
Based upon the 1915 adventure novel by John Buchanan, The 39 Steps garnered a wider audience in 1935 when Alfred Hitchcock directed his mystery thriller variation of the story. The plot and presentation underwent a decidedly comedic interpretation in the mid-90s when Simon Corble and Nobby Dimon wrote a stage play based on the work premiered. In 2005, playwright Patrick Barlow further adapted the stage play. In the current iteration of the play, every single character from Hitchcock’s film is played by a four-member cast, and comedy ensues. That adaptation of The 39 Steps is opening Friday, February 16 at Playhouse 615 (11920 Lebanon Rd, Mt. Juliet, TN) Directed by Diane Bearden-Enright, Playhouse 615‘s The 39 Steps stars Philip David Black, Erin Grace Bailey, Alyssa Borg and Barclay Randall.
As the cast was preparing for opening night, I recently had the chance to chat with them for my latest Rapid Fire 20Q. What follows are those conversations.
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RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH CAST OF PLAYHOUSE 615’s THE 39 STEPS
RAPID FIRE WITH THE 39 STEPS’ CLOWN 2, ALYSSA BORG
JHPENTERTAINMENT: I understand this is your first time on stage at Playhouse 615. What’s the experience like so far?
ALYSSA BORG: Working with Playhouse 615 for The 39 Steps has been a hoot! From the moment I stepped into the theater for auditions, each rehearsal has been filled with laughs. For me, Playhouse 615 has proven to be the epitome of community theater in the best possible way – performers, technicians, designers, all working together to create this magical and ephemeral beast (a play) all because they love the art of theater.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: You’re playing Clown 2…what’s your favorite aspect of the role?
ALYSSA BORG: Haha, well, first, I love that I’m Clown #2 – in my mind there was obviously some sort of placement competition in the clowning community, like landing second chair in an orchestra. And having worked as a paid mime long, long ago, I love the physicality of this kind of comedy, plus it’s a fun acting challenge to play so many different characters with different accents.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: Speaking of the different characters, of the multiple roles you play, do you have a favorite?
ALYSSA BORG: Mr. McGarriggle, hands down. Drunk. Scottish. Lots of one word responses. What’s not to love?
JHPENTERTAINMENT: What’s the most challenging aspect of portraying multiple roles in a single show?
ALYSSA BORG: Remembering all the costume changes.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: As Clown 2, you share the stage with Barclay Randall, who’s playing Clown 1. I’m about to chat with Barclay, so I gotta know…How is Barclay as a scene partner?
ALYSSA BORG: Oh, Barclay. He’s Clown #1 for a reason. Also I will say, I now know too much about Barclay’s love of breasts – mainly the pair he wears in the show.
RAPID FIRE WITH BARCLAY RANDALL, THE 39 STEPS’ CLOWN 1
JHPENTERTAINMENT: When you tell folks you’re playing Clown 1 in The 39 Steps, how do you describe your role(s) in the show?
BARCLAY RANDALL: First off, when I tell my friends I’m playing a character called “Clown 1”, they respond, “Ah. Typecasting.” Then I explain it’s actually something like 15 different characters who are all goofy, fun, farcical caricatures. Again, “Ah. Typecasting.”
JHPENTERTAINMENT: Just prior to chatting with you, I spoke with Alyssa Borg and asked her about sharing the stage with you…so I’ll return the favor. How is Alyssa as a scene partner?
BARCLAY RANDALL: Wonderful! Alyssa’s trained in improv and has come up with some great bits during rehearsals that take the comedy to a higher level. Or maybe it’s a lower level? Whichever, it’s a funnier level.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: Playhouse 615’s The 39 Steps is being directed by Diane Bearden-Enright. Like myself, you’ve known Diane for years. What’s she like as a director?
BARCLAY RANDALL: She’s a very funny lady. Always has been. At least in the mmm-mmm-mmm decades I’ve known her. And she understands comedy. She can find the beats in a scene. She can find the funny in a scene. And she’s making us doing ridiculous things! I love her!
