Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

The 39 Steps (play)

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Written by
  
Patrick Barlow

Original language
  
English

First performance
  
17 June 2005

Date premiered
  
17 June 2005

Genre
  
Comedy/parody

Playwright
  
Patrick Barlow

The 39 Steps (play) t3gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcQhSJxzIQjdBPyE4o

Place premiered
  
West Yorkshire Playhouse Leeds

Setting
  
1930s England and Scotland

Characters
  
Richard Hannay, Annabella Schmidt, Margaret - Crofter's Wife, Clown #2, Clown #1, Pamela

Adapted from
  
The Thirty-Nine Steps, The 39 Steps

Places premiered
  
West Yorkshire Playhouse, Leeds

Similar
  
Noises Off, Heroes, The Play That Goes Wrong, Love Upon The Throne, God of Carnage

Highlights from the 39 steps


The 39 Steps is a melodrama adapted from the 1915 novel by John Buchan and the 1935 film by Alfred Hitchcock. The original concept and production of a four-actor version of the story was by Simon Corble and Nobby Dimon. Patrick Barlow rewrote this adaptation in 2005.

Contents

The play's concept calls for the entirety of the 1935 adventure film The 39 Steps to be performed with a cast of only four. One actor plays the hero, Richard Hannay, an actress (or sometimes actor) plays the three women with whom he has romantic entanglements, and two other actors play every other character in the show: heroes, villains, men, women, children and even the occasional inanimate object. This often requires lightning fast quick-changes and occasionally for them to play multiple characters at once. Thus the film's serious spy story is played mainly for laughs, and the script is full of allusions to (and puns on the titles of) other Alfred Hitchcock films, including Strangers on a Train, Rear Window, Psycho, Vertigo and North by Northwest.

The 39 steps


Production history

The first version of the play written by Simon Corble and Nobby Dimon for a cast of four actors and funded by a £1,000 Yorkshire Arts Grant, premiered in 1995 before an audience of 90 people at the Georgian Theatre Royal in Richmond, North Yorkshire, before embarking on a tour of village halls across the north of England.

In 2005 Patrick Barlow rewrote the script, keeping the scenes, staging and small-scale feel, and in June 2005 this re-adaption premiered at the West Yorkshire Playhouse, directed by Fiona Buffini and designed by Peter McKintosh. The featured actors were Robert Whitelock, Lisa Jackson, Simon Gregor and Mark Hadfield. Maria Aitken directed the revised production in its London premiere at the Tricycle Theatre (London), which opened on 10 August 2006 titled John Buchan's The 39 Steps. The cast for the London premiere comprised Rupert Degas, Charles Edwards, Simon Gregor and Catherine McCormack, again with designs by Peter McKintosh. The production transferred to the Criterion Theatre in London's West End in September 2006. The 39 Steps closed on 5 September 2015 after 9 years in the West End, making it the fifth longest running play in West End history.

On 27 August 2008 a Spanish production opened at Maravillas Theatre in Madrid directed by Eduardo Bazo and starring Gabino Diego, Jorge de Juan, Diego Molero and Patricia Conde (later replaced by Beatriz Rico).

United States premiere

The play premiered the U.S. at the Boston University Theatre, by the Huntington Theatre Company, in Boston on 19 September 2007. Billed as Alfred Hitchcock's The 39 Steps, it opened on Broadway in a Roundabout Theatre production at the American Airlines Theatre, with previews beginning on 4 January 2008 and the official opening on 15 January 2008. The initial run concluded on 29 March 2008 and transferred to the Cort Theatre on 29 April 2008 and then transferred to the Helen Hayes Theatre on 21 January 2009. Aitken also directed the United States productions, with McKintosh designing, and Edwards transferred to these productions as Richard Hannay, the only actor from the UK cast to do so. The other actors in the premiere US productions were Jennifer Ferrin, Arnie Burton and Cliff Saunders. Edwards concluded his run on 6 July 2008 and Sam Robards took over the role of Richard Hannay.

Jeffrey Kuhn and Francesca Faridany joined the cast on 28 October 2008. In December 2008 it was announced that Sean Mahon would take over the role of Richard Hannay. The show had its final Broadway performance on 10 January 2010 after 771 performances, "the longest-running Broadway play in seven years" (according to the writer for Playbill.com). The 39 Steps transferred to the off-Broadway venue New World Stages, reopening on 25 March 2010.

Awards

The play won the Olivier Award for Best Comedy in 2007 and the What's On Stage Award for Best Comedy 2007.

