise-Women and Cunning-Men; these are reflected in the “Witch” Plays (as opposed to the “Wizard” Plays, inspired by the educated Grimoire-Tradition), and are based upon the sometimes-raucous, often improvisational Tradition that we associate with “Energy-Raising.”

Perhaps the most famous example of the Elizabethan Grimoire-derived (Ceremonial-Traditional) Circle-Casting known to us is that presented to us by Marlowe in Doctor Faustus (c. 1592), in Act I, scene iii, lines 8-24: Faustus formally charges into being the Circle that he has transcribed on his floor (as per the illustration attached to the printed play, seen above). Being of the Christian Magick variety, this Circle is particularly “anagrammatized” with the Name of Jehovah, as well as laid out by the “figures of every adjunct to the Heavens, and characters of signs and erring stars”- that is, it has been made to resemble in miniature an outline of the Astrological Heavens themselves, in a very Microcosm/ Macrocosm, “As Above, So Below” sort of deal. This Circle is further empowered by calling in the Spirits of the Four Elements.

Caveat: as the Wikipedia entry on the play will tell you, Marlowe’s play was published in two versions, known as the Text A and the Text B versions: the Text A is thought to resemble more closely Marlowe’s original script, with Text B representing an “improved-upon” version of the play reworked after Marlowe’s untimely death. As the Wikipedia entry notes, there are differences between the two versions of the play- but as the Wikipedia entry fails to point out, in Text B (the text most often reproduced, as people tend to play it safe by putting into print the greatest possible number of words potentially committed by Marlowe to paper), the Names of only three of the Four Elements are called (“Earth” is omitted). Text A calls in all Four Elements- which makes the most sense- and demonstrates to us a genuine late 1500s Tradition of Consecrating a Magick-Circle by Calling In all Four of the Mystical Elements of Life. (The reason for “Earth’s” absence is surely as simple as, the type-setter blanked. Maybe it was getting close to lunchtime, and he was hungry and distracted.)

Another caveat: in the interest of being totally responsible in the transmission of Magickal Knowledge- Dr. Faustus’ Legend comes to us as the Supreme Example of the Perils of Trafficking with the Forces of Darkness. The Middle Ages took such things strenuously seriously, and so we have the cautionary Tale of Faustus: who was Fool enough to believe that he could contract with the Forces of [Christian] Hell and live to tell the tale.

In short, Faust represents the ultimate in Christian Theology cautioning one against Magickal Practicing. But you know what? Here’s how I look at it: Faustus actually ASKS the Devil to come into his Circle (the Devil being represented as the reptilian sort-of creature in the picture next to Faust, just outside of his Magickally Protective Circle). Never mind the Pagan Thealogical Question: Do we as Pagans even give credence to the Thought-Form of the Devil? (I, for one, do not, and therefore- it seems to me- avoid the obvious pratfall of Faust by Calling In only such Deities as Whom I judge to be Honorable and Just, and with Whom I feel comfortable that I have established a fair Working-Relationship.)

Another example of Circle-Casting in a play whose Cultural influence is extremely difficult to question, is that presented by Shakespeare in The Tempest (c. 1610). Although explained merely by a stage-direction- following Line 57, Act V, scene i: “They all enter the Circle which Prospero had made, and there stand charmed”- Prospero’s famous speech “Ye Elves of hills, brooks, standing lakes, and groves” is meant to be understood as a Circle-Invocation inspired by Ovid’s account of Medea’s Invocation to the Spirits of Nature in Metamorphoses. As represented in Julie Taymor’s 2010 movie-version starring (in a status-changing gender-bending performance) Helen Mirren as the Female Wizard Prospera, the speech is every bit a Circle-Invocation as much as that presented by Shakespeare’s contemporary Marlowe- but oriented from a very Nature-driven perspective. It demonstrates to us that- at least for Shakespeare, in the early 1600s- Circle-Casting could be thought effective if engaged purely from an orientation towards Nature, rather than from a strictly Ceremonial Traditional point-of-view. (It might be, if you watch enough productions of The Tempest, that you don’t see many examples of Prospero or Prospera actually Casting a Circle during this speech; I believe that is because so many people nowadays simply do not know what to make of the stage-direction “the Circle that Prospero had made,” having no cultural context through which to formulate the Magick-Circle. In short, I don’t think many theater-folk today understand a “Magick Circle,” and so, have no idea how to stage this segment of The Tempest.)

