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The main character Ruth Pickett plays in her Fringe debut
is a delicate, detached and dreamy spinster who runs an unsuccessful
charity show with only her obsessive-compulsive cat Bobbins for
company.
The stage is thus littered with the store's useless stock,
a haphazard collection of ephemeral trinkets out of their time:
polkadot teapots, plastic cactuses, decorative sombreros, obscure
albums with titles like Mrs Mills's Party bizarre mementoes
all of the minutiae of life.
It's an apt setting, because An Endless Series Of Distractions,
named after Pickett's ida of what life is, is comedy bric-a-brac
too: a ramshackle collection of all sorts of random items - quirky,
unusual, and appealing to a very specific taste.
Many people will very possibly be left cold by this faux-innocent
brand of wide-eyed whimsy, but if it's distinctive, ethereal
comedy you're after, Pickett delivers. For this is a charmingly
sweet hour, enchanting, endearing and frequently laugh-out-loud
funny.
The junk shop, Past Caring, is at the centre of a small, isolated
world where everything is interconnected, like a more benign
Royston Vasey. In it live such oddballs as Alan, the voyeuristic,
lonely, awkward misfit with an unrequited crush on store manager
Jennifer; bearded folk singer Tommy Leghorn, Lionel Richie-obsessed
supermarket lurker Don Swisher, and Mrs Bunn, whose 'entertainment
extravaganza' comprises a series of poor-quality animal impressions.
We meet them all over the course of a week, during which Pickett's
Jennifer relates various surreal anecdotes, beautifully sings
graceful tributes to Hoovers and fictional corporate cleaning-product
mascots and paints a rich picture of this well-imagined world.
Peppering this are some very good jokes, and some truly bad
ones proving something of a letdown given the skill with
which the show as a whole is constructed plus a rather
unfortunate scatological seam of humour which is thankfully more
juvenile than sick.
But this is a show that's more than the sum of its part, thanks
to the rich, unique atmosphere Pickett creates in which to showcase
her impressive performing talents.
Steve Bennett