What do you do for a main-house show when the masculine part of your repertory company is busy touring secondary schools and sixth-form colleges with John Godber and Jane Thornton’s Bouncers? You make the obvious choice – and mount the sister show Shakers. What’s more, as Bouncers is playing in a cut-down version, you throw in some cut-price performances of it as a curtain-raiser.
There has been some clever up-dating of the text of the 1985 original (2012 bankers with bonuses and TOWIE stars among them). This has become standard for the play, as with Bouncers, It’s given a glittering set by Claire Lyth, all shine and see-through tables, chairs and bar-stools. The girls wear black with spangled jackets; you can see why the idea of substituting shorts (of the miniscule variety) isn’t a popular idea.
As well as the four waitresses, Natasha Moore (Adele), Rachel Dawson (Carole), Lucy Thornston (Mel) and Laura Pitt-Pulford (Nicky), play a host of customers both male and female, including a raucous 21st birthday celebration party, sundry men on the pull, a chef taking it out in unseemly ways on his over-fussy diners and some ghastly show-off couples. They’re all very good and carry the audience with them.