A platoon of masterful performances command Llangollen Twenty Club's latest Blackadder production which opens for a five-show run at the Town Hall this evening (Wednesday).
They last tackled a multi-play set of the same hit TV comedy by Richard Curtis and Ben Elton featuring Blackadder in the trenches some years back.
They made an excellent job of it then but I reckon what is by and large the same core group of actors, assisted by some very useful newer performers, do even better this time round.
It's the same basic idea as always, with the notorious shirker Blackadder doing his best across four short plays with different themes to have a quiet but rather enjoyable life while striving to avoid the little inconvenience of being a frontline First World War infantry captain in 1917.
Alongside him to get him into and out of equal doses of impossible trouble are a band of cerebrally-challenged cronies. The result is pure comedic heaven of a sort seldom seen anywhere these days.
Our hero is played once again by Mat Oswald-Haggett who turns him into a seething cauldron of tart sarcasm spitting out his marvellous venom with the rapidity of a machine gun.
Back to set Blackadder's teeth on edge is John Clifford as the bumbling, buffoonish General Melchett who is so gloriously daft that he misreads the back of a wrongly-turned-over map as a featureless desert.
And deliciously stupid yet powerfully loveable as Lieutenant the Hon George Colthurst St Barleigh is Si Kneale.
Kevin Williams is so stinkingly good as Blackadder's smelly and eternally put-upon sidekick Baldrick that he deserves his own spin-off show.
New to the club is George Williams who is extremely good as the snidey Captain Darling. So good, in fact, that we're bound to see him again very soon.
Last time he was a posh airman in the club's 'Allo 'Allo. This time Ed Roscoe has swapped world wars to become the wonderfully overbearing fighter pilot Lord Flashheart who delivers more non-woke one-liners and gestures than a cancelled stand-up comedian.
And if you thought Bev Maier was good as Alice Tinker in the club's Vicar of Dibley you're not going to be disappointed with her as the cloyingly innocent yet cheeky Private Bob in this one.
Tracey Kempster-Jones nips across from the Operatic to comfortably don the uniform and persona of Nurse Mary, Jack Shimmin is an overbearing Baron von Richtoven and Luke Myers perfectly handles the dual role of Lieutenant von Gerhardt/Field Marshall Haig.
But look out for the poignant closing scene which illustrates that war isn't all fun.
Naomi Riley comes the other side of the footlights to direct the piece with aplomb, reinforced by Helen Belton as producer and Chrissie Ashworth as director's mentor.
The backstage battalion have done a particularly good job on every aspect of the production's World War One setting which is quite simply brilliant.
Blackadder Goes Forth is on from tonight (Wednesday) until Saturday, November 12/15 with a matinee.
* Tickets are available at: www.ticketsource.co.uk/llangollentwentyclub



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