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Slapstick comedy, One Man, Two Guvnors, lives up to its hype

It's easy to understand why this 2011 National Theatre production - which premiered in Asia last Friday as part of the Hong Kong Arts Festival - is already a big hit in London's West End and New York's Broadway.

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A scene from One Man, Two Guvnors.
Kevin Kwong




It's easy to understand why this 2011 National Theatre production - which premiered in Asia last Friday as part of the Hong Kong Arts Festival - is already a big hit in London's West End and New York's Broadway.

Written by Richard Bean and directed by Nicholas Hytner, One Man, Two Guvnors is an all-out farce that doesn't take itself too seriously. Yet underneath all the slapstick comedy lies an ingeniously devised piece of theatre.

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An adaptation of Venetian playwright Carlo Goldoni's commedia dell'arte classic Servant of Two Masters (1743), this play transposes the setting from 18th century Venice to 1960s Brighton. A skiffle band is thrown into the mix for extra entertainment.

The engagement party of Pauline Clench (Kellie Shirley) and her actor boyfriend Alan Dangle (Leon Williams) is interrupted by the unexpected arrival of Francis Henshall (Owain Arthur), who announces that his boss, Roscoe Crabbe (Rosie Wyatt), whom Clench was betrothed to, is not dead as rumoured - but is now here to take her hand.

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But Roscoe is, in fact, his twin sister Rachel, who is on the run with Stanley Stubbers (Edward Bennett), who killed her brother.

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