The 5 Best Suspense Thrillers

Dial M for Murder
NBC Television/Wikimedia Commons/Public Domain

Unlike mysteries in which the audience searches for clues to figure out “whodunit,” thrillers let viewers know who the bad guys are in advance. Then, the audience spends the rest of the play on the edge of their proverbial seats wondering who will win: the evil doer or the innocent victim?

Here are five of the best stage thrillers in theatrical history.

Wait Until Dark by Frederick Knott

In this slick, slightly dated cat-and-mouse thriller, three con-men manipulate a blind woman. They want the secret contents hidden inside a mysterious doll, and they are willing to go to any lengths to retrieve it — even murder.

Fortunately, the blind protagonist, Suzy Hendrix, is resourceful enough to use her other heightened senses to combat the criminals. In the climactic final act, Suzy gains the advantage when she shuts off all the lights in her apartment. Then, the bad guys are in her territory.

Deathtrap by Ira Levin

A reviewer from Cue Magazine calls Levin’s comic suspense play, “two-thirds a thriller and one-third a devilishly clever comedy.” And the play is indeed devilish! The premise: a formerly successful author is so desperate for another hit, he seems willing to murder a younger more talented writer in order to steal his brilliant manuscript. But that’s only the beginning.

Plot twists and treachery abound throughout Deathtrap. Try to see this one live at your local community theater. However, if you can’t wait for it to be revived, the Michael Caine film is a fun ride as well.

Dial M for Murder by Frederick Knott

Another “Knotty” thriller, this play became an instant theatrical hit as well as an Alfred Hitchcock classic.

Believing that he has planned the perfect crime, a cold-hearted husband hires a thug to murder his wife. The audience members hold their breath as they watch to see what happens next. Will the husband get away with the heinous deed? Will the wife survive? (Don’t hold your breath for too long – the play runs about two hours.)

Perfect Crime by Warren Manzi

This show is currently the longest running play in New York City history. This off-Broadway thriller has been running since 1987. Believe it or not, lead actress Catherine Russell has starred in Perfect Crime since its premiere. That means she performed in over 8,000 shows – missing a mere four performances during the last twenty years. (Can a person stay sane after all those performances?)

The press release says: “The main character is a Harvard-educated psychiatrist accused of bumping off her wealthy British husband. The play is set in an affluent Connecticut town where this suspected murderess conducts her practice out of her secluded mansion. The handsome detective assigned to the case must overcome his own love-interest in the wife as he seeks to discover who murdered the husband, if indeed he was murdered at all.” Sounds like a good combination of suspense and romance.

The Bad Seed by Maxwell Anderson

Based upon the novel by William March, The Bad Seed asks a disturbing question. Are some people born evil? Eight-year old Rhoda Penmark seems to be.

This play might be seriously disturbing for some people. Rhoda behaves sweetly and innocently around adults, but can be murderously devious during one-on-one encounters. There are few plays in which such a young child is portrayed as such a manipulative sociopath. The psychopathic Rhoda makes the creepy ghost girl from The Ring look like a Strawberry Shortcake.

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Bradford, Wade. "The 5 Best Suspense Thrillers." ThoughtCo, Sep. 3, 2021, thoughtco.com/suspense-thriller-plays-2713705. Bradford, Wade. (2021, September 3). The 5 Best Suspense Thrillers. Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/suspense-thriller-plays-2713705 Bradford, Wade. "The 5 Best Suspense Thrillers." ThoughtCo. https://www.thoughtco.com/suspense-thriller-plays-2713705 (accessed March 19, 2024).