JHPENTERTAINMENT: Mr. Memory is among the characters you portray in The 39 Steps. Staying on theme with his talent of remembering things…what’s the most random piece of trivia that takes up space in your brain?
BARCLAY RANDALL: The second European explorer to step foot into what is now Tennessee—the second, mind you, not the first, who was Hernando DeSoto—but the second, was named Juan Pardo. That’s the one thing I remember from Tennessee History in college at MTSU.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: Can we just talk about the train scene in which you play…what?…three or four characters within a matter of seconds? How much fun are you having with that?
BARCLAY RANDALL: The train scene is a great distillation of the entire show: lightning-paced and physical and over-the-top. In that scene, I get to play a foppish underwear salesman, an adolescent boy, an old lady, and a Scottish cop, all in the span of a couple of minutes. I think if I keep working it, and don’t die, it’ll be pretty funny.
RAPID FIRE WITH ERIN GRACE BAILEY, THE 39 STEPS’ ANNABELLA, MARGARET & PAMELA
JHPENTERTAINMENT: To start things off can you describe each of the three characters you play in Playhouse 615’s The 39 Steps using only one word for each of them?
ERIN GRACE BAILEY: Margaret – Sugar, Annabella – Spice, Pamela – Everything Nice (I know that’s two words, but it was too good of a quip not to use.)
JHPENTERTAINMENT: Early on, Annabella’s death scene is typically played with some fun almost slapstick physicality. In fact, the entire show is resplendent with over-the-top laughter inducing action. How much fun are you and your cast mates having with that aspect of the show?
ERIN GRACE BAILEY: It’s been an amazing and really refreshing experience. I think most actors would agree that high comedy like this is a muscle that most of us don’t get to stretch very often, so I really try to appreciate it when the opportunity arrives. It’s so wonderful to be able to walk into a rehearsal room and truly just “play.”
JHPENTERTAINMENT: If you had to pick…and I guess since I’m asking, you do…of the three characters you’re playing, who’s your favorite and why?
ERIN GRACE BAILEY: Each character is pretty different, which is a fun challenge, especially since a lot of female comedy characters tend to get bogged down in being one thing. Personally, I think I resonate the most with Pamela. Some of that’s probably because she appears in the show longer than the other two characters, so she has a little more depth. She’s got a tough exterior, but deep down, she’s a hopeless romantic which gives me a lot to play with for her.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: I love that the play is peppered with nods to Alfred Hitchcock, who, of course, directed the 1935 film adaptation loosely based on the original 1915 adventure novel. Prior to being cast, were you familiar with the show and its history?
ERIN GRACE BAILEY: Not thoroughly. I love old movies and had heard of it, but I didn’t have a lot of background knowledge. I have watched it since being cast, of course. It’s actually quite shocking how much of the play’s script parallels with the film. It really proves how much context affects how you read dialogue. Aside from the text though, it’s been fun explaining this show to those who haven’t heard of it. When they hear the name Alfred Hitchcock, they usually get pretty excited.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: Like the Hitchcock film, the play takes place in and around London in 1935. Had you lived in that time, what do you think you’d have enjoyed most about the era?
ERIN GRACE BAILEY: The theatre! I think we’ve discussed before how much I love British comedy. Noel Coward‘s one of my favorite playwrights, and he was really starting to make a name for himself around this time. I would love to go back and see one of his shows. I often think about how exciting it must have been to get dressed up and go out and see a show, especially before television.
RAPID FIRE WITH PHILIP DAVID BLACK, THE 39 STEPS’ RICHARD HANNAY
JHPENTERTAINMENT: A quick peek at your show bio reveals that while you were recently an understudy in another area production, being cast as Richard Hannay in Playhouse 615’s The 39 Steps marks your Tennessee premiere on-stage. How has the experience been thus far?
PHILIP DAVID BLACK: It’s been great to act again. I used to perform a good bit right out of college, but it’s been a minute. Also, almost all of the acting work I did in times past involved travel to parts of the country where I had no family or friends, so it’s a special treat to get to play this part and have loved ones actually close enough that I can reasonably guilt trip them into attendance.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: Who is Richard Hannay to you?
