The Scotsman

Dial M For Murder

King’s Theatre, Edinburgh

- JOYCE MCMILLAN

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IT’S almost 70 years since Frederick Knott’s powerful and intricate thriller was first seen on the London stage; and the temptation, in staging it two generation­s on, is to give it the touch of film noir romance captured in Alfred Hitchcock’s 1954 Hollywood version, and let it remain a glamorous period piece.

Anthony Banks’s new UK touring production, though, gives this formula a thoroughly welcome shake-up, pushing the style and decor forward to the early 1960s, and portraying the central couple – Margot and her husband Tony – as a slightly racy pair, hanging around with creative types in black leather jackets, and talking, in Tony’s case, in a slightly déclassé estuary accent.

Add an interestin­g twist, in Banks’s decision to make both Tom Chambers as Wendice and Michael Salami as Margot’s ex-lover Max play their roles in a slightly stylised, hysterical style, as if permanentl­y ontheverge­ofanervous­breakdown,

and you suddenly have a much more jangly, disruptive and interestin­g version of postwar London than is often served up in 1950s thrillers.

The result – after a slightly jolting start – is a tense, clever and thrilling version of Knott’s terrific tale, orchestrat­ed to its conclusion by Christophe­r Harper’s strikingly youthful and eccentric Inspector Hubbarb. And as these strange and nervy men circle around her, it’s Sally Bretton’s touching, straight-as-a-die performanc­e as Margot that gives the drama its emotional centre; conjuring up the image of a woman caught up in a time of social change, and guilty of betraying her husband, but willing to fight for her own life, and – with a little help from her friends – to win.

 ??  ?? Sally Bretton as Margot holds the centre in this clever revival
Sally Bretton as Margot holds the centre in this clever revival

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