THE first thing with Dario Fo's popular farce is that you need to find
the right maniac. It is the central part in the play, the maverick who
turns impersonator to turn the interrogation screw on the police after a
suspect falls to his death from a fourth-storey window. Cast that role
successfully and the rest should flow along into, well, more or less
happy anarchy.
Craig Ferguson has joined the Arches Theatre Company for this summer
season political pantomime to reflect the resumption of bombings,
dubious suicides and scandal in Italian cities. Not that the play ever
seems exclusive to the Italian judicial mess, as the maniac's references
to the Birmingham Six, the Guildford Four and the Rodney King trial in
Los Angeles make clear.
Ferguson lends a stand-up comedian's ease to these apparent departures
from the script, and his readiness to offer audience asides creates a
nice illusion of total ad-lib. He possesses a range of popular theatre
skills that are essential to Fo, and he has just that right sediment of
anger that the author insisted should accompany the laughter.
Ross Stenhouse, Grant Smeaton and Raymond Burke give hilarious support
as the trio of oafish police trying to work out a plausible ''suicide''
scenario, and director Andy Arnold camps it up as a pedantic inspector.
It is a show which makes a neat virtue of economy, with the trembling
set design to add ludicrousness. A roller blind rolls down two storeys
of Milan skyline to get us from one office to another, and Ferguson
throws in the line: ''Mind your head on that building'' when Inspector
Pissani brushes alongside it. It is a portable city, and they are taking
it to the Assembly Rooms for the Edinburgh Festival fringe after this
run finishes on August 14.
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