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:

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