PHILIP DAVID BLACK: He’s a lost soul. He’s a Brit that has been living abroad in Canada and has only recently returned to London. So as our story starts, he’s pretty isolated and out of sorts. Even though this story is set in the 1930s, I feel like he’s very relatable to today, when a lot of us find ourselves both isolated and a bit depressed. But he’s about to have an awfully big adventure.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: As the show’s title indicates, much of the action revolves around a mysterious organization known as The 39 Steps. IF you were to found a mysterious organization of your own, what would it be called and what would its purpose be?
PHILIP DAVID BLACK: If I were to found a mysterious organization, I would never reveal its secrets. However, assuming I am too lazy to do so and/or I am not simply covering for a much more sinister organization I have in fact already started, let’s pretend it would be called the Brotherhood of Suspense. It would be a secret society of people who believe suspenders are better than belts and who signal their allegiance to each other with strange codes and seemingly insignificant hand gestures. We would exist to bring down the belt industry. And we would succeed.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: Give me a plot summary in ten words or less.
PHILIP DAVID BLACK: Four actors. One hundred and fifty characters. Comedic adventure ensues.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: What do you hope audiences take away from The 39 Steps?
PHILIP DAVID BLACK: I hope that watching the cast run around like crazy people performing such a demanding show reminds them that life is an adventure, and that small groups of people can get a lot done when they work together to achieve positive things in the world. And I hope they laugh at the jokes.
Playhouse 615‘s The 39 Steps opens Friday, February 16 and runs through Sunday, March 3 with shows at 7:30p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and Sunday matinees at 2:30p.m. Tickets are $20 ($17 for Military & Seniors) and are available for purchase HERE, by calling the box-office at 615.319.7031, or at the door an hour before each performance.
Next up at Playhouse 615 is Henrik Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler, on stage March 21 thru April 29. For more on the show and to keep up with Playhouse 615, check out their website or find them on Facebook.
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RAPID FIRE WITH CLOSER’s ANGELA GIMLIN
JHPENTERTAINMENT: You play Anna. What can you tell me about her?
RAPID FIRE WITH CLOSER’s BRITT BYRD
BRITT BYRD: I was quite reckless in my 20s, yeah. But who wasn’t in one way or another? I learned a lot of hard but valuable lessons from sabotaging my own happiness in those days, and I like to think I’ve grown up a lot since then, so I cut Alice a lot of slack for her mistakes.
RAPID FIRE WITH CLOSER’s ROSS CANALES
JHPENTERTAINMENT: There are some very intense scenes in Closer. How do you prepare for such somber moments in the script?
RAPID FIRE WITH CLOSER’s JEREMY JAMES CARMICHAEL
JHPENTERTAINMENT: Closer is being presented at the Annex on the second floor above Third Coast Comedy Club. What’s the advantage of presenting this particular show in such an intimate space?
RAPID FIRE WITH STEEL MAGNOLIAS’ CLAIREE, JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN
RAPID FIRE WITH STEEL MAGNOLIAS’ OUISER, CHERYL SINGTON
RAPID FIRE WITH STEEL MAGNOLIAS’ TRUVY, COURTNEY LINAM
RAPID FIRE WITH STEEL MAGNOLIAS’ SHELBY, MACY SAULS
RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH GIRL FROM THE NORTH COUNTRY’s MATT MANUEL
RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH GIRL FROM THE NORTH COUNTRY’s JEREMY WEBB

RAPID FIRE WITH THE LION IN WINTER DIRECTOR, CLAY HILLWIG
RAPID FIRE WITH JACK E. CHAMBERS, HENRY II IN THE LION IN WINTER
JHPENTERTAINMENT: As the central patriarch, you share the stage with Kay Ayers as Eleanor, Henry’s Queen, as well as Elizabeth Burrow, Henry’s rumored mistress. What’s been it been like sharing the stage with each of these actresses?
