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You are at:Home » How director Jillian Keiley uses perspective to guide the audience’s eye in Dial M for Murder at Theatre Calgary
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How director Jillian Keiley uses perspective to guide the audience’s eye in Dial M for Murder at Theatre Calgary

1 October 20255 Mins Read

iPhoto caption: Tyrell Crews and Stafford Perry in ‘Dial M For Murder.’ Photo by Trudie Lee.



A latchkey, a handbag, and a letter: the plot of Frederick Knott’s classic thriller Dial M for Murder hinges on small objects. For his hit film adaptation of this 1952 play about a man who murders his wife to nab her inheritance, Alfred Hitchcock highlighted essential details via close-ups and unexpected cinematographic angles. But in a live production, how should the audience know where to look?

“I’m in a [750]-seat theatre. I can’t see a key. I lose my keys every day in my house!” reflected Jillian Keiley, director of Jeffrey Hatcher’s 2022 Dial M adaptation, in a co-production between Theatre Calgary (where it opens first) and Vancouver’s Arts Club Theatre Company (where it starts performances in February 2026).

Over Zoom, Keiley explained that she guides the audience’s eye through one central concept: perspective. This prominently manifests in Anton deGroot’s 1950s apartment set, which rests on a turntable that revolves with near-imperceptible slowness. As the show progresses, “the audience should feel like [they’re] actually changing perspective,” said Keiley, artistic director of Ottawa’s National Arts Centre English Theatre from 2012 to 2022. 

Shekhar Paleja, Emily Dallas, and Tyrell Crews in Dial M For Murder. Set design by Anton deGroot. Photo by Trudie Lee.

Keiley and costume designer Jolane Houle complement this rotating scenic design with a colour palette that evolves as time passes between the script’s five acts (here presented with one intermission). The hope is that if in one section, many of the actors are wearing brown, the audience will start subconsciously paying attention to narratively important mahogany props or set pieces.

“We’re just helping them see what they need to see and when,” said Keiley. “[Thanks to colour], things that were in the background suddenly go to the foreground. So if there’s a [green] lamp back here and it’s the green section, you never noticed the lamp before, but suddenly [it] becomes important.”

Keiley drew parts of these staging techniques from the Gestalt principles — laws of design and psychology that categorize how people recognize patterns and parse complex images. The turntable plays with the principle of “proximity,” while colour grouping is a facet of “similarity.”

She introduced Gestalt to the actors on the first day of rehearsals, and now a couple of the principles make themselves felt in the actors’ performances. “There’s one that is called ‘common fate,’” said Keiley. “[It’s] that everything is going in one direction, and then one person is going in the other direction. And that can be that everybody’s talking, talking, talking, and one person’s silent… [or that] everybody’s looking in one direction, and one person’s looking [the other] way.

“And there’s another one, which is ‘continuity’ — it’s really cool,” she continued, speaking of a concept unrelated to cinematic continuity editing. “One of the actors uses it a lot, and it’s really great. So they’ll be walking while they’re saying something, and then when they drop the clue, they’ll walk backward, [and then keep walking forward].”

Keiley emphasized that because Dial M is a thriller and not a murder mystery, the plot should be legible (though not obvious). One goal of the production is to make “the audience feel smart.” And calibrating this effect requires smarts on the part of the production team. For example, to keep the lighting of the set’s doors and windows consistent as the stage rotates, designer Itai Erdal must gradually dim certain lights and intensify others.

“Lighting-wise, there’s a lot of math, constant math,” Keiley said. “I have an assistant director, [Anna Cummer], who’s quite brilliant [and] really good at math, thank God. In the rehearsal room, I’m actually on a rolling chair, and she’s like, ‘come this way, go that way’ — she’s directing me where to be and when.

“It’s very hard to rehearse,” Keiley continued. “The actors are good as gold, and they’re very talented, but this is a leap of faith for them… Because for them, in the room, the proscenium is changing all the time: The proscenium is me.”

Shekhar Paleja, Olivia Hutt, and Tyrell Crews in Dial M For Murder. Photo by Trudie Lee.

Considering the high level of difficulty, I found myself wondering: Why bother with a stage adaptation when Hitchcock already tells the story with such precision? Keiley’s response was that this sense of overcoming the impossible is a large part of what makes the project — and theatre in general — special.

“There’s a magic in theatre, and a spiritual part of theatre, that’s really important. It’s the gathering, but it’s also: ‘How did you make me believe that? How did you do that?’” she said. “That’s the mystery I play with in all my shows. And it’s a tightrope every time, especially when you’re doing something new like this… The math says it’ll work, but I actually don’t know. I have no idea… I’m thanking [Theatre Calgary artistic director] Stafford Arima, who brought me in to do the show, because you can get a lot of people to do a show like this, and just do the set [in the stage directions]. But he knew I’d do something different with it, and he was interested.

“I don’t ever read a script and think ‘OK, there’s a couch in the middle.’ I don’t see it that way. I can’t help it,” she continued. “I just want to shake it… like, to get the model, and shake the box. But it requires a ton of trust from my designers. And sometimes I fail. A lot, actually… When it works, it’s really exciting. But,” she repeated, “it’s a tightrope.”


Dial M for Murder runs until October 26 at Theatre Calgary. Tickets are available here.


Theatre Calgary is an Intermission partner. Learn more about Intermission’s partnership model here.


Liam Donovan

WRITTEN BY

Liam Donovan

Liam is Intermission’s senior editor. He lives in Toronto.

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