The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Toil and trouble: Theatre group steps back from tree campaign

Royal Shakespear­e Company backed bid to save Birnam Oak – but support was short-lived

- jamie buchan

The Royal Shakespear­e Company has been forced to withdraw its support for a campaign to save one of the world’s most famous trees.

The eminent Stratford-upon-avonbased theatre group earlier this week urged fans to check out the ambitious £100,000 appeal to preserve the Birnam Oak.

The tree is one of the only survivors from the ancient Perthshire forest immortalis­ed by William Shakespear­e in Macbeth. Local conservati­onists mounted a campaign to safeguard its long-term future.

The Perth and Kinross Countrysid­e Trust said that, although the mighty oak is stable in the short-term, substantia­l work is needed to ensure its long-term future.

The Royal Shakespear­e Company posted about the campaign on its website, as part of promotion for its upcoming production of Macbeth starring Christophe­r Ecclestone.

Under the heading “Saving Macbeth’s Great Wood”, the webpage stated: “Just two of the oldest trees remain from the wood that Shakespear­e wrote about in his Scottish tragedy, Macbeth.

“Believed to be over 500 years old, the Birnam Oak stands close to the south bank of the River Tay in Birnam, Perthshire. Although it is too young to have been seen by Shakespear­e’s doomed king, it would have been a mature tree by the late 1500s when the playwright is thought to have travelled to the area with his company of actors.”

The online story, which contained links to the Countrysid­e Trust’s appeal page, was also posted to the company’s 450,000 followers on Twitter.

However, the RSC has now been forced to delete the tweet and remove the post from its website. A spokeswoma­n told The Courier that the online content was put up “in error”, stressing that as a charity they were unable to show support for a trust which is raising money.

Website visitors searching for the Birnam Oak story were later greeted with the message: “No Page! How did that happen? We are indeed an asshead, and a coxcomb, and a knave, a thin-faced knave, a gull!”

It is not clear if the short-lived backing had much impact on the ambitious appeal, which was yesterday sitting just above the £12,500 mark.

The next phase of the rescue campaign will involve getting a structural engineer to design new tree props, to hold up the branches.

A spokeswoma­n for the Perth and Kinross Countrysid­e Trust said: “The Birnam Oak is the last remnant of the Birnam Wood made famous in Macbeth and is in serious need of help if it’s to live for hundreds of years more.”

She added: “We’ve already managed to raise over £12,500 of our £100,00 goal through this appeal and thank everyone for their incredible support.”

jabuchan@thecourier.co.uk

 ?? Picture: Getty. ?? Jonathan Slinger as Macbeth and Aislin Mcguckin as Lady Macbeth in the Royal Shakespear­e Company’s production of William Shakespear­e’s Macbeth.
Picture: Getty. Jonathan Slinger as Macbeth and Aislin Mcguckin as Lady Macbeth in the Royal Shakespear­e Company’s production of William Shakespear­e’s Macbeth.
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 ?? Picture: Steve Macdougall. ?? The historic tree is immortalis­ed in Shakespear­e’s play Macbeth.
Picture: Steve Macdougall. The historic tree is immortalis­ed in Shakespear­e’s play Macbeth.

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