RAPID FIRE WITH KAY AYERS, ELEANOR IN THE LION IN WINTER
JHPENTERTAINMENT: While you’ve shared the stage with Clay Hillwig in the past, this marks the first time he’s directed you in a show. During the rehearsal process, what is it about Clay’s directorial style that you admire most?
RAPID FIRE WITH ELIZABETH BURROW, AlAIS IN THE LION IN WINTER
JHPENTERTAINMENT: In addition to your on-stage role, you’ve also been part of the technical crew for The Lion in Winter, as scenic painter. What can you tell me about the set?
From the moment Katerina McCrimmon takes the stage, she IS Fanny Brice. She’s got the period-authentic New York dialect, the exaggerated facial expressions, but most of all, she’s got the voice. Ok, so the voice might be more what audiences expect thanks to the aforementioned Streisand portrayal, but I’m here to tell you McCrimmon makes the character her own while carefully maneuvering through, and well beyond what could easily be brushed off as an impression. Throughout the show, including more familiar territory of musical moments like I’m the Greatest Star, Don’t Rain on My Parade and People, and my personal favorite, His Love Makes Me Beautiful, McCrimmon vocal range, strength and ability prove time and time again she’s the perfect powerhouse to introduce Fanny Brice to a whole new generation of musical theatre fans. 
Izaiah Montague Harris plays the always in-step and dependable Eddie Ryan, a dancer/choreographer friend of Fanny’s who’s always there to help her with her career and pick up the pieces when Nicky is out of step. When I say Harris’ Eddie is in-step, I mean it. One of the best non-Fanny-centric moments of the show features Harris in a tap-tactic dance sequence. Which reminds me, kudos to the show’s costume designer, Susan Hilferty. Yes, all of Fanny’s period-perfect costumes are fabulous, but it was during Harris’ tap number that I notice a wonderfully clever costuming detail. Hiferty has sewn the occasional rhinestone throughout the pant legs of Harris costume, which catch the light of his fancy footwork and draw the eye throughout the dancer’s entire body, allowing those of us who picked up on this seemingly random detail the joy of watching the full mechanics, precision and skill of the dance.
Speaking of Scrooge, Matthew Carlton is simply brilliant in the role, and it’s a bit of a full-circle moment! His bio reveals his first foray into A Christmas Carol at The Rep came in 1990 when he was cast as Scrooge’s young nephew, Fred. Over the years, Carlton says he’s played a dozen or more characters in eleven different production. I’m here to tell you though, he better free up his winter calendar going forward because it’s official, Matthew Carlton now ranks among my favorites to have ever taken on the role. He’s in good company, too, considering Sir Michael Caine’s Scrooge from The Muppet Christmas Carol tops the list! What’s interesting about Carlton’s performance is, it’s all-encompassing. Yes, he can mean-mug with the best of them, but the scene that struck me most, and may or may not have made my eyes sweat takes place during a party when Scrooge is transported back in time by Kris Sidberry’s beautiful Ghost of Christmas Past. In the scene, Carlton’s Scrooge sees his beloved Belle (Ivory Bodnar) enjoying the merriment of a dance with fellow holiday revelers. Caught up in the moment, but forgetting that he’s only a shadow presence, Scrooge attempts to join in the fun, getting caught at one point in the center of a quartet of dancers. Of course unseen because he isn’t actually there in his present form, he’s ignored as the dancers continue moving about without him. Within just a few minutes as this scene plays out, Carlton, under the keen direction of Brewer, runs the gamut of emotion from excitement to regret and sadness. Being a self-confessed Scrooge myself, I was a puddle.
You know you’re a great actor when just a projection of your face can elicit an internal squee. That’s the exact reaction when another longtime Nashville favorite, Brian Webb Russell’s face appeared on Scrooge’s door as the “dead to begin with” Jacob Marley. In an early scene, when Marley visits Scrooge to warn him of the coming visitors, Russell’s Marley rattles his chains as he floats about the room. More fanciful than frightening, a joy to watch. He’s equally enjoyable when paired with Deb Meeks (making her Rep debut) as a rather boisterous party-goer who’s husband (Russell) is partaking of a few too many Christmas ‘spirits’ of his own. These two need to be paired together more!
