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My night with mum and me sisters: Straight and Narrow @abovethestag
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Update: since posting, Above the Stag has announced its permanent closure
Set in the 1980s in Manchester, Bob (Lewis Allcock) and Jeff (Todd Von Joel) are long-term boyfriends who also have a successful business installing kitchens. But spending years together doing the same thing every day, they seem stuck in a rut. A trip to Malta is an opportunity to do something differently. But the trip didn't go as either of them was expecting. Things get a bit explosive and emotional on the return. And Bob's mother and two older sisters are there to observe the proceedings. Sex doesn't feature. There's only a passing reference to the AIDS epidemic. And the focus on the family dynamics makes it less My Night with Reg and more My night with mum and my two sisters and their husbands.
Bob also serves as a narrator of the proceedings as time jumps forward and back throughout, explaining how things came about. But the narration also comes with observations and generalisations that seem awkward and dated nowadays. Bob's description of how he longs for food that not even a Wetherspoons would serve these days sounded hilarious. And his craving for a holiday in Blackpool seems quaint in the era of package holidays and massive disruption at Manchester airport.
And while not all the family dynamics are always believable, there are some touching moments too. There's a tacit acknowledgement that even though Bob can't be open and honest to everyone in his family, they love him all the same.
The production is incredibly detailed, getting the period pieces right. With pastel colours and furnishings, Bob and Jeff's home looks and feels so eighties. You don't often see this amount of detail in a fringe production in London. It's also impressive, given the production only had a week to put everything together.
Directed by Mark Curry, Straight and Narrow was at Above The Stag.
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