The Scottish Mail on Sunday

The craziest trigger warning yet... play about Groucho Marx ‘contains prop cigar’

- By Chris Hastings ARTS CORRESPOND­ENT

WITH his bushy moustache and ever-present cigar, Groucho Marx is one of the most recognisab­le stars in Hollywood history.

Yet in what may be the most ridiculous and unnecessar­y content warning yet, audiences at a new stage show about the wisecracki­ng comic actor are being cautioned that it features a ‘prop cigar’.

The Arcola Theatre in Dalston, East London, is sending the warning to anyone who buys tickets for Dinner With Groucho, a play which imagines a meeting between the Marx brother and the American writer TS Eliot.

The warning states: ‘We’re looking forward to welcoming you to Dinner with Groucho... Content warning: Contains use of haze and prop cigar.’ A similar notice is posted on the door of the auditorium.

Steve Bennett, editor of the comedy website Chortle, said: ‘Groucho’s cigar defined his enduring image as much as his greasepain­t moustache, wiggling eyebrows and wisecracki­ng puns. So of course a play about the comic genius was going to feature a cigar.

‘What next? A warning that a Tommy Cooper tribute act may contain fezzes? Or that a Ken Dodd impersonat­ion may contain harrowing scenes of tickling sticks?’

Downton Abbey creator Julian Fellowes added: ‘I simply do not understand the fashion for infantilis­ing an audience, treating them as if they were three years old.’

And Maureen Lipman said: ‘Groucho Marx without a cigar is like a footballer without a tattoo – and it should be a lit cigar. Are we going to stage Look Back In Anger with a gaslightin­g alert? Where do these warnings end?’

One audience member who attended the show last week reported that several prop cigars are used in the performanc­e – but they are not actually lit.

Dinner With Groucho, which has been written by Irish playwright Frank McGuinness, was inspired by the real-life friendship between Marx and Eliot.

In 1961, they began a correspond­ence when poet Eliot sent a fan letter to Marx asking for a signed photograph. They finally met over dinner three years later.

The new play, which stars Coronation Street actor Ian Bartholome­w as Groucho, imagines that meeting.

A spokeswoma­n for the Arcola said its warning was in line with official advice. She said: ‘The Government’s Health and Safety Executive recommends that entertainm­ent venues using smoke or haze in production­s should print warnings on or with the tickets and post warning notices on the premises. This is standard practice across London.’

 ?? ?? BEYOND A JOKE: Groucho with his trademark cigar, which is now subjected to a warning notice
BEYOND A JOKE: Groucho with his trademark cigar, which is now subjected to a warning notice

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