The One with All the Laughing – a 5 star show deserving of a
2 part review.
Part 1…..
“The One with the set up”
For 10 seasons, 236 episodes and countless cultural spin
offs, Friends, the 90’s show penned by David Crane and Marta Kauffman set the
standard and blueprint for modern sitcoms.
Its lovable characters gained such followings that a simple change of
hairstyle would send thousands to the salons to insist on a ‘Rachel’. Since its final airing in May 2004, episodes
have garnered a new following, mainly from re-runs on Channel 4 and
Netflix. Those who watched it originally
were now sat with their teenage children watching it again, lamenting the more
simple times it portrayed and even calling out for a reunion (or movie).
“The One with the Stage Show”
Well, fans need fret no more as Friendsical, the Parody Musical
written and directed by Miranda Larson is on tour and guarantees a 5 star laugh-in
which demands multiple watches just to get all the clever in jokes. Fresh from a sell out run at the Edinburgh Fringe, Miranda has brilliantly written a story of a
show within the show, having the ‘real’ Ross Geller put on a musical depicting
his life during the 10 years of the show, his ‘On again, off again’ relationship
with Rachel Green and the gang of 6 caffeine addicts. Often having the cast freezing the scene to
break the 4th wall and engage the audience, Larson lets the viewers
feel they are in on Ross’s plans for his show while the others just wonder “where
is Bonnie” ? The genius of the writing
means at times the cast are asking each other why the show doesn’t match the TV,
even giving each other spoiler alerts based on what their characters should do
later in the run.
“The One where the Brilliant Writer and Director picks
what to use”
Using instantly recognisable tropes and brilliant
observations of episodes, characters and oft-asked questions and fan theories,
Miranda presents an whistlestop run through the 10 year’s story arcs, mashing up
the timelines and injecting comedy music & dance numbers that give the
audience little time to catch breath from laughing. Monica’s Game Night, Ross’s fashion faux pas,
Rachel’s hair, Chandler’s dance, Phoebe’s singing and Joey’s …. well, ‘Joeyisms’
are all there in a magnificent homage, ably supported by Gunter’s unrequited love,
Janices’ OMG’s and cameos from other friends.
Major events such as Naked Thursday, the power cut, saying the wrong
name at a wedding, a gold bikini and getting ready for a dinosaur convention
all feature and are destined to delight friends fans across the country.
“The One where Ross and Rachel are on again (for now)”
Of course, a show like this needs to have a cast that the audience
can recognise and boy do they hit that nail square on the head. The mannerisms of Jamie Lee-Morgan as Ross is
uncanny – he looks like David Schwimmer but even more impressive, his dorky,
foppish fawning and frustrated attempts to control life is comedy gold. Fans will instantly see the Ross on
tranquilizers, the Ross on prom night, the Ross on a break. Playing opposite Lee-Morgan is Charlotte
Elisabeth York as Rachel Green. From her
manic introduction in rain soaked wedding dress, York takes Jennifer Aniston’s spoilt
rich girl persona and gives it both barrels (literally, with her not so subtle
nod to her ever growing ‘points of view’).
The two of them create a fabulous lampoon of their ‘On Again, Off Again
relationship’ which is one of the hilarious musical numbers.
“The One where Monica and Chandler avoid moustaches”
Obsessive Monica with her megalomania towards order and control
is played by Sarah Goggin and she absolutely nails it. Sarah’s perfection of Monica is wonderfully
astute; desperate to be the lynch-pin the group revolve around, she has Monica’s
compulsions, psychoses and desires all tied up in a bundle of seven. Thomas Mitchells plays her beau to be
Chandler, the sweater vest wearing data transponster, with aplomb; always looking for the ‘witty’ one liner, plagued
by a previous love, and destined to do his victory dance with Monica, Mitchells
gives comedy gold with his fear of Richard’s Moustache.
“The One where Phoebe jumps for joy and Duncan steals the
show”
Ally Retberg is ever lovable Phoebe, complete with guitar,
kooky life story and triplets. Ally has
Phoebe’s puppy-like excitability off to a tee, jumping for joy as every little
victory is celebrated and always looking for the sunshine behind the clouds. At present, Joey is played by Duncan Burt (standing
in for Jordan Fox) and, like the rest of the cast, is brilliant in his
portrayal of everyone’s favourite soap doctor.
Whilst there is little evidence of Joey’s Queens’ accent, his innocent
misunderstandings and love for sandwiches are immediately recognisable, as his
is charisma and charm for the ladies.
Particularly impressive is Duncan’s recollection of all of Joey’s lady
friends, a list that rivals the colours of Joseph’s Dream Coat.
Whilst the main cast also play one or two other cameos, the
main support comes from Rebecca Withers who pops up as Gunter, Janice, a
brilliant Richard and an hilarious Emily, giving the scenes even more comedic
richness.
“The One where you go buy tickets”
Friendsical is a 2 hour spectacularly funny, heart warming
look back to TV for simpler times before the real world pressures of Brexit,
Trump, Global Warming, Recession and without the ‘wokeness’ of current PC
correctness dominated the writers room.
Friendsical is on at the wonderful Northern Stage until Saturday 6th and then on tour – check out the website for dates and
tickets - https://britishtheatre.com/friendsical-uk-tour/
Part 2….
A brilliantly funny, clever and witty retelling of the story
of Friends. It’s like going to see your
favourite aunt who is now in a nursing home with dementia – she remembers most
of what happened but it’s not exactly the same, the timelines get a bit
confused but overall you can sit and laugh at the shared memories.
No comments:
Post a Comment