And then there is the Circle-Casting found in singular form in the “Witch-Plays” of the late 1500s-early 1600s: whereas the Grimoire-Traditions are preserved in written manuscripts read by the educated and the literate, the Ways of Witchcraft must have been maintained through oral Folk-Culture. Apparently there was, at least in England, a coherent system identified as “Witchcraft : the Witches in Shakespeare’s Macbeth, Jonson’s The Sad Shepherd and The Masque of Queens, and Middleton’s The Witch all do the same thing as “Witchcraft” in all four plays, what we would consider to be the most significant Witch-Plays of the early 1600s. This involves forming a Magickal Circle- but unlike the Ceremonial Magicians, who enact recorded ritual in a dignified manner, the Witches generate their mystical Spaces through intention, rhythm, movement, music, and excitement: very much what we would term “Raising Energy.” So much folklore surrounds the idea that Witches (like Faeries) danced in Circles, that we should not be surprised to find Circle-Dancing associated with all these Jacobean Witches: the Witches in Macbeth (c. 1605), for instance, dance “hand in hand” in order to “wind up their Charm” in Act One, scene iii; similarly, in Act Four, scene i, they dance around their Cauldron (which will cause one to dance in a Circle) in order to “set the stage” for the Thane of Glamis and for the Spirits that they will raise for him, ending the scene by performing a last “antic Round,” or excited Circle-Dance.

The male Ceremonial Traditions of the late Middle Ages are driven by the performance of prescribed ritual; the female Witchcraft Traditions of Jacobean England are set in motion through “Energy-Raising” spectacles (as we would think of them); yet both Traditions depend upon an understanding of an enchanted, specialized (Circular) Magickal Space.

Far from being held super-secret, however, Magickal Traditions appear to have been openly embraced in England during the time of Elizabeth: there was a flourishing business of printing and selling pamphlet-edition Spell-Books and “How to” Magickal manuals, with George Lyman Kittredge providing many examples of “grass-roots” Magickal experimentation in Witchcraft in Old and New England. The fact that plays which deal with Magickal matters are clearly popular is an indication of the Elizabethan/ Jacobean interest in Magick, and the fact that Magickal Ceremonies are performed in Magickal Plays presented as popular theater plainly indicates all by itself a means of transmission of this knowledge.

Assuming that Circle-Casting is indeed well-established as late 1500s/ early 1600s English Magickal custom, we would imagine English settlers in the New World to transport faith in Magickal Circle-Casting with them into America: exactly as we seem to find in early 20th century Appalachia.

All of this might be understood as cultural encouragement to consider Circle-Casting as primary in the performance of the Magickal Arts.

 

“Black Spirits” perhaps sounds familiar to Wiccans who have experience of the writings of Doreen Valiente, in particular the piece that begins: Black Spirits, White Spirits! Red Spirits, Gray! Harken to the Rune I say-

This was derived from the Black Spirits Charm of Middleton’s The Witch (V.ii), agreeable testimony to Mother Valiente’s prodigious research and actively inquisitive Magickal mind (curiously enough, a stage-note in Macbeth [IV.i] suggests that at some point, the Song-Charm from Middleton’s show was incorporated into Shakespeare’s Scottish Play). English folklorist Katharine Briggs, in her seminal volume on the Witch-Plays and Witch-Beliefs of Shakespeare’s time Pale Hecate’s Team (p. 51) finds cause to suggest that the “Black Spirits” formula derives from a folk-ballad about the St. Osyth Witches, as Corbin and Sedge (editors of Three Jacobean Witchcraft Plays) note (p. 231, #59). The editor for the 1990 Oxford edition of Macbeth also believes the origin of ”Black Spirits” possibly lies in folk-culture.

Therefore: a formulaic invocation of Four Spirits, each identified by a different Color- preserved in an early 17th century Witch-Play, potentially deriving from 17th century English folklore. What does this sound like- except perhaps what we do as Wiccans, when we Quarter the Circle.

“Black Spirits” has its first appearance in The Witch (c.1616) in (I.ii), as “White Spirits.” Heccat makes her entrance invoking the names of the St. Osyth Witch-familiars: “Titty and Tiffin, Suckin and Pidgen, Liard and Robin; White Spirits, Black Spirits, Gray Spirits, Red Spirits; Devil-toad, Devil-ram, Devil-cat and Devil-dam!”

