Tuesday, November 15, 2022

Twenty Club makes heavenly job of Vicar of Dibley


* A scene from The Vicar of Dibley by Llangollen Twenty Club.


* The vicar meets Elvis in the church hall.


... then Mary and Joseph.


* An angelic nativity scene.

llanblogger preview

Llangollen Twenty Club has made a divinely good job of bringing the Vicar of Dibley, one of the small screen’s greatest comedy hits, to the live stage.

From tomorrow (Wednesday) until Saturday at the Town Hall the talented drama group will be performing two back-to-back episodes of the iconic show which centres on how the Rev Geraldine Granger copes with life in a small rural parish and the crazy antics of a bunch of eccentric villagers written into sitcom legend back in the 90s by Richard Curtis.

The original cast, all with their own highly identifiable quirks, are a tough act to follow but the Twenty bunch handles it in style.

Club regular Helen Belton takes on the ecclesiastical role and has even had her hair styled in the manner of Dawn French, who memorably played the vicar on TV, to ensure a high level of authenticity. And she also effortlessly manages to wring out just as many laughs from the action as her famous counterpart.

The piece includes the episodes Dibley on Air, in which the gang try out their own local radio station with predictably hilarious results, and the Second Coming, in which their nativity play with a difference goes haywire. 

Handling the pivotal character of the sex-starved Jim Trott – famous catchphrase “no no no no” – with total competence is Kevin Williams, while Matt Oswald-Haggett is equally adept at recreating Owen Newitt, the blunt-mannered local farmer.

Excellent as usual in his role as pedantic yet surprisingly interesting parish council clerk Frank Pickle is Twenty regular Arwel Jarvis and Heather Wolfson does a neat line in bringing to life Mrs Cropley, whose repulsive culinary creations nobody would want to touch.  

An impressive dopey double-act has been put together by Bev Maier as church verger Alice Horton – Tinker as was – and Dan Pedley as her equally hopeless husband Hugo.

Steve Hughes turns in an admirable portrayal of Hugo’s tetchy old dad, local squire David Horton, who is the closest we ever get to a villain of the piece.

There are a couple of nifty cameos by John Clifford as the vet and Jayne Dickson who shows up right at the end playing an accordion, the reason for which cannot be disclosed without spoiling things.

Director Chrissie Ashworth, the whole cast and a very competent backstage team have done a heavenly job with A Vicar of Dibley Christmas.

Stage play is by Ian Gower and Paul Carpenter adapted from the original TV series by Richard Curtiss and Paul Mayhew-Archer with kind permission of Tiger Aspect Productions.         

The show will be staged at Llangollen Town Hall from Wednesday November 16th to Saturday November 19 at 7.30pm with a matinee on the Saturday at 2.30 pm.

* Tickets  - £12 and £10 concessions - are available online at: ticketsource.co.uk/llangollentwentyclub or from Courtyard Books, Llangollen Oggie Shop or Jenni in Market Street. Tickets also available from cast and crew members, and at the door, subject to availability. 

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