Once Upon A Time in Nazi Occupied Tunisia is a bold title for a play, evoking thoughts of fairytales, and there is something of the Big Bad Wolf to Adrian Edmondson’s continually scene-stealing turn as the self-proclaimed psychotic Grandma – a role that seems to have been written just for him. I struggle to imagine anyone else who could play the same level of absurdist-comic menace, and when the humour in the play really takes off it is largely thanks to him.
Ethan Kai and Pierro Niel-Mee. Photo: Marc Brenner |
Due to a knee injury, Edmondson is using a stick on press night and sports a limp. If anything, rather than detracting form his performance, it adds to it – his menacing prowling of the stage now comes with the tap, tap of his cane. A primal drum beat to mark impending doom.
There is something of the chaotic energy of Edmondson’s performances in television hits the Young Ones and Bottom here. His cast members act as foils to his energy so that, although sometimes touching the point of over-acting, it never feels over the top or completely excessive.
There are good performances throughout the cast, Ethan Kai and Pierro Niel-Mee convincingly play friends Youssef and Victor who have ended up on separate sides of the war, whilst Yasmin Paige is fantastic as the conflicted Loys. The best section of the play relies on the interplay between Paige and Edmondson, as the Jewish wife attempts to outwit the psychotic Nazi during an unannounced dinner visit.
However, the supporting cast are hampered slightly by the material they are working with. The role of Faiza (Laura Hanna) is underwritten, whilst Daniel Rainford does the best he can as Little Fella, a copy-and-paste version of a ‘bad Nazi’ found in countless films on Netflix.
Adrian Edmondson and Pierro Niel-Mee. Photo: Marc Brenner |
Despite this, and even with the absurdist comedy, the production is an often touching take on what makes ‘home’ home, what gives a person their identity, how we cope with that identity being diluted or marginalised, and how we manage relationships growing and fracturing.