The “Devil, etc” section has the earmarks of a genuine folk-charm; Scot quotes it explicitly in excoriating Judge Darcy (the presiding magistrate in the St. Osyth case). “Titty, Tiffin, Suckin, and Pidgen” are the familiars assigned to Ursula Kemp by her eight year-old boy, with “Liard (Lion) and Robin” folkloric creatures. “White Spirits, etc,” as Ms. Briggs believes, may originate through a folk-ballad- or I assume, perhaps a folk-rhyme, or at least through some sort of folk-culture origin, perhaps localized to the St. Osyth area of Essex (which is held to be the most Witchcraft-intensive region in all of England).

We next encounter “Black Spirits” in Middleton’s work at the Witchcraft-Working climax (V.ii). All the Witch-Band is assembled, and Heccat gives instruction: “Stir, stir about! Whilst I begin the Charme!”

Stage-Notes: “(A charm-song about a vessel)”; the “vessel” is a boiling cauldron (established as a major Witch-Instrument in [I.ii]). It is possible (folks speculate) that this scene was inspired by the Cauldron Scene of Macbeth; Heccat is going “about” the “vessel” (the cauldron) singing or chanting the “charm-song” Black Spirits (ideally, to some sort of musical accompaniment: in the Red Bull Theater’s Reading, they had an actor stationed stage-right, beating out a light rhythm on two overturned bucket-drums).

“Black Spirits and White! Red Spirits and Gray! Mingle, Mingle, Mingle- you that Mingle may! Titty, Tiffin: keep it stiff in! Firedrake, Pucky: make it lucky! Liard, Robin: you must bob in! Round, around, around, about! about! All ill come running in; all good keep out!”

Caveat: these being Jacobean Witches, they will be Evil and Wicked (as Jacobean Witches were imagined to be). Therefore, at the end of their Charm-Song, they will invite “all ill” to come in; all “good” to keep out.

Obviously one does not wish to do this, so- to follow Mother Valiente’s example- we might deliver the end as: All GOOD come in; All BAD keep out!

We notice the formula “about, about,” sometimes joined with the variant “around, around.” This is a formula encountered in Witch-Ritual at the moment the Energies are released to the Universe, in what I imagine as a great, swirling cosmic Whirlpool of Eldritch Force: About! About!

This means, Energies: Go About now! Now is the time to whirl youselves About, and be About the Magickal Working with which I have charged Thee! (This is what “About, about” means.)

 Similar also is “Mingle, Mingle, Mingle- ye that Mingle may!” Again, we find (on a metaphysical level) the excited energizing of Magickal Spirits or Energies or something of that Nature.

In the midst, we find an Invocation to Ursula Kemp’s two familiar-Spirits, Titty and Tiffin, to “keep it stiff in” (I’ll let you figure that out for yourself, how they keep it “stiff in”). Firedrake and Pucky (Puck) are invoked, to bless the Working with Luck: Puck is the famous fellow from A Midsummer Night’s Dream, and Firedrake is a Spirit mentioned by Scot, a Fire-Dragon sort of Creature. Liard and Robin “must bob in,” to add their presence, Liard being a Lion-Spirit and Robin another Form of Puck.

Heading all this is: Black Spirits and White! Red Spirits and Gray! It is not entirely clear whence this derives, but here it is, in Mr. Middleton’s 17th century play: an Invocation to 4 Mighty Spirits, one Black, one White, one Red, one Gray.

It makes me think of Wiccans who assign black, white, red, and gray to the Directions, calling in same when they wish to Quarter their Circle.

The Witches “show Reverence to yond peeping Moon”: which is something that happens periodically in a Witch-Play (as it does, for instance, in Jonson’s Masque of Queens), when Witches stop to Reverence the Moon. Something about this seems to scream “Ancient British Moon-Worship!” to me- but that’s just me.

“Here they dance The Witches’ Dance and exeunt.”

In other words: after Circling About their Cauldron singing the Charm-Song “Black Spirits”- the Witches dance the Witches’ Dance and exit the stage (done with their part in the show).

The Witches’ Dance is the Ultimate Climax to the Witch-Scenes in Middleton’s Witch-Play; it is presumably the vehicle that sets in (final) motion the Magickal Charms of the Witches.

In context, the scene undeniably demonstrates (1) going “About” in a Circle (perhaps around a boiling cauldron, perhaps not; I would expect this might not always be convenient), whilst (2) chanting or singing a “Charm-Song,” (3) followed by executing the “Witches’ Dance”- these constitute “Witchcraft” to Middleton’s audience.

