HOME PAGE SITE GUIDE SEARCH REVIEWS REVIEW ARCHIVES ADVERTISING AT CURTAINUP FEATURES NEWS Etcetera and Short Term Listings LISTINGS Broadway Off-Broadway NYC Restaurants BOOKS and CDs OTHER PLACES Berkshires London California New Jersey DC Connecticut Philadelphia Elsewhere QUOTES TKTS PLAYWRIGHTS' ALBUMS LETTERS TO EDITOR FILM LINKS MISCELLANEOUS Free Updates Masthead Writing for Us |
A CurtainUp London Review
No Naughty Bits
Ed Hall directs Steve Thompson’s new comedy about Michael, not Palin we have been assured, (Harry Hadden-Paton) and Terry, similarly not Gilliam, (Sam Alexander) suing ABC for cuts made in their comedy series without their consent. The story of what was censored is almost as anarchic a romp as the original Pythonic television series. Charity Wakefield plays Nancy, the American "fixer" who approaches Michael in London with the proposal that they should challenge the American network’s alteration of their writing. The elimination of the "naughty bits" makes a nonsense of much of the humour which is the best joke. Issy van Randwyck plays to perfection Franklin, the po- faced, unamused but ballsy, ABC executive with the sense of humour failure. How she keeps a straight face throughout, I do not know! She must have had lessons from Queen Victoria. Clive Rowe is brought on board as the heavyweight US attorney for the Python team and the actual court hearing is presided over by Matthew Marsh as a whimsical Judge Lasker, whose random comments take us off in all kinds of delightful directions. Just as the Pythonites are priding themselves that their attorney Osterberg has watched every episode or every series, he explains that this was in the last 24 hours - a labour not of love but of professionalism. Franklin calls their comedy "Frat humour" and after the ABC representative has said, "People in Idaho will watch this!" Terry questions, "They don’t have genitals in Idaho?" Act One closes with the highly camp Python version of a secret love story between two Air Force men in wartime to the music of 633 Squadron or one of those films about flying. The BBC is described as a liberal parent in allowing irreverent humour. Clive Rowe’s attorney has a squeaky nose whenever he rubs it but I wasn’t sure why, but it was very funny. Act Two is a sheer delight because of Judge Lasker’s off the wall interjections, "Me with my unhappy face," he says predicting a bad outcome for one of the parties and when the ABC lawyer asserts that they didn’t change the scripts but the videos, the judge says "Let’s lay off the grumpy sarcasm!" The performances are all believable, Harry Hadden-Paton’s mild mannered Michael and Sam Alexander’s zany Terry with his dislike of his fellow countrymen, the Americans. Ed Hall as always directs with verve and designer Francis O’Connor has created some beautiful Pythonesque visuals. If you like Monty Python humour you will enjoy No Naughty Bits and the interesting conclusion to the court case which I will not divulge here.
|
|