Newsrevue is the longest running show on the Fringe. According
to one enthusiastic flyerer on the Royal Mile, it's the longest
running show in the world, which the 54-year-old The Mousetrap
might take issue with. Whether it's an overstatement for marketing
purposes, or just that this particular flyerer had been working
the Mile so long he'd forgotten a world outside of Edinburgh
exists, I can't say. What I can say is that Newsrevue is a brilliant
show.
It would be easy to criticise Newsrevue for having no ambition.
But it's been going for as long as it has because its remit
is simple: jokes about big events in the previous year's news.
Basically the sort of gags you'd get in Private Eye or on Have
I Got News For You, but done as sketches and song parodies. It's
not a particularly lofty goal, admittedly, but it's a worthy
one and one which the show accomplishes with aplomb.
Newsrevue focuses its satirical ire on politicians and celebrities,
who it skewers to great effect. The targets are generally fairly
obvious, such Tony Blair, a reforming Take That, John Prescott,
Wayne Rooney or religious fundamentalists. But while the targets
are the same as ever the approach is different and original.
And when a sketch isn't quite enough, we're treated to a satirical
song parody with a choreographed dance routine. Sure, not all
the cast are natural singers but it's the sharp nature of the
lyrics that's really important, and they're certainly not lacking
here. There's a brilliant routine involving John Prescott and
Blur's Country House I'm sure you can begin to imagine.
What really lifts the show up into truly terrific territory
though is in its attempts to satirise not just the contents of
the news, but the nature of the news itself. A running theme
is how much the news broadcasters and newspapers try to scare
us as it makes good entertainment. It's here that the Newsrevue
bears its teeth. It's just a shame they didn't make more of this,
as it's an area many modern satirical outlets steer clear of.
Newsrevue is a show that knows what it wants to do and does
it brilliantly. It's not perfect, but it's close.
Dean Love