I have really been enjoying the good weather lately, afforded
us by the Olympic weather gods in London. In the space of one week I’ve done
Camberwell, the South Bank, St Katherine’s Dock and Little Venice.
I went to Little Venice to watch a sketch show by Footlights
in a little theatre above a pub; productions above, or below, pubs are often my
favourites; there is something authentic and intimate about performances above
pubs. My pub meal was both affordable and delicious by the way (see below).
(my dinner at Canal Club*Perfect Strangers*Paddington Basin)
The Footlights are celebrating their fiftieth year at the
Edinburgh Fringe. Fifty years ago an intrepid troop comprising; Tim
Brooke-Taylor, Graham Chapman, Ian Lang and John Cleese, produced by some guy
called Trevor (Nunn!) headed for Edinburgh. Next you will need a bit of
Cambridge context. In Cambridge freshers are invited into ‘families’ for their
pastoral care in the opening weeks of their time. Surprisingly comedy runs in
my Cambridge ‘genes’ as both my Cambridge ‘Dad’ and my Cambridge ‘grandson’ are
Footlighters and current comedians in their own right; perhaps I was just the
carrier?! My Cambridge grandson was in this year’s quartet of genius.
This show is funny. It features excellent writing, wittily
combining a number of story lines into subtle but evident themes – I think Ryan
O’Sullivan will go far. All the funniest tropes, aliens, politicians, daughters,
husbands, and neurotic mothers were present. The comedic value in scenes often
relies on wordplay and context, the jokes work twice – once when you only know
some context and three times as funny when five minutes later, you understand
the backstory – a tactic often employed by Sheeps a Cambridge alumni comedy
troop. The show was directed by Abi Tedder and Jonny Lennard; the former’s
impact on the performance was evident as the style of the comedy was thoroughly
reminiscent of the ADC pantomime 2009 which she co-wrote (Ali Baba and the
Forty Thieves).
I really enjoyed the threads too of my Cambridge experience;
the cast features two Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic graduates (no mean feat
when the average number of ASNACs in a year across the university is 25!) and
similarly two out of five cast (three if we’re counting crew!) were alumni of
Homerton, my dear alma mater. It was good to feel so connected to a show that
amused me in an hour, featured my own Cambridge relatives, was preceded by good
food and good beer and gorgeous weather. Also did I mention it was good value
for money.
The good news is you can still catch this show. I changed
the habit of a life time and caught the show at the start of its run rather
than the end. ‘Perfect Strangers’ is showing at the Pleasance Dome at the
Edinburgh Fringe between 2nd and 27th August, then tours
America from 4th – 22nd September (catch it if it comes
near you Tommy!), British schools (25th-29th Sept) and
then returns to Cambridge for Freshers’ Week (2nd -6th
October). Genuinely, this was funny and did not feature any ‘student’
references – you’ll love it. Go!
Hi Bec,
ReplyDeleteThanks for the donation! Hope you're well. I got back ok,
Mel.