The 2008 Roundabout Broadway production won the 2008 Drama Desk Award for Unique Theatrical Experience and Outstanding Lighting Design (Kevin Adams). It won two Tony Awards on 15 June 2008 for Best Lighting Design and Best Sound Design. It was nominated for four other Tonys: Best Play, Best Direction of a Play (Maria Aitken), Best Scenic Design of a Play (Peter McKintosh) and Best Costume Design of a Play (Peter McKintosh).

Film references & production notes

The play shares the plot and characters with the film. However, the play is a more comic treatment of the story, in the style of Monty Python and Barlow's own National Theatre of Brent, compared to the original and more serious film. The play incorporates references and use of music excerpts from other Hitchcock films. The cast of four actors portrays between 100 and 150 roles, including actors doubling parts within the same scene. The quick, comic changes are reminiscent of Charles Ludlam's The Mystery of Irma Vep. The actress playing Annabella Schmidt also plays the two other romantic females, Pamela and Margaret, while the two clowns play the nearly all the other roles. The part of Richard Hannay is the only one where the actor does not double in another role in the play.

Productions

Apart from the transfers to London and Broadway, this lists only the first production in a country.

  • 2005, Leeds - West Yorkshire Playhouse
  • 2006, London - Tricycle Theatre
  • 2006, London West End - Criterion Theatre
  • 2007, Boston - Huntington Theatre
  • 2008, New York City, Broadway - American Airlines Theatre, Cort Theatre, Helen Hayes Theatre
  • 2008, Melbourne - Playhouse, Victorian Arts Centre (Melbourne Theatre Company)
  • 2008, Aachen - Grenzlandttheater, first performance in German
  • 2008, Tel Aviv - Habima Theatre, in Hebrew
  • 2008, Hong Kong - Lyric Theatre, Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts
  • 2008, Mexico City - Ramiro Jiménez Theatre
  • 2008, Athens - Knossos Theatre, Greek adaptation
  • 2008, Madrid - Maravillas Theatre, in Spanish
  • 2008, Turku - Åbo Svenska Teater, in Swedish
  • 2008, Tampere - Komediateatteri, in Finnish
  • 2009, Paris -Paris théâtre Labruyere
  • 2009, South Korea - Sejong Arts Center
  • 2009, Wellington - Circa Theatre
  • 2009, Warsaw, Poland - Teatr Komedia (in Polish)
  • 2010, Gananoque, Ontario - The Thousand Islands Playhouse (Canadian Premiere)
  • 2010, Buenos Aires, Argentina - Teatro Piccadilly
  • 2010, São Paulo,Brazil - Teatro Frei Caneca
  • 2011, Makati City, Philippines-Greenbelt, Ayala Center
  • 2011, Montevideo, Uruguay - Gran Teatro Metro
  • 2011, Barcelona, Spain - Teatre Capitol
  • 2012, Shanghai, China, Shanghai American School
  • 2012, Dubai, United Arab Emirates [Backstage Theatre Group]
  • 2013, Stockholm, Sweden - Intiman theatre
  • 2013, Nuremberg, Germany – Staatstheater, in German
  • 2015, Halifax, Nova Scotia - Neptune Theatre
  • 2015, Kincardine, Ontario- Bluewater Summer Playhouse [1]
  • 2015 American Stage St Petersburg, Florida

  • 2017, Los Angeles, California - Caroline's Loft. Starring Eitan Gurvis, Alyssa Lopez, Moss Woodbury, Kyle Tomlin, and Trevor Keyfauver
  • Richard Hannay - Daniel Llewelyn-Williams
  • Pamela/Annabella/Margaret - Kelly Hotten
  • Man 1 - Gary Sefton
  • Man 2 - Darryl Clark
  • Awards and nominations

    Awards
  • 2007 Laurence Olivier Award for Best New Comedy
  • 2008 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Lighting Design (Kevin Adams)
  • 2008 Drama Desk Award for Unique Theatrical Experience
  • 2008 Tony Award for Best Lighting Design of a Play (Kevin Adams)
  • 2008 Tony Award for Best Sound Design of a Play (Mic Pool)
  • 2009 Helpmann Award for Best Regional Touring Production
  • 2009 Molière France Best Comedy
  • Nominations
  • 2008 Tony Award for Best Play
  • 2008 Tony Award for Best Direction of a Play (Maria Aitken)
  • 2008 Tony Award for Best Scenic Design of a Play (Peter McKintosh)
  • 2008 Tony Award for Best Costume Design of a Play (Peter McKintosh)
  • 2008 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Sound Design (Mic Pool)
  • 2009 Molière France révélation Actress Andrea Bescond
  • 2009 Molière France Best Director Métayer Éric
  • 2009 Molière France Best adaptation Gerald Sibleyras
  • References

    The 39 Steps (play) Wikipedia