The Scotsman

Pamela’s Palace

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The Principal (Venue 119) ☆☆☆☆

Fizzy wine, nibbles and small talk are the order of the day at Pamela Jones’ beauty salon, a place decked out in pure white fake marble columns and veil curtains, the empire from which Pamela rules the annual Salon of the Year contest. Her stylists – brash and ambitious Tiffany and dry-witted Australian Bronwen – meet the ‘customers’ in the crowd, taking names and gowning some of them up.

Pamela’s Palace is an interactiv­e treat of the kind it’s impossible to grudge being roped into.

Let’s just say those glasses of wine, should the audience partake, help to loosen things up amid an in-the-round crowd who are all encouraged to join in with the fun – and this experience really is a lot of fun, a welcoming and communal party in which everyone is a potential client, hair model or judge of this year’s Salon of the Year contest.

Played by the show’s creator Donna Gray, Pamela is an outstandin­g sitcom comic creation, a brash matriarch

who struts and vogues her way through the salon as though it were a catwalk runway. She has imperial ambitions for her salon, both in the name – Scissor’s Palace – and in kitting the staff out in the attire of Greek goddesses, and it’s only moments before the judges arrive that Bronwen points out Caesar was a Roman.

Pamela’s sidekicks (Katie Grace Cooper as Tiffany and Ayesha Tansey as Bronwen) see through Pamela’s emperor’s new clothes, but this is very much a team game, and each performer gets to show off their considerab­le comic ability. The sequences which require interactio­n from members of the audience are easy-going and designed to highlight the foibles of the characters rather than pick on anyone, while the message which shines through the mayhem is a positive one – that women should stick together and that no-one’s self-image should be about pleasing others.

Where the comedy is strongest, however, is in the unexpected­ly powerful and intricate formation dancing sequences and later in a convincing fight sequence. A lot of effort has gone into creating a real treat of a show. DAVID POLLOCK

Until 27 August. Tomorrow 9pm.

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