| A full 
              house at The Rep enjoyed this Alan Ayckbourn Christmas classic with 
              the added bonus of the production being directed by the man himself. 
               |  |  | Goddard and Kelly | 
 The 
              play picks away at the problems of family relationships and gets 
              to the very heart of the stresses of bringing people together for 
              the festive season. We all know what that's like聟 Matthew 
              Kelly (Uncle Bernard) is the bumbling failure, a washout as a doctor 
              and a poor puppeteer to boot. His scene of the rehearsal for the 
              puppet show and the ensuing chaos brought the house down and his 
              partner on stage, Alison Pargeter (the heavily pregnant Pattie) 
              was hilarious. She was so still on stage to start with that she 
              appeared almost marionette-like. And who could ever forget the grand 
              finale at the hands of the manic Uncle Harvey. |  |  | Goddard and Cottle | 
 The 
              always stylish Liza Goddard caught in a midnight fling under the 
              Christmas tree and fairy lights with Matthew Cottle (writer Clive) 
              was superb and played being on the emotional edge elegantly and 
              beautifully. Terence Booth's character (Uncle Harvey) although first 
              amusing turns out to be a highly dangerous and unhinged individual 
              whose past work as a security officer wrecks any chance of a Merry 
              Christmas and ultimately ends tragically. Eliza 
              Hunt plays Bernard's wife Phyllis superbly and who cannot recognise 
              the harassed cook caught in the kitchen tippling the drink and playing 
              the martyr for the whole evening. She also makes a good go of a 
              pass at Matthew Cottle, (author Clive) the writer of just one book 
              and an apparent favourite with the ladies. Cottle makes the most 
              of this role and has an air of disbelief at what is unfolding. Alexandra 
              Mathie plays left-on-the-shelf literary secretary Rachel to perfection 
              and one knows she just isn't going to get her man this Christmas. 
              The boring husbands who repair toys at Christmas are Bill Champion 
              (Neville) and Jason Baughan (Eddie) both archetypal Ayckbourn men 
              for whom DIY or a shed in the garden have become a refuge from any 
              risk of emotional interaction. Brilliant. The 
              whole production is attractive and well set with excellent lighting 
              and clarity of sound. Now, almost 25 years on, Season's Greetings 
              remains just as fresh as when it was originally presented at Scarborough 
              and should do very well especially as audiences will probably recognise 
              something of their own families in the characters.  Written 
              by Clive Fuller Be 
            a 成人快手 Birmingham reviewer 禄
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