Can’t talk about A Christmas Carol without talking about the Spirits. Mentioned above, Kris Sidberry, making her Nashville Rep debut, is simply magical as Ghost of Christmas Past. Delightful, sweet and fun…all the things we think of most when we remember the past are personified in Sidberry’s performance. She doesn’t just shine in her performance, she sparkles. In part, thanks to Costumer Designer, Melissa Durmon’s literally and figuratively glowing gown!
Brian Charles Rooney, seen last holiday season as Buddy the Elf in Nashville Rep’s Elf, is larger than life as Ghost of Christmas Present, and what a present his performance is. Towering above Carlton’s Scrooge (did I see light-up disco platforms under Rooney’s velvet robe?) Rooney’s Ghost of Christmas Present is cheeky, loud and bossy. Everything you could wish for in a ghost guide. Again, kudos to Durmon, and added kudos to her and her wig department team for transforming Rooney into an almost unrecognizable bacchanalian party god with flowing ginger locks and beard. Didn’t think I was into scruffy gingers, but you never know. As mentioned previously, Rooney is among those featured throughout the action as a caroler. I have it on good authority he had been dealing with a bit of laryngitis during the opening days of the show. All I know is, if that’s Rooney with laryngitis, belting out and hitting those unfathomable soprano-high notes, the rest of the run the audiences were in for a treat.
Round out the ghostly trio is Ben Friesen as Ghost of Christmas Future. Even though the show is about to enter its final week at the time of this review being posted, I’m a staunch believer that spoilers do just that…they spoil aspects of shows that are meant to surprise and entertain. To that end, Friesen’s Ghost of Christmas Future definitely delivers. Visually hauntingly brilliant and looming large, Friesen’s appearance is definitely a powerful one. Suffice it to say, his performances a Ghost of Christmas Future would no doubt make Jim Henson proud..and that’s as much of a spoiler as you’ll get from me. Not to fret though, he’s also featured throughout the show, most notably as Dick Wilkins, a friend and colleague of younger Scrooge.
The entire cast is filled with great supporting performances. Mention should be made of Max Fleischhacker as Scrooge’s Nephew Fred, Ethan H. Jones as Mr. Blakeley, Abby Hopper as Alice Cratchit, Alex Hillaker as Henry Cratchit, David Long III as Peter Cratchit, Shelby Talbert as Martha Cratchit, Elle Wesley as Belinda Cratchit, Caroline Henry as Alice Cratchit and Emily Hooper and David Matthew Clark (on alternate nights) each sharing the role as Tiny Tim. 
RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH IT’s A WONDERFUL LIFE’s GEOFF DAVIN
RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH IT’s A WONDERFUL LIFE’s MARIAH PARRIS
RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH IT’s A WONDERFUL LIFE’s CALEB SHORE
RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH IT’s A WONDERFUL LIFE’s GEROLD OLIVER

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH A CHRISTMAS CAROL DIRECTOR MICAH-SHANE BREWER
RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH A CHRISTMAS CAROL’s GHOST OF CHRISTMAS PAST, KRIS SIDBERRY
RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH A CHRISTMAS CAROL’s GHOST OF CHRISTMAS FUTURE, BEN FRIESEN
RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH A CHRISTMAS CAROL’s GHOST OF CHRISTMAS PRESENT, BRIAN CHARLES ROONEY
RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH A TUNA CHRISTMAS DIRECTOR, MEMORY STRONG-SMITH
RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH A TUNA CHRISTMAS STAGE MANAGER/SET DESIGNER/GRUMPY ELF, ERIC CRAWFORD
RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH A TUNA CHRISTMAS STAR, MATTHEW N. SMITH
RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH A TUNA CHRISTMAS STAR, DANIEL VINCENT