Syracuse Stage Opens 2024/25 Season With New Adaptation of Classic Nailbiter 'Dial M for Murder'
Syracuse Stage begins the 2024/25 subscription series with āDial M for Murder,ā Jeffrey Hatcherās fresh adaptation of the classic crime thriller. Directed by Syracuse Stage artistic director Robert Hupp (āAgatha Christieās Murder on the Orient Express,ā āOur Townā), the show will run Oct. 16-Nov. 3 in the Archbold Theatre at Syracuse Stage, 820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse.
Margot Wendice is happily married to Tony, and the couple share a charming life and a modest flat in 1950s London. But not all is as it seemsāMargot has been involved with the famous American crime writer Maxine Hadley and is being blackmailed by a mysterious stranger who threatens to expose the affair to her husband. But Tony already knows, and he has just hatched a plot of deadly revenge.
āIām thrilled to direct our season opening production of āDial M for Murder,āā says Robert Hupp, artistic director. āI am a huge fan of this genre, and we had so much fun creating last seasonās āAgatha Christieās Murder on the Orient Expressā that I couldnāt wait to kill off more characters on our stage.ā
Written by Frederick Knott in 1952, āDial M for Murderā was adapted into a 1954 Alfred Hitchcock film starring Grace Kelly, and again in 1998 as the loose remake āA Perfect Murderā with Gwenyth Paltrow as the unsuspecting wife. Hatcherās adaptation, which premiered at San Diegoās Old Globe in 2022, gives Knottās clever original a fresh coat of paint, notably infusing the script with a touch of light comedy and a swifter pace for modern audiences.
Says Hupp, āāDial Mā is less of a murder mystery and more of a psychological thriller. While the setting, 1950s London, remains the same as the Knott play and the Hitchcock film, our playwright, Jeffrey Hatcher, updates the storyline to raise the stakes and create even more tension in this powerful, suspenseful story. I think our audience will love the cast weāve assembled for āDial M,ā and I canāt wait to share this deliciously dangerous play with everyone in Central New York.ā
“Dial M for Murderā features (assistant professor in the College of Visual and Performing Arts’ Department of Drama) as Margot Wendice, Avery Clark as her scheming husband Tony and Krystel Lucas as Maxine Hadley. The ensemble rounds out with J.D. Webster as Inspector Hubbard and John Long as the killer-for-hire Lesgate. The design team includes sets by Stanley Meyer, costumes by Lux Haac, lighting design by Dawn Chiang, sound design by Tony Award nominee John Gromada (āThe Trip to Bountifulā) and hair and wigs by Brittany Hartman, with fight choreography by D.C. Wright. Blake Segal serves as the productionās dialect coach and Yvonne Perry as the intimacy coordinator.
Born in China to missionary parents in 1916, Knott studied law at Cambridge University and achieved the rank of major in the British Army before finding fame with 1952ās āDial āMā for Murder.ā The play aired on the BBC before critically acclaimed productions in Londonās West End and on Broadway. Called ānotoriously unprolificā in a 2002 obituary, Knott only wrote three other plays during his lifetimeāāMr. Fox of Veniceā (1959), āWrite Me a Murder (1961) and āWait Until Darkā (1966)ābut made enough from his work to live comfortably in Manhattan with his wife, actress Ann Hillary. Knottās intricately plotted mystery plays continue to entertain audiences throughout the world with revival productions and new adaptations, including American playwright Hatcherās stylish updates of āWait Until Darkā and āDial M for Murderā.
All evening performances begin at 7:30 p.m. while all matinee performances begin at 2 p.m. Tickets start at $25 with discounts available for students and groups. Tickets may be purchased online at , by phone at 315.443.3275 or in person at the Syracuse Stage Box Office. Pay-what-you-will performances for āDial M for Murderā are Oct. 16-20 inclusive; prologue conversations, three pre-show discussions, take place one hour before curtain on Oct. 20, 26 and 31; the post-show Talkback will take place on Sunday, Oct. 20, after the 7:30 p.m. performance. Syracuse Stage has its open-captioned performances scheduled for Oct. 23 and Nov. 2 at 2 p.m. and Oct. 29 at 7:30 p.m. The performance on Sunday, Nov. 2, at 2 p.m. is an audio described performance with Spanish language open captioning. The sensory friendly/relaxed performance of āDial M for Murderā is scheduled for Tuesday, Oct. 29, at 7:30 p.m.
Support for the 2024/25 season includes season sponsors the Slutzker Family Foundation, the Dorothy and Marshall M. Reisman Foundation and Advance Media New York. The community partner for āDial M for Murderā is the Syracuse International Film Festival.