Advertisement
UK markets closed
  • FTSE 100

    8,433.76
    +52.41 (+0.63%)
     
  • FTSE 250

    20,645.38
    +114.08 (+0.56%)
     
  • AIM

    789.87
    +6.17 (+0.79%)
     
  • GBP/EUR

    1.1622
    +0.0011 (+0.09%)
     
  • GBP/USD

    1.2525
    +0.0001 (+0.01%)
     
  • Bitcoin GBP

    48,555.60
    -1,625.38 (-3.24%)
     
  • CMC Crypto 200

    1,261.51
    -96.50 (-7.11%)
     
  • S&P 500

    5,222.68
    +8.60 (+0.16%)
     
  • DOW

    39,512.84
    +125.08 (+0.32%)
     
  • CRUDE OIL

    78.20
    -1.06 (-1.34%)
     
  • GOLD FUTURES

    2,366.90
    +26.60 (+1.14%)
     
  • NIKKEI 225

    38,229.11
    +155.13 (+0.41%)
     
  • HANG SENG

    18,963.68
    +425.87 (+2.30%)
     
  • DAX

    18,772.85
    +86.25 (+0.46%)
     
  • CAC 40

    8,219.14
    +31.49 (+0.38%)
     

Tennis Elbow review – a nonstop rally of jokes

Pell-mell, helter skelter, the joshing wordplay rains down. No chance for parody is resisted, no phrase left unturned. Tennis Elbow is the work of a tremendously inventive comic playwright. But the pace is relentless: jokes are left gasping for breath.

John Byrne’s play is the second Sound Stage audio drama produced by Pitlochry Festival theatre with Edinburgh’s Royal Lyceum and Naked Productions. It’s a new take on an old success. In 1977, Byrne – later acclaimed for BBC Scotland’s terrific TV series Tutti Frutti – shook the Edinburgh fringe with Writer’s Cramp, a spoof biography of the imaginary Francis Seneca McDade, a writer and artist of grand aims and dodgy talent.

Now Byrne recreates this mid-20th-century landscape from the point of view of McDade’s artist wife, the sapphically inclined Pamela Crichton Capers. Various cultural grabs – men from women, English from Scots, posh from less-so – are given a good going over as the heroine moves through convent school, St Mildred’s College, Oxford, BBC arts programming – and prison. The rum slang of the English establishment gets a jolly good shout: “Dickers got Anners preggers at Twickers.” Affectation is sent up in the shape of a critic called Denholm Pantaloon and in parodies of literary tics and genres. Minutes swim by on rafts of alliteration: the Pink Parasol Press in Prestatyn is responsible for paperback publication. Pam writes an epic poem called “Dimples” and a bodice ripper in which Wanda feels “every sinew of her lithe body tighten”. Every now and then there’s a touch of old Scots.

Maureen Beattie is a commanding, sceptical narrator and Kirsty Stuart a versatile heroine; Cherylee Houston has fun as the cod cockney landlady Mrs Ripper. Elizabeth Newman’s production has a strong sense of period but the targets are now too familiar for the satire to have real edge. Perhaps that will come: after Writer’s Cramp and Tennis Elbow it is surely time for Housemaid’s Knee?