Put into context with other Witch-Plays, such as Macbeth; Masque of Queens; and Jonson’s The Sad Shepherd- The Witch reinforces this perception of Jacobean Witchcraft, as all four plays present Witches doing essentially the same thing as “Witchcraft.”

The useful thing about these other three works is that they all arrive with language that appears (to my mind) to suggest “Raising Energy” as the Conception and Purpose behind this “Witchcraft.” The Witch is a bit oblique on the “Energy Raising” subject; the other three make the point in much more explicit fashion, I feel.

But nonetheless, should you wish to experiment and avail yourself of a Witches’ Charm from the 1600s: Call thou in “Black Spirits and White! Red Spirits and Gray! Mingle and Mingle and Mingle, ye that Mingle may! Titty, Tiffin- keep it stiff in! Firedrake and Pucky- make it lucky! Liard and Robin- now must bob in! Round, around, around- about, about! The Good jump in; the Bad jump out!”

Dance your Witches’ Dance- and you have just performed a Jacobean Witch-Charm.

 

Having preoccupied themselves throughout (I.ii) with the making of their Flying Ointment, the Hags of Middleton’s The Witch (c.1616) spend (III.iii) enjoying Magickal Flight (this is a 17th century version of “Defying Gravity” from Wicked). While skeptics such as Reginald Scot were already challenging the reality of Witchcraft in part upon the obvious impossibility of actual flight (one of Scot’s arguments basically boils down to, Get real; how is a mortal human going to take leave of the earth and fly? Who has ever seen anything to make them believe that a mortal human can possibly fly?)- the possibilities of humans-in-flight played upon 16th/ 17th imaginations in a huge way (it is interesting to note that Flight has shifted in the modern Zeitgeist from Witches to Super-Heroes). In paraphrasing Scot, Middleton ends up being extremely lyrical in his imagining of what it must be like to fly.

Heccat enters on a magnificent Moonlit Night: “The Moon’s a Gallant! See how brisk She rides!” [The Witch-Queen compares the Moon to a gallant horse-woman.] 

Stadlin so agrees: “Here’s a rich evening, Heccat.”

Heccat clasps herself in joy as she contemplates the air-journey of five thousand miles the Witches intend to accomplish ere the sun rise again: “O ’twill be precious!” But first- “Have you heard the owl yet?”

Assured that an owl has indeed been heard to hoo-hoo, Heccat concludes: “Tis high time for us then! Have you your ointments?” Given confirmation that the rest of the Witch-Band has, Heccat wastes no more moments: “Prepare for flight then!” She will tarry a moment behind, and then overtake them.

The Witches scurry off-stage, while Heccat’s son Firestone enters bearing the basket of herbs that he has been cutting for his Witch-Mum: mandragora [mandrake]; panax ["panace," or "all-heal"]; selago [club-moss]; and hedge-hyssop. He makes a point to observe that they “were all cut by moonlight.”

Music begins to play and Firestone spies the other Witches in flight: “They are above the steeple already, flying over your head with a noise of musicians.” A song called “Come Away” begins; a curious stage-note to (III.v) of Macbeth suggests that this song was interjected into a later production of Shakespeare’s play.

The other Witches: “Come Away, Come Away! Heccat, Heccat! Come Away!”

Heccat answers them: “I Come, I Come, I Come, I Come! With All The Speed I May, With All The Speed I May! Where’s Stadlin?”

Stadlin (as a Voice in the Air): “Here!”

Heccat: “Where’s Puckle?”

Puckle (as a Voice in the Air): “Here! And Hoppo too, and Hellwain too! We lack but you, we lack but you! Come Away, make up the Count!”

Heccat: “I will but ‘noint, and then I Mount!” [She anoints herself with Flying Ointment, while Malkin, a Spirit "like" a Cat "descends," meaning they have the Cat-Spirit fixed inside a harness and are dropping her down from the theater's eaves, in a show of 17th century stage-effects. Wait for it, though- an even cooler one is coming.]

Malkin the Cat-Spirit descending through the air: “There’s one comes down to fetch his dues: a kiss, a coll, a sip of blood!” [The Cat-Spirit is a Witch's Familiar, who collects kisses and "colls"- hugs- from the Witch, but vampire-like nourishment from her blood as well.] “And why thou stay’st so long, I muse, I muse, since the air’s so sweet and good!”

Heccat: “O art thou come! What news, what news?”

