La Cage Aux Folles
Park Theatre
Reviewed – 19th February 2020
β β β β
“a gem of a play, tightly timed and focussed”
Simon Callowβs translation of this celebrated French farce is a triumph of hilarious camp, full of double entendres, sparkly dresses and genuine affection. Georges and Albin are a gay couple, living above the Cage Aux Folles nightclub. Albin is its ageing star who still looks good in a frock, but is no longer the sexy sylph. Georges is the harassed manager, continually fending of crises. They bicker and squabble, but, as Michael Matus and Paul Hunter show, they still love each other anyway. But their world is about to be turned upside down. Georgesβ son Laurent arrives and announces that he is getting married, and that his girlfriend and her parents are coming to stay. Unfortunately the parents are conservative in the extreme, and the father is running for election on a ticket of morality and rectitude. How can Georges rearrange and tame his gorgeously queeny household and survive their arrival? That is the central dilemma that drives the action, and it is quite a task!
Syrus Lowe is a total class act as the screamingly camp and beautiful employee, Jacob. He struts and pouts his way through the play with a charming outrageousness and his attempt to walk in men’s shoes instead of his high heels is a masterpiece of physical comedy. By the time Laurentβs girlfriend Muriel and her the parents arrive the apartment has been transformed from its boudoir aesthetic to something almost monastic, complete with crucifix, Tim Shorthallβs design creating the physical changes Laurent persuades Georges to make, in his attempt to portray a βrespectableβ family. Of course, it all goes horribly wrong. Laurent has invited his absentee mother to dinner much to the horror of Georges and Albin, and Albin has given up in his attempt to play the masculine uncle, opting for a totally different role that complicates everything. As the dinner party goes rapidly downhill the club downstairs is plunging into chaos and Georges has to act. Throughout the play other drag artists appear from downstairs and a reporter snoops around, looking for dirt. The reporter is played by Mark Cameron, who also has a hilarious cameo as the butcher, a tough guy macho man who turns out to have an unlikely love of art.
Jez Bond has directed a gem of a play, tightly timed and focussed, but feeling like an outrageous disaster as all good farce should. I hope this gets a transfer after itβs life at the Park. It deserves it.
Reviewed by Katre
Photography by Mark Douet
La Cage Aux Folles
Park Theatre until 21st March
LastΒ ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Black Chiffon | β β β β | September 2019
Mother Of Him | β β β β β | September 2019
Fast | β β β β | October 2019
Stray Dogs | β | November 2019
Sydney & The Old Girl | β β β β | November 2019
Martha, Josie And The Chinese Elvis | β β β β β | December 2019
The Snow Queen | β β β β | December 2019
Rags | β β β | January 2020
Shackleton And His Stowaway | β β β | January 2020
Time And Tide | β β β | February 2020
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