'The 39 Steps' spoofs Hitchcock

Expect style over substance at this parody of the 1935 film

By Matt Windman

amNewYork Theater Critic
January 16, 2008

 
Critic's Rating:
2 1/2

'The 39 Steps' spoofs Hitchcock
Charles Edwards, Arnie Burton, Cliff Saunders and Jennifer Ferrin portray 150 characters (Credit: Ari Mintz/Newsday)
[To hear an audio review and view images of "The 39 Steps" and for more breaking theater news, visit amny.com]

We tend not to remember Alfred Hitchcock for "The 39 Steps," a 1935 film so musty that it's fallen into the public domain. Its plot is a stereotypical thriller: an innocent man learns too much about a covert spy ring, gets chased across Scotland, meets an uptight pretty girl, and finally returns to London in order to foil the villain's dastardly plans. You can watch the movie online for free, but it's barely worth your time.

Who knows whether playwright Patrick Barlow likes the film, but the point of his stage adaptation wasn't to merely pay homage to it. Barlow instead uses the original screenplay as a vehicle for slapstick comedy, rather like how "The Complete Works of Shakespeare (Abridged)" uses the Bard's plays as a springboard for silliness. (Barlow has also prepared parodies of the Bible and Ring Cycle.) Following its West End run, the production arrives as a three-month engagement.

Here, four cast members play a total of about 150 roles. Every scene from the film is somehow portrayed – including the chase on the Flying Scotsman, the escape on the Forth Bridge and finale in the London Palladium – through clever uses of stagecraft. With sheets and ladders and English accents, what results is an unusual combination of whodunit mystery, espionage thriller and physical comedy clowning.

The end result is like the current Broadway production of Mark Twain's "Is He Dead?"—a cute, engaging staging of a meaningless product. In other words, expect style over substance. Of course, it's fun to watch as the talented ensemble cast switch characters and costumes at the speed of lightning, but the thrill is modest at best.

Still, who really wants to see a parody of a film that no one really cares about? In order for any satire to be effective, its audience must be familiar with the source material it seeks to make fun of. Luckily, there's bound to be a handful of movie buffs somewhere that will get a kick out of "The 39 Steps."

"The 39 Steps" runs until March 23 at American Airlines Theater, 227 W. 42nd St, 212-719-1300, tickets $51.25-96.25.


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