Skip to content

Play Spanks the competition

After heating up box offices — and body parts — in the U.S., a hit Canadian stage spoof of the bestselling erotic novel Fifty Shades of Grey is attracting interest around the world as it gets set to debut on this side of the border.
Moran, Whalen
Actors Alice Moran and Patrick Whalen. the stars of "SPANK! The Fifty Shades Parody

After heating up box offices — and body parts — in the U.S., a hit Canadian stage spoof of the bestselling erotic novel Fifty Shades of Grey is attracting interest around the world as it gets set to debut on this side of the border.

Mills Entertainment and Just For Laughs will present SPANK! The Fifty Shades Parody at the Panasonic Theatre in Toronto this Wednesday to Sunday after sold-out shows in Springfield, Mass., Hartford, Conn., and Las Vegas.

The comedy is also due to open in Chicago later this month.

“It feels like a rock concert,” Jim Millan, the Toronto-based director and co-writer, said of the electrifying vibe from the audience.

“Like, the women are screaming — 900 women, some of whom show up with husbands, but not very many.

Mostly it’s a women’s night out and they sort of scream from the time that the lights go down,” he continued in a recent phone interview from the Rio Las Vegas Hotel & Casino, where the show’s audience members have included the latter half of Penn & Teller.

“We anticipated that the love they have for the book would translate into their enthusiasm for a night out but we couldn’t imagine it would be like this.”

The response to the unauthorized musical parody has been so strong, in fact, that shortly after its premiere in Springfield in early October, Creative Artists Agency (CAA) signed on to represent it in the U.S.

Now, two different companies are considering touring SPANK! and two different producers in New York have expressed “strong interest” in an off-Broadway production, said Millan, founder of Crow’s Theatre in Toronto.

Producers in the U.K. and Australia have also inquired about buying the rights to the show or working with the creators to stage it, he added.

Alice Moran, Patrick Whalen and Anne Marie Scheffler star in the Toronto production, about a wannabe erotic fiction writer who sends her kids and husband away to Disneyland so she can write her racy manuscript.

While the show is a parody of E. L. James’s hugely popular Fifty Shades of Grey, which features bondage, discipline, sadism and masochism, it’s completely original material.

“And we’ve had very expensive lawyers, old lawyers, poring over books” to make sure there were no legal issues, said Millan.

“The reason I say that is it just makes me laugh to think that we paid an old lawyer to read Fifty Shades of Grey, and it just makes me laugh more if I think they’re really old and they’re poring over the book, slowly turning the pages, not smiling, and then they read the play.”

The show includes musical numbers as well as improvised material, audience interaction and burlesque-style scenes.

“It feels a bit Second City, a bit Saturday Night Live, a bit Kids in the Hall — at times when the women are screaming, a bit Chippendales,”’ said Millan, who’s known for directing the Kids In The Hall comedy group.

But while there is some sexy stuff in the show, “there’s no attempt to be graphic, and in fact what’s been fun is watching women from, like, 21 to 60 or 71 come to the show,” noted Millan.

Ticket buyers are encouraged to arrive at the theatre early to get a signature SPANK! cocktail.

After the show is a meet and greet with the cast.

Millan said he’s seen many audience members wear silver-grey ties and shirts with the words “Laters, baby,” which are both references to the book.

“The husbands and (others) that get towed along certainly can understand it and they’re laughing, too, and I think it turns out well for them — after they go home,” he noted with a laugh.

The show’s Toronto-based writers, comics and improvisers also include Jon Blair, Ian MacIntyre and Colin Munch.

Millan embarked on the project in mid-August on the suggestion of his American producer-friend, Mike Mills.

At that point, Millan hadn’t read Fifty Shades of Grey so he brought it with him on his summer holiday with his family in Alberta’s Rockies.

“I think women would recognize what has become a very famous cover, and so sitting at a cafe or something (reading the book) while my kids played on teeter-totters with the Rocky Mountains as a backdrop, I think maybe women walking by thought, ‘He’s an interesting dad,”’ said Millan.

“But to me I thought it was hilarious and I, each step of the way, have loved and welcomed conversation about the book....

“Usually when I asked somebody, ‘You’ve read it?’ and almost every woman says, ‘Yes.’ The other answer I get is, ‘I’ve read the trilogy.”’