Malkin: “All goes still to our delight- either come or else refuse, refuse!”

Heccat: “Now I am furnished for the Flight!” [She has anointed herself.]

And here Heccat the Queen-Witch of Middleton’s play (named after the Witch-Goddess Herself) “goes up” with Malkin: meaning that the stagehands up in the eaves start pulling up the cords attached to Heccat’s flying-harness- and she Defies Gravity to rise majestically into the Air.

A delightful song: “Now I go, Now I fly- Malkin, my sweet Spirit, and I! O what a dainty pleasure tis to ride in the air when the Moon shines fair! And sing and dance and toy and kiss, over woods, high rocks, and mountains, over seas and misty fountains, over steeples, towers and turrets, we Fly by Night ‘mongst troops of Spirits! No ring of bells to our ears sounds, no howls of wolves nor yelps of hounds! No, not the noise of water’s breach or cannon’s throat our Height can reach!”

This scene, in an otherwise gruesome Jacobean Witch-Play, is actually rather enchanting, I feel, and seems to suggest something of the wistful regard with which the Era must have contemplated the idea that Witches might possess a secret that enabled them to indulge in aerial ballet.

Heccat’s son appears to feel so, as he watches the Witches soar away into a magnificently moonlit night: “Well Mother, I thank your kindness. You must be gambolling i’th’ air and leave me to walk here like a fool and a mortal.”

 

Thomas Middleton’s “TragiComedy” The Witch (c. 1616) plays better than it reads, to judge from the estimable Off-Broadway Company Red Bull Theater’s recent Revelation Reading of the work. On the page, it comes across as a Jacobean House of Horror affair; I initially took it to be a very Exploitative piece, particularly in its regards to Witches. However, the Red Bull and Tanya Pollard (Associate Professor of English, CUNY, in the scholarly essay on the play that she contributed, as well as in the discussion afterwards that she led, with the reading’s director Eleanor Holdridge) stress the work as a satiric take on the familiar Revenge Tragedy “Horror” elements. In this light, even the Witches’ scenes work, as an Addams Family-style spoof on the Grand Guignol aspects of Jacobean Witchcraft.

As Prof. Pollard pointed out, Middleton was a great “pilferer” when it came to the Witch scenes of his show; he borrowed primarily from Reginald Scot, who in his turn, cites other works in reference. To study Middleton’s play, therefore, is to have a glance over some of the most important voices concerning Witchcraft of the time. (Presumably a fair portion of Middleton’s audience would have recognized Middleton’s sources; I presume that he imagined this would give his Witch sections verisimilitude, lending them an admirable authenticity.)

Middleton’s Witches are interesting for a variety of reasons to Pagans and Wiccans: (1) they operate as a Coven of six (although they do not use that term), with Heccat (the name is pronounced with only two syllables) as their effective High Priestess (2) they engage in the most lyrical, enchanting scene of Elizabethan/ Jacobean Witchcraft that I know of- which (in addition) is the only scene that I know of that presents Witches flying (3) they demonstrate Witches performing an act of Witchcraft, whereby they Dance the Witches’ Dance around their Cauldron, whilst they sing their Charm-Song. (This is one of those cases where the most effective way to interpret what the Witches are doing, it seems to me, is Gardner’s description of “Raising Energy.”) The song “Black Spirits” is remarkable for being (1) an authentic 17th century Witches’ Charm, and for (2) being apparently incorporated into Shakespeare’s Macbeth.

Text and Notes taken from Three Jacobean Witchcraft Plays, Peter Corbin and Douglas Sedge, ed. (Manchester University Press, 1986).

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So Monday last, my good Witch-friend Lynne and I caught the Red Bull Theater’s Revelation Reading of Thomas Middleton’s The Witch- and a revelation it was indeed, to hear this staged reading of this (c. 1610-16) play, which finds Witches so interesting that it places them on stage.

The Red Bull’s performance space is arresting, residing (basically) under the eaves in the attic of a 19th-century church (St. Clement’s, at 423 W46th St); a more atmospheric locale for Jacobean drama is hard to imagine.

