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The duo (or rather in this show, the foursome) hit the audience
with a very simple bit of comedy as they walk in the room and
realise that the Abba song you can hear is actually being sung
by the sound man Phil.
It's not the only inspired piece of comedy in this show and
no surprise that Colin and Fergus won the Writer's Guild award
in 2004. This year they have dispensed with their usual sketch
format in favour of one long sketch well play I suppose
you'd call it accompanied in its execution by their mate Dave
McNeill and, of course, sound man Phil.
Rutherford Lodge is a Victorian detective so desirable he
even has his own theme tunes. In this adventure (we are told
he has had many others) he comes up against Emperor Toot, his
deadly henchman Wong and the heinous three men in a tub with
their terrifying Rub a Dub Dub chant - the last thing that many
a salty seaman heard before a certain and messy death.
The play is full of enjoyably dodgy characters, Yorkshire
man John's wife who enjoys craft fairs and rough sex,' Policeman
Longbody with the John Cleese silly walk and the utterly irrelevant
orphaned urchin 'Me dad's head's carme oaff.'
There's plenty of inspired silliness to be discovered here;
Irishman O'Reilly who only accidentally speaks English, Lodge's
father who used him as a canvas for his paintings and the boy
who drops his lollipop into the dirt - 'little did he know his
great, great grandson would shoot John Lennon.'
The quartet are fond of drawing attention to what they are
doing as there are plenty of self reflexive turns to the audience
to step out of character and Phil the soundman performs the sound
effects in Norman Lovett style 'sound of a wave crashing
over them, whoosh, whoosh'
Great stuff.
Marissa Burgess