ComedyDramaReviewScotland

Groan Ups – King’s Theatre, Edinburgh

Reviewer: Dominic Corr

Writers: Henry Lewis, Jonathan Saver & Henry Shields

Director: Kirsty Patrick Ward

Settle down everyone, and while you more than likely have plenty to say; fingers on lips, legs crossed and try not to be influenced by this crowd of rabble-rousing misfits. They’ve botched mysteries, torn-apart pantos, cracked open the heist-thriller and pulled a rabbit from the hat – but returning with another hopeful creation under their belts, Mischief Theatre take us back to school.

Five friends, growing through the years, share experiences and snogs as their first meeting with young Archie brings the gang together and asks audiences if we choose who we become, or if other variants impact us.Groan Upstakes the audience on a journey as they come to realise the choices and mistakes made in youth can indeed carry over into adulthood.

Shifting through the early years of boogers and cooties to the high-school days of underage drinking and snogging,Groan Upsends with a reunion, the pay-off for the set-up of the previous two scenes. Lives have changed (for some more than others), and deeds lay bare as the longed-for joviality and usual brilliance of Mischief Theatre begins to eek back into something worth remembering.

But despite tremendous energy, hurling themselves into the roles, the cast ofGroan Upscannot lift the dreary writing. And an unwelcome presence arrives at the doors: predictability. A crime Mischief has never previously experienced, and the antithesis of their award-winning regime.

The level of physical dedication from the entire cast is spectacular, and lord can only imagine how exhausting it must be, merely watching the crew bounce and dart across the stage leaves you with a stitch. And it’s all deserving of a tighter script, which leans less into the tropes of comedy and capitalises on the merits and talents which Mischief have utilised to shake up the theatrical world.

In attempting to communicate the hazards of high-school insecurities and bullying, Henry Lewis, Jonathan Sayer and Henry Shields conceive a progressive plot; the transitioning of time an elaborate and technical narrative arc that tests their abilities but makes for an inventive set-up. The principal issue is a colossal one – it isn’t all that funny.

The physicality of Dharmesh Patel and Matt Cavendish carries laughter, but the flatness of the written humour is tragic. The pair attempt to lift slumped jokes with a measure of explosive emotion and quick-paced timing, all to success on their part – particularly Cavendish as the miserable punching bag and desperate for attention Simon.

Wasted, Yolanda Ovide and Lauren Samuels bring exceptional panache and enthusiasm to their parts of Moon and Katie but often play second fiddle to the male writing in terms of practical humour. Ovide tries her damnedest, but the character of Moon has such little development or change that it’s awkward to maintain interest. But lord, Ovide is determined. In a world where schools now award ‘attendance’ and ‘participation’, Ovide and Samuels deserve to be top of the class for exuberant exaggerations and sincerity with limited development.

But this exaggeration and vehemence of the cast isn’t matched by the set design, Fly Daves playing it strikingly safe. At first, the larger-than-life chairs, the scale to convey the youth of the initial characters is clever, but the high-school years are missing in the way of imaginative design, and the adult reunion scrapes a few needed visual gags but is sorely lacking overall.

Groan Upsfinds itself dropping a set, needing to repeat a year or two, but as with all healthy end of term reports, it displays massive potential if it only had a touch more focus.

Runs until 2 October 2021, then continues on tour | Image: Contributed

The Reviews Hub Score

Lacking overall

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The Reviews Hub - Scotland

The Scotland team is under the editorship of Lauren Humphreys. The Reviews Hub was set up in 2007. We aim to review all professional types of theatre, whether that be Commercial, Repertory or Fringe as well as Comedy, Music, Gigs etc.

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