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By
Giles Broadbent on October 2, 2008 11:06 AM
Where the Blackadder feared to tread – that is the territory occupied with resolution and wit by Simon Munnery and Miles Jupp in Stewart Lee’s take on the first Elizabethan age.
The Queen is played with the sort of comic force of persuasion that Munnery brought to his TV persona in Attention Scum! She/he repairs to her trampette to bounce off her anger while Miles Jupp – comically versatile in a Hugh Laurie vein – energetically counts the ways he loves her. This is advanced panto fare – with knowing quips to the audience, sharp ad libs, mashed potato as a form of torture and soiled underpants as a makeshift crown. But amid the setpiece ribaldry, there’s nifty wordplay, dextrous acting, and, despite the odd codpiece gag, the script happily steers clear of the lowest common denominator. The
audience at Greenwich Theatre was not large and the wind outside was
whipping and cold. The pair – old hands at this kind of thing
– did a handsome job of warming an initially bewildered audience
(what is this, we wondered as Raleigh gave us a slide show featuring
Jimmy Carr), finally bringing us to our feet for a closing rendition
of the national anthem. |
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