The Scotsman

High farce in attic bedsits

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Fishbowl Pleasance Courtyard (Venue 33) JJJJ

Judging by the packed full house in one of the largest non-traditiona­l festival spaces in Edinburgh during August, this establishe­d French comedy hit – and winner of the Molière Award for Best Comedy Play in 2017 – needs no additional boost upon its transfer to the UK. Yet it’s worth taking time to eulogise it anyway, because this is a perfectly-pitched piece of physical character comedy; as wonderfull­y light and accessible as an Ealing comedy, yet with a sharp edge and moments of real emotional power and occasional Pythonesqu­e darkness.

Set amid the particular­lystyled attic bedsits of Paris, three people live in closetsize­d rooms adjacent to one another. One (Olivier Martinsalv­an) is a burly man with the comedicall­y grandiose air of Matt Berry about him, who lives in a hermetic white apartment with a toilet which is summoned from under the bed by a handclap; the second, Pierre Guillois, a slovenly, professori­allooking gent who lives amid squalor and owns an incredibly unfortunat­e goldfish; and the third, Agathe L’huillier’s just-arrived young woman, whom the other pair are predictabl­y smitten by, despite her inability to deliver beauty treatments which are anything but dangerous.

All three apartments, plus stairway, communal toilet and a roof which sees some hair-raising action, are built together in one claustroph­obic set, and the way the cast interact between them is a joy to uncover; with, for example, Martin-salvan’s character stealing Guillois’ food through the ventilatio­n hatch, to the latter’s confusion, or a bravura moment of mistaken peeping tom identity which manages to boil the sleaziness out of the genuine comedy of Benny Hill.

Masterfull­y related in few words, this joyously universal work runs the gamut from toilet humour (in a very literal sense) to the sad, austere juxtaposit­ion of the starving Guillois debating eating his pet rabbit while the other pair begin a romance, to an ultimately very charming look at the bonds of community which form between strangers who have been thrown together by their choice of address. It seems inevitable that it will be viewed as one of this year’s big successes.

Until 26 August. Today 1pm.

DAVID POLLOCK

 ??  ?? 0 Living in a Fishbowl can be a farcical experience, as can life in a bedsit
0 Living in a Fishbowl can be a farcical experience, as can life in a bedsit

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