Walk this way (humor)

For the song by Aerosmith, see Walk This Way.
A "Walk this way" sign on a brick building in Holt, Norfolk, indicating the way to the Holt Foot Clinic.

"Walk this way" is a recurrent pun in a number of movies and television shows, most recently in movies by Mel Brooks.[1] It may be derived from an old vaudeville joke. It refers to the double usage of "way" in English as both a direction and a manner.

One version of the old joke goes like this: A heavy-set woman goes into a drug store and asks for talcum powder. The bowlegged clerk says, "Walk this way," and the woman answers, "If I could walk that way I would not need talcum powder!"

Another version adds a visual, not any less vaudevillian, dimension to the joke: One character would say, "Walk this way" and walks off in a limping or waddling or otherwise odd manner, and the second character would follow, mimicking the mannerisms of the first.

1930s-1960s

Since the 1970s

At least three of Mel Brooks' productions feature the pun:

About 41 minutes into History of the World, Part I, Miriam tells the prisoners to walk this way. In Spaceballs, Yogurt leads Lone Starr and co. to his merchandising store by saying "Cmon, walk this way."

In the Tim Conway and Don Knotts 1980 comedy, The Private Eyes, (their final movie together) the recently injured and slouching butler of the mansion, Justin (played by Bernard Fox), escorts the two detectives down a hallway with the line "Walk this way." The duo mimic him until Knotts realizes they are doing so and abruptly smacks Conway to to stop walking that way.

References

  1. Comedy Writing Secrets, p. 60; Melvin Helitzer, F & W Publications, 1992. ISBN 0-89879-510-9
  2. Kiss Me Like A Stranger: My Search for Love and Art, p. 151; Gene Wilder, Macmillan, 2005.
  3. "Walk their way | Aerosmith News". AeroForceOne. Retrieved January 20, 2011.
  4. "Double Take", The New York Review of Books

External links

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