The Scotsman

Knocking at the door, but not quite a full house yet

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Bingo!

Assembly Hall, Edinburgh

They say that it can take months of previews and tryouts to get a new musical comedy just right; and perhaps that’s the most flattering explanatio­n for what’s going on at the Assembly Hall this week, where two of Scotland’s leading theatre companies – Grid Iron and Stellar Quines – have come together to create a show that looks at best interestin­g, moving and full of potential, and at worst a chaotic and unfunny mess.

Written by anita vet t es se and Johnny Mcknight, and directed by Jemima Levick, the show is advertised as being about a night at the bingo; but the first shock is that despite Grid Iron’s track record as a site-specific company, the show involves no element of audience engagement, nor any sense that we’re actually in a bingo hall.

And if we get to play no bingo, then neither do most of the characters; instead, what the show aims to do, in spades, is to lay bare the seething passions and severe financial pressures that underlie the superficia­l calm of the average bingo hall.

The story revolves around unhappy 30-something Daniella, played with huge bravado by Louise Mccarthy, who has committed an unforgivab­le financial crime against her friends and family out of sheer desperatio­n.

It makes that leap in such extreme style, though – with Daniella going completely and grotesquel­y berserk – that it parts company with any recognisab­le reality at an early stage, and takes flight into a surreal realm of what should be perfectly-timed physical comedy, but is more like selfindulg­ent chaos accompanie­d by occasional brilliant one-liners, and a few completely forgettabl­e songs.

Things improve greatly in the second half, when one clearly superfluou­s character – brilliantl­y played by Barbara Rafferty – is out of the game, and the action, dialogue and music begin to focus on the misery generated by a combinatio­n

of loveless family life and endless, grinding economic stress.

The songs, with music by Alan Penman, take on a different tone, producing two or threebeaut­ifulballad­s,notably for Wendy Seager as Daniella’s awful old mother Mary. And by the end, the show begins to look like a brave and powerful semi-absurdist drama about how solidarity among ordinary people in a bitterly unequal society can eventually triumph over the worst of mutual betrayals and infighting; although it may take many more weeks of trial and error, atthisrate,beforethat­story emerges at full power from what is still, formal press night or not, very much a work in progress.

JOYCE MCMILLAN

Assembly Hall, Edinburgh, until 17 March, and on tour to Stirling, Ayr, Musselburg­h, Glasgow and Inverness, until 21 April.

 ??  ?? Jane Mccarry plays Betty, the caller for a group of bingo enthusiast­s with problems
Jane Mccarry plays Betty, the caller for a group of bingo enthusiast­s with problems

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