Thirty Christmases
New Diorama Theatre
Reviewed – 8th December 2017
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“a welcomed breather from the usual pomp and cheesiness of Christmas shows”
With songs about not being a prick at Christmas or having sex with a reindeer, itβs fairly safe to say that Jonny Donahoeβs Thirty Christmases is probably not a show for all the family to see, even though family is what lies at the heart of this anecdotal comedy. If youβre feeling a little bah humbug this season or fed up with the sparkly, tacky commercialism of the whole Christmas period, then this hilariously risquΓ©, yet, heart-warming story is for you.
Donahoe and Rachel Parris play two siblings, who havenβt had a decent Christmas in years, but want to put this right. However, before they can do such a thing, there are a few tiny issues such as their 10-year fight that has left them estranged, which needs sorting out first. Doing a show seems cheaper than therapy, so with the help of childhood friend Paddy (played by Donahoeβs musical comedy partner Paddy Gervers) they take a psychiatristβs toolkit of role-play and songs, throw it on stage, and hope for the best. Through reliving various notable Christmases from the past, we are introduced to the rather unconventional lives they have led.
The cast give us a wonderfully warm and believable depiction of family dysfunction. They demonstrate the bizarre goings on that they were under the impression made up everyoneβs family Christmas. Most of these eccentric ideas had come from their socialist, anarchist, agnostic, Jewish father. A man, who experimented with questionable new eggnog flavours and made Jonny and Rachel put their clothes in the freezer.
When we find out about their father going missing one Christmas, never to return, Thirty Christmases takes a new direction. Donahoe and Parris, in particular, display versatility in being able to portray more serious topics with touching sensitivity, alongside their aptitude for insightful, witty humour. It is the balance between the two that makes this a proficiently nuanced production, which could have quite easily slipped into either an anti-Christmas rant, or fluffy sentimentality.
The use of Jonny and The Baptists songs (Donahoe and Gervers’ band), really is the icing on the yule log, adding an amusingly perceptive twist on what Christmas truly means. Particular highlights are the alcoholic 12 Days of Christmas and Maybe Itβs Christmas In Africa, which doesnβt hold back from ripping into charity singles.
All in all, this is most likely one of the best things you will see this festive season, as this faultless production offers a welcomed breather from the usual pomp and cheesiness of Christmas shows.
Reviewed by Phoebe Cole
Photography by Josh Tomalin
Thirty Christmases
is at the New Diorama Theatre until 23rd December
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