One of the more memorable Z/Yen Christmas outings, this one.
In an attempt to start to big-up the event, we tried a west end evening, with bar drinks, theatre visit and dinner in a private room.
Perhaps the bar bit was not a great idea ahead of a silly play, Scissor Happy, that was relying on audience participation for laughs.
Anyway, we started in Detroit – by which I mean the bar in Seven Dials, long since defunct as I write 25 years later – not the City in Michigan, obviously.
Then we went to see Scissor Happy at The Duchess Theatre. I wrote the following in my theatre log:
Works outing for Z/Yen – went very well.
Michael Moore’s drunken interventions were especially memorable.
Michael was the husband of one of our employees – Rachel. He was significantly older than her, indeed older than the rest of us. At first his audience interventions went down well with cast and audience, but he got carried away and for a while seemed to think that he WAS the show.
I remember several of our number being embarrassed about this – not least Rachel – although I also recall hearing on exit other audience members debating whether that funny old geezer was a plant from the show or really a member of the audience.
The Fung Shing meal was excellent in out private room. At that time Fung Shing was, in my opinion, the best restaurant in Chinatown. Writing 25 years later, it is another long-since defunct place, sadly.
Returning to Scissor Happy, though – I wonder what made us chose that play? Some sort of lowest common denominator thinking? Or perhaps it came recommended by someone…certainly not me! Not my sort of play at all.
Nor Nicholas de Jongh’s, who described it as “piffle” in the Standard:
23 Oct 1997, Thu Evening Standard (London, Greater London, England) Newspapers.com
Strangely, Charles Spencer in The Telegraph rather liked it, while admitting “it depends who is in the audience”. Too right!
24 Oct 1997, Fri The Daily Telegraph (London, Greater London, England) Newspapers.com