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Things ain’t what they used to be and people today are more likely to jump on a jet to Amsterdam to celebrate their last night of pre-marital freedom, than they are to go to their local club.
Thank goodness then that Willy Russell hasn’t “updated” Stags and Hens, but rather rewritten parts of this snapshot of a period, so it still works as well - although with much more of a contemporary feel.
It’s 1977 and Linda (Rachel Rae) and Dave (Kris Mochrie) are getting married in the morning. Dave is legless when he enters the seediest club in town and forced into in the gents with his head down the bowl.
In the same club Linda, the feisty wife-to-be, and her mates are getting drunk, dancing and trying to pull. Add to the cocktail a returning old flame on the way up, light the blue touch paper and stand well back.
This is classic Willy Russell - ots of subtlety, some moments of inspired genius and an underlying message summed up best by The Clash all those years ago, should I stay or should I go, that has been formed into something so much more by director, Bob Eaton, and this superlative entirely Liverpool cast.
The pick of which, in mind of equality, are Keddy Sutton, playing the dithering Maureen with such superb timing it is difficult to imagine anybody else in the role, and James Spofforth as the disillusioned Eddie, Dave’s best mate, who has an edge to his character that is both deeply disturbing and highly likeable.
Excellent, too, is Gillian Hardie as Bernie, the archetypal seventies married woman out on the pull, and Danny O’Brian as Kav, the highly talented yet naive artist.
With an effective split stage set, outstanding writing, superlative direction and fabulous performances all round, Stags and Hens is a play that remains a great deal of fun and is guaranteed to have audiences chuckling and empathising with everyone on stage. Tremendous stuff.
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