Saturday, 29 September 2018

REVIEW: BENIDORM LIVE @ REGENT THEATRE, STOKE





It’s fair to say that Derren Litten’s sitcom Benidorm has become something of a legend in its own happy hour. First hitting our screens in 2007, it took its final bow earlier this year after amassing an impressive 74 episodes. The comedy is as subtle as the Costa Blanca’s own Las Vegas itself, and in many ways can perhaps be classed as television’s modern successor to the Carry On films. It is fair to say that quality wise it was a rocky road in the later series, but ironically the show was just seeming to get back on track when ITV brought down the shutters on the poolside bar. However, following a long tradition of putting television comedies onto the stage (fellow holiday sitcoms Hi-de-Hi! and Duty Free both paved the way during the 1980s for this theatre incarnation) the Solana all-inclusive resort is given one last glorious fling in the sun courtesy of a massive UK and Ireland tour.


Tricia Adele-Turner & Will Jennings



 Tony Maudsley & Adam Gillen

The conceit of this production is that it follows on pretty directly from the end of the final series. The Solana Group are still in danger of being taken over by the Bellroy Leisure Group, and a few of the regulars’ absences are swiftly explained (Monty is on an anger management course, Les / Lesley is serving a sentence in an open prison in the UK for tax evasion). Joyce Temple-Savage has had some intel that Bellroy Hotels have put in a spy among the current wave of holidaymakers to review facilities. All their jobs could be on the line. So enter Ben and Sophie Perkins (surely a nod to Benidorm’s original producer, the late Geoffrey Perkins) who are virtually a mirror image of Katie and Martin Weedon from the early days. Having been transferred from the Solana’s sister hotel due to overbooking, they encounter a hotel far from its peak, with staff disinterested at best. Can these be the Bellroy spies? Joyce thinks so, and devises a plan to get them onside. Supersize stylist Kenneth Du Beke and his assistant Liam Conroy, salon executives at Blow ‘n’ Go, have more immediate worries, like Mrs. Cattleprod’s new cut and set. Jacqueline Stewart meanwhile has invited over her friend ‘Gay Derek’ from the Middlesborough Swingers Association, and it turns out he has designs on a member of the Solana staff. Naturally ageing Spanish lothario Mateo Castellanos has got his eyes on virtually every pretty girl setting foot inside the all-inclusive complex. It all comes to a head during a fabulously camp night in Neptune’s Bar.


Shelley Longworth

Jake Canuso

Anybody coming to this production should be prepared for adult pantomime. It is loud, it’s tacky and frequently very funny. An impressive six actors from the television regulars have been enticed onto the stage by producers Michael Harrison and David Ian. Perhaps the most beloved of them all is Kenneth.  From the moment Tony Maudsley enters the salon dressed in a ‘Bleached Whale’ top, he is on top form and seemingly loving every outrageous moment. He commands the stage like the seasoned pro that he is, delivering outrageous one liners and slipping his ample frame into a pair of hot pants. Adam Gillen provides a lot of the heart of the show, Kenneth’s naive assistant Liam who wants to be reunited with his jail bird Dad. His repertoire of comedy stances coupled with a genuine ability to look harassed, makes them comedy gold together. Shelley Longworth as Sam Wood, the one-time holidaymaker who returns as a travel rep, shows off a fine singing voice, and Sam’s ability to deliver no frills assessments of any given situation provides more comic opportunities. Janine Duvitski is something of a comedy legend having appeared in so many high profile roles over the years (Abigail’s Party, Waiting For God, One Foot In The Grave). Following the death of her on screen partner Kenny Ireland as husband Donald Stewart, her character has perhaps not been best served but here Duvitski embraces her role as a singles swinger to the hilt, culminating in a bravura performance at Neptune’s Bar. Equally legendary in the comedy stakes, is Sherrie Hewson. One time Maureen Holdsworth in Coronation Street, she is a comedy performer of enormous skill and experience going back to the Carry On films, which is entirely appropriate. There is also more than a touch of the Mrs. Slocombe about Joyce, a role Sherrie also played recently. Her veneer of snobbishness underpinned by a streak of common running through her are attributes Sherrie exploits brilliantly. Jake Canuso as Mateo causes many a ladies (and gents) heart to flutter when he breaks into a dance upon his first entrance, displaying all the skills he employed earlier in his career as a West End dancer. It is however his beautifully observed sleazy Spanish waiter that has endeared him to the nation, and its fair to say that Mateo is up to his old tricks throughout the show. 

 Damian Williams


Bradley Clarkson & Janine Duvitski

 Newcomers to the fold are equally at home with the double entendres. Tricia Adele-Turner and Bradley Clarkson as Sophie and Ben provide the bedrock of the plot, whilst Damian Williams (a genuinely funny man who should have been a star years ago) swings nicely as Gay Derek who has an infatuation with one of the Solana staff. Bringing up the rear (ho hum) Will Jennings as Ricky, provides some nice comedic touches.

 Asa Elliott

Playing himself, Asa Elliott has been imported from the series to provide the musical soundtrack to the show. Whether Livin’ La Vida Loca or giving his Shang-A-Lang, Elliott’s cheesy but powerful vocals set exactly the right Costa Blanca cabaret tone to give the play a real authenticity.

Director Ed Curtis understands totally what the paying audience want: nothing subtle but presented in bright, stylish way. It is likely to be a rare theatre visit for many of the television followers, and Curtis makes sure the show fair zips along.  No room for padding on this holiday. Set designer Mark Walters has worked a minor miracle with his micro-Solana. Making sure the we swiftly get to scenes around reception, the salon, the pool and Neptunes with the minimum of intrusion to the play. Choreographer Alan Harding has coaxed some very entertaining routines out of the performers too, this is one play that can really move.

With all the gloom over Brexit and the UK annexing itself from the rest of Europe, is it any wonder this tour is packed with people wanting a belly laugh. Derren Litten has provided an extension to the series packing in farce, smut, music and dance. It would be nice to think that in the future ITV might return to the Solana to catch up with our favourite characters, but if this is truly the last we see of them, they are going out with the biggest party provincial theatres have seen in a while. Pour yourself a Sangria and book some tickets – if you can find any!!!




Benidorm Live is on tour until April 2019.  Further information can be found at:


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