Happily it takes more than a blown-up church and shattered thespian dreams to destroy this partnership and they are soon back eliciting shrieks of laughter around pictures of Farage, Heather Mills, and Girls Aloud, and those for whom there is no show without Trump will not be disappointed.
The experience is like a visual version of Tim Vine on speed – although the pace changes in the central section where we are treated to a thrilling storyline involving amateur dramatics, betrayal and a dead vicar. The funny rolls out relentlessly and in the most gloriously random manner so that you never have any idea where the next gusset-threatening laughter-bomb will be dropped. If you are a pop fan, this show will change forever the way you hear many classic songs. It is, as Freddie would sing, “a kind of magic”, as huge gulping belly laughs are created out of juxtaposing two cardboard letters, mucking about with just the words ME or IT written on a card, and endless, painfully silly, brilliantly misheard song lyrics. The bend-you-over, turn-you-red-in-the-face, non-stop, eye-wateringly funny. True Fringe comedy lovers should rejoice because, amongst the angry and the innovative, the thought-provoking and the moving, we have the funny. It brings to mind occasions like Shirley Bassey doing Glastonbury or Sir John Geilgud in Tinto Brass’s Caligula. More than 20 years after first testing the pelvic floors of an audience past the point of no return, Raymond and Mr Timpkins have come to the Edinburgh Fringe. “I’ve seen them on Britains Got Talent.” Old confusaed woman in bingo hall.įull 2018 Edinburgh review from The Scotsman written by Kate Copstick “An indulgent set of brilliant tackiness” Take 7 Magazine “Wonderful, innovative and endearing” Brighton Argus “A mad, anarchic triumph of stupidity over style. And it wears its incredible skill, its labour-intensity and its comic genius so lightly one might think it is just a bit of silliness.
"This is comedy that reminds us why we go out to see live shows. A 1930s murder mystery based in Brighton and a frankly silly retelling of the Jack the Ripper tale, (too soon?) have so far been forged in the red hot fires of their imaginations.Īvailable for any project from feature films to mini series. Their latest foray is into radio comedy/drama. Now, this terpsichorean twosome tour the country, even venturing as far afield as The Falklands and Oman, to provide spiritual uplift to the brave boys and girls of the armed forces. With the fledgling post-fix, "Revue", added, they blasted the clubs with their Guitar and Stylophone stylings, wowing rooms with super slick prop manipulation, dazzling jaded eyes with sandal based choreography that remains inimitable. See you there.Ĭutting their teeth compering and performing in Comedy and Variety nights at The Wedgewood Rooms in Southsea, they watched the nineties as it wafted gently past until, eventually and not before time, London called. If you like silliness, middle aged men dancing and unsavoury acts, you’ll probably love it. If you like music and let’s face it, who doesn’t, you’ll like it. Headlining at venues from the Falklands to Ashby De La Zouch, they’ve circumnavigated the planet, spurting amusement in concentrated twenty minute bursts but now an hour show is gestating, due to arrive bloody and screaming at some point, if not slightly before.
An overload of velvet, sandals and multi-hued wool provides a startling accompaniment, the whole effect being that of a slim man and a fat man putting their bums in your face. Lightning fast choreography meets uber swift editing in a fantasmagorical collision of quality entertainment. (things we wrote to try and sell our stuff.)