The cast were all theater-pros: of particular distinction were Carol Halstead (as the Duchess), an actress who in addition to achieving a wide variety of effect while moving relatively little, has a wonderful comedic sense (always an appealing quality in a lead actress); Charles Borland (as Antonio) displayed an admirable, almost haiku-like precision in his gestures, moods, and line-readings; the commanding presence and majestic voice of Johnny Lee Davenport as the Duke recalled James Earl Jones in his Off-Broadway days. Also impressive and fun was Nigel Gore as the drunken Almachildes (I can’t say for certain, of course, but I’d be willing to put money on the table that Mr. Gore was playing Almachildes as Keith Richards; that would be my guess.) Brandy Zarle (as the floozy Florida), and David Grimm (as the comic servant Hermio) demonstrated that, even with a relatively minor role, a talented actor can leave a large impression.

As to the Witches: my apologies, I find that (of the secondary Witches), I cannot recall exactly which Witch was Hoppo and which Stadlin; therefore I am uncertain which of the two talented actresses (Dale Soules and Aysan Celik) to credit; but the red-haired woman who played Heccat’s Witch #2 is plainly a veteran character-actress, charged with a number of supporting character-roles, in and out of which she moved with lightning-speed; she was particularly hilarious as Witch #2.

As Heccat the Lead Witch (and the titular character: this is a presentation that is so on-top of its material, it figured out that the scansion of the song-lyrics in the 1700s published script indicate that the name was pronounced with two syllables): Jacqueline Antaramian possessed an ethereal, slightly Gypsy-Queen sort of beauty, with a forceful presence; commanding voice; and endlessly inventive line-readings. Often Heccat was posed stage-center and alone, the stage-lighting going green and spooky during her scenes: the Jacobean presentation of a Witch-Queen was impossible to escape.

One other actor- positioned far stage-right- deserves mention. His name is Jacob Knoll; he is a lanky young actor, projecting an appealing sort of goof-ball charm, who did a fine job as the Head Witch Heccat’s slightly imbecilic son Firestone. It was he who also was entrusted with the task of providing the drum-accompaniment to the Witches’ Conjuration scenes.

Witches’ Scenes often being delivered against a background of (at least) steady, rhythmic chanting- if not music outright: as per the Witches in Macbeth, for instance, when they call to “charm the air to give a sound, while we perform our antic round.” As we might see here, “Witchcraft” in Jacobean plays involves (1) a “round” (a circle-dance; a dance in a “round” circle); (2) preferably an exuberant, excited circle-dance (an “antic round”); (3) accompanied by “charming” music (or “sound”).

Perceiving the need to “boomph up” the scenes showing the Performance of Witchcraft: Red Bull Theater cannily and craftily invested the young Mr. Knoll with two overturned plastic buckets and a pair of drumsticks, and had him beat out a drum-rhythm accompaniment to the Witches’ Witch-Crafting: it was he who “charmed the air to give a sound, during The Witch’s performance of [the Witches'] Antic Round.” Jacob Knoll was the drummer for the Witches.

I was surprised, watching the show “performed,” how funny it was (my impression upon reading it years ago was that it was a slightly disagreeable script, with much gratuitous and self-conscious “horror”). A Question-Answer session was held after the play’s performance, which featured Tanya Pollard (Associate Professor of English, CUNY) and the reading’s director Eleanor Holdridge, who discussed Middleton’s work as a satiric piece, spoofing the (by then) familiar tropes of the Revenge Tragedy and the grotesque imaginings of Jacobean Witches. Looked at within this light, the Witches’ Scenes in The Witch are more in line with Addams Family “spoof-humor” than with any sort of “anti-Witch” stage-slander: its as if, to judge by the Red Bull’s interpretation, Middleton- in reaction to the grotesque Jacobean “Anti-Witch” stereotype- encourages his audience to laugh at the idea of Witches as depraved as these. (I did note that Heccat’s lines tended to receive large laughs from the audience; interestingly, the more perverse the line, the greater the laugh. It was as if the Red Bull audience that night was being encouraged to find silly and laughable the idea that Witches will be as corrupt and as deranged as they are alleged to be.)

The learned intelligence on display throughout the question-answer session was extremely impressive; I was particularly struck by how well-informed the audience members were, who understood that Middleton lifted huge portions of The Witch from Reginald Scot, and who were able to place The Witch within the context of the European Burning Times. Red Bull Theater is plainly inspiring an erudite audience with its February Witch-Series.

An in-depth look at the Witches’ Scenes in Middleton’s The Witch to follow, along with a look at the Conjuration Scene, with its famous “Black Spirits” Charm. (This is that thing that Doreen Valiente came across, with which she began to experiment in wonderfully entrepreneurial Magickal ways: an authentic 17th century Witches’ Charm: “Black Spirits.”)

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