Mission “impossible”: How Emma Rice brought Alfred Hitchcock’s North By Northwest to York Theatre Royal stage

Wise Children writer-director Emma Rice

THE world premiere of Emma Rice’s theatrical take on Alfred Hitchcock’s North By North West is up and running at York Theatre Royal with a full week of previews before next Wednesday’s press night: a lead-up more associated with West End premieres.

Such is the scale and anticipation that surrounds Frome company Wise Children’s co-production with the Theatre Royal, HOME Manchester and Liverpool Everyman & Playhouse.

“The show’s ready for an audience,” said writer-director Emma last Friday morning, in a brief break from tech-week preparations for Tuesday’s first preview.

Five weeks of rehearsals at The Lucky Chance, Wise Children’s creative space in a converted Methodist church in Somerset, had preceded moving up to York on March 16.

“There’s a certain percentage of work you can’t do in the rehearsal room, especially when we have a very ambitious set with four revolving doors that are over four metres high and slide over the stage, and the cast has to learn how to move across the stage,” says Emma. “It’s quite mathematical as it’s such a mind-bending plot – and Maths is not my strong point!”

Quick refresher course: Hitchcock’s 1959 American spy thriller, the one starring Cary Grant, Eva Marie Saint and James Mason from cinema’s Golden Age, finds hapless advertising man Roger Thornhill (now played by Ewan Wardrop) being mistaken for George Kaplan when a mistimed phone call to his mother lands him smack bang in the middle of a Cold War conspiracy. Now he is on the run across America, dodging foreign spies, airplanes and a femme fatale, Eve Kendall, who might not be all she seems.

Rice duly turns Hitchcock’s smart thriller on its head in her riotously humorous reworking, replete with six shape-shifting performers, a fabulous 1950s’ soundtrack and a heap of hats, clothes, suitcases and newspapers in a topsy-turvy drama full of glamour, glitz, romance, jeopardy and a liberal sprinkling of tender truths. 

Where Rice’s vision of North By Northwest meets Hitchcock’s version is “sort of a surprising marriage, but I’ve loved it” she says of the creative process. “I love that it’s an impossible test. North By Northwest has a vast series of impossible problems to solve on stage, from Mount Rushmore to the plane, the crop duster, and you have to work your magic.

“We’ve come up with lots of fun ways to meet those challenges, those setpieces, while also matching Hitchcock’s vision, so it’s very stylish.”

Etta Murfitt’s contribution as movement director has been important. “It’s been fascinating because it’s an odyssey story and the thing you can’t do with the four-door set is travel much, so you have to find the energy to give that sense of travel,” says Emma.

Emma Rice at Wise Children’s creative space, The Lucky Chance, a converted Methodist church in Frome, Somerset

“We do that with fantastic choreography that, like Bob Fosse’s work, gives it humour as well as movement, and you think, ‘is it dance, is it theatre’? We have six actors who are incredibly virtuosic in their acting. Five of them have worked with me before, and the newcomer to the company is Simon Oskarsson, who’s Swedish but has been working in England for a long time.”

North By Northwest may be outwardly familiar, “but I would place a wager now that a lot people will have seen the film but if you ask them to tell the story they probably couldn’t,” says Emma. “I’ve taken months to complete all the beats of the story. I’ve not needed to have too many surprises but I’ve made it easier to understand.

“My experience of the film was that it was baffling, and we’ve been able to tell the story more clearly without losing the tension.”

To help her do so, she methodically made note cards of each plot point, placed on the floor to work through the machinations in her fourth conversion from screen to stage after The Red Shoes, A Matter Of Life And Death and Brief Encounter in her Kneehigh Theatre days.

“Nothing happens in Brief Encounter. Everything happens in North By North West, and it takes every iota of my theatre craft to present it. I have to be on the front of my toes. Like we now have over 70 suitcases in this show, each one with a different label and different things in it, after I swapped having lots of hats for more suitcases, though there are still many hats, but many more suitcases now!”

 Emma has homed in on the 1950s’ post-war setting too, not least to bring more depth to Hitchcock’s characters. “I’ve always been really fascinated by the Fifties,” she says. “My parents were small children in the war; my grandparents fought in the war. My parents were my family’s first generation to go university.

“Every character in the film would have just come out of the war; everyone making the film would have experienced it, so it’s been interesting to add that depth to it.”

In particular, she focuses on building up the back story of Eve Kendall, the femme fatale who helps Thornhill to avoid detection after they meet on a train. “I think Hitchcock made a great job of Eve; she’s the heroine of the piece, putting herself on the line with her bravery and her moral judgement  when facing the most jeopardy.”

Emma has given the narrator’s role to Katy Owen’s Professor. “I’ve used a lot of Hitchcock’s dialogue in the play, but the Professor’s narration is very much in my language though I’ve also used stage directions from Ernest Lehman’s film script, which was a masterpiece. They’re beautifully written; the language is virtuosic and humorous and elegant too.”

Wise Children in Alfred Hitchcock’s North By North West, York Theatre Royal, until April 5, 7.30pm plus 2pm, March 26 and April 3; 2.30pm, March 29 and April 5Box office: 01904 623568 or yorktheatreroyal.co.uk.

The poster for Wise Children’s world premiere of Alfred Hitchcock’s North By Northwest, on stage at York Theatre Royal from this week

Ewan Wardrop dances with delight at playing Roger Thornhill in Emma Rice’s take on Alfred Hitchcock’s North By Northwest

Ewan Wardrop in rehearsal at The Lucky Chance, Frome, for his role as Roger Thornhill in Wise Children’s production of Alfred Hitchcock’s North By Northwest, premiering at York Theatre Royal from March 18 to April 5. Picture: Steve Tanner

EWAN Wardrop returns to the Wise Children ranks for the world premiere of Emma Rice’s adaptation of Alfred Hitchcock’s North By Northwest at York Theatre Royal from March 18.

After appearing in artistic director Rice’s productions of Bagdad Café (Old Vic Theatre, London) and The Buddha Of Suburbia (Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Swan Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon and Barbican Theatre, London), he will take the lead role of Roger Thornhill in the Somerset company’s co-production with York Theatre Royal, HOME Manchester and Liverpool Everyman & Playhouse.

Mistaken for another man, Thornhill finds himself smack bang in the middle of a Cold War conspiracy after a mistimed phone call to his mother. Now the reluctant hero is on the run, dodging spies, airplanes and a femme fatale who might not be all she seems.

“Emma told me about her production plans getting on for two years ago,” says Ewan. “We did two sets of workshop at The Lucky Chance [Rice’s creation space and venue in the refurbished and repurposed Portway Methodist Church in Frome], where we just threw ideas around because it’s such a filmic Hitchcock film with the setpieces and the plane scene and you’re thinking ‘how do you do that on stage?’.

Simon Oskarsson’s Valerian, left, Ewan Wardrop’s Roger Thornhill, Katy Owen’s Professor and Mirabelle Gremaud’s Anna rehearsing a scene for Emma Rice’s production of Alfred Hitchcock’s North By North West. Picture: Steve Tanner

“The producers had sought Emma to do this production as she’s the best at doing this kind of adaptation.”

For the rehearsal process, “Emma writes the script with her ideas for stage directions, but it’s moveable, thinking ‘oh, this will work better visually’, where she’ll come in with a better idea overnight,” says Ewan. “Or Etta [choreographer and movement director Etta Murfitt] might come up with a new movement sequence.

“You learn your lines, you do the lines, cuts are made, and Emma is very good at thinking on her feet, making changes right up to the eve of the show, always looking for the best way to portray something.”

The resulting production will become as much Emma Rice’s 2025 North By Northwest as Alfred Hitchcock’s 1959 North By Northwest in this fifth collaboration between Wise Children and York Theatre Royal after productions of Angela Carter’s Wise Children, Malory Towers, Wuthering Heights and Blue Beard.

Wise Children writer-director Emma Rice

As the Theatre Royal brochure promises: “Emma Rice takes on film legend Alfred Hitchcock in this riotously funny reworking that turns the original thriller on its head. With just six shape-shifting performers, a fabulous ’50s soundtrack and a lot of hats, this dazzling production plays with the heart, mind and soul. Join us for a night of glamour, romance, jeopardy and a liberal sprinkling of tender truths.”

“With this sort of show, it’s about striking the right balance,” says Ewan. “Audiences want to see scenes from the film they recognise, and it would be difficult not to have a nod to those, like the plane swooping down. We’re not re-creating the film but people will be happy to see scenes they love.

“It’s a question of scale how you transfer it to the stage, so for some things you have to rely on the audience’s imagination, which is the most powerful tool theatre has – and I prefer to use the imagination rather than see something where I don’t quite buy it.

“The film is a box of tricks but its emotional heart is maybe quite slight, so Emma has looked into how we present the ‘baddies’, looking deeper into that to make them more three-dimensional.

Emma is bringing more depth to Roger’s relationship with Eve Kendall,” says Ewan Wardrop, pictured in rehearsal with Patrycja Kujawska. Picture: Steve Tanner

“She’s also bringing more depth to Roger’s relationship with Eve Kendall. In essence, he’s quite a shallow character, but he’s been through the war – like the actors in the film had – so Emma has written new sections to explore that.

“She’s been pretty faithful to the film, to the characters and the dialogue, but she’s added to the dialogue without changing the storyline.”

Ewan is an Alfred Hitchcock devotee. “I’ve always loved his films. They’re visually compelling, and I was a dancer before I was an actor, so I’ve always responded to his visual flair. With Hitchcock, there are so many memorable scenes that go by without dialogue that are beautifully framed,” he says.

Ewan worked previously with choreographer Etta Murfitt in Matthew Bourne’s company and loves the movement element to Wise Children’s shows. “Emma (CORRECT) uses more and more dance in her productions, so she casts actors who aren’t necessarily great dancers but who move well, which can be more interesting than actual dancers.

Leaping into action: Ewan Wardrop, left, and Simon Oskarsson in the Wise Children rehearsal room. Picture: Steve Tanner

“Emma casts really well as she knows people so well and she’s very instinctive to make you do things that I wouldn’t come up with or go as far as that, and you think, ‘how does she know that?’. 

“She will use your great strengths and that’s one of her great assets: her emotional intelligence and empathy, as well as her theatricality.”

North By Northwest marks Ewan’s return to York. “I’ve been coming here for years,” he says. “I did my one-man George Formby show, Formby, in the Theatre Royal Studio and I play the baritone ukulele with the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain, performing at the Theatre Royal,” he recalls.

Wise Children in Alfred Hitchcock’s North By Northwest, York Theatre Royal, March 18 to April 5, then on tour. Box office: 01904 623568 or yorktheatreroyal.co.uk