logo
Lorna Rose Treen: 24 Hour Diner People review – ‘best joke of the fringe' winner serves up silliness

Lorna Rose Treen: 24 Hour Diner People review – ‘best joke of the fringe' winner serves up silliness

The Guardiana day ago
When Lorna Rose Treen won the best joke of the fringe award two years ago with a cheetah/cheater pun, it 'killed comedy' according to the Sun newspaper. (They may see the recent cancellation of that prize as proving their point.) The character comic quotes that unlikely coverage at the start of her new set, a (marginally) more theatrical offering with which she promises to kill off theatre as well. In a show full of one-liners to rival her 2023 prizewinner, the choicest joke may be the idea that this mild-mannered, delightfully silly act poses any kind of mortal threat whatsoever.
Just as her acclaimed debut Skin Pigeon showcased an array of unapologetically weird female characters, so too does 24 Hour Diner People – with the twist that, this time, they're all to be found in the same, titular location. The first is a waitress given to eating her tips. Just as Skin Pigeon featured a cowboy with guns for hands, we now meet a trucker with impossibly long arms. One recurring sketch airs the libidinous if immature fantasies of a teenage girl as prom approaches. Another, co-starring a press-ganged audience member, introduces us to a wannabe Bonnie and Clyde plotting a heist of the diner's takings.
Whereas Treen herself was a largely invisible presence in Skin Pigeon, she peeks out from behind the disguises here to comment on the cartoon chaos unfolding. That adds to the generous spirit of an event whose host takes care to involve us in these outpourings of her dotty imagination. No point pretending its several strands all reach satisfactory conclusions, and there are points when endearingly messy and DIY shades into slapdash. A couple of musical numbers, too, don't play to Treen's strengths.
But it's easy to submit to the show's warm embrace of stupidity, to the fine physical comedy of that spindly limbed trucker, and to a host of throwaway one-liners ('last week I did camp America – better known as San Francisco') whose quality all but the Sun newspaper must admire. Far from killing comedy, Treen proves here that it – and hers in particular – is very much alive.
At Pleasance Courtyard, Edinburgh, until 24 August
All our Edinburgh festival reviews
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Wheel contestant leaves BBC show with ZERO pounds after everyone fails to answer jackpot question in 'rare' result - but could you have guessed it right?
The Wheel contestant leaves BBC show with ZERO pounds after everyone fails to answer jackpot question in 'rare' result - but could you have guessed it right?

Daily Mail​

time6 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

The Wheel contestant leaves BBC show with ZERO pounds after everyone fails to answer jackpot question in 'rare' result - but could you have guessed it right?

A contestant on The Wheel went home with zero pounds after every celebrity failed to guess a jackpot prize question on an episode of the BBC show. The popular programme sees members of the public try to win cash prizes by answering quiz questions in specific categories, with the help of a number of celebrity experts. As The Wheel spins, contestants hope they will land on the celebrity who has the right knowledge to help with their question. However, one episode has gone viral after a contestant walked away empty-handed leaving host Michael McIntyre stunned. The show started off smoothly, with each hopeful sailing through the rounds up until the end of the game. Could you have done better than these participants? Fans watched as contestant Jonathan took on a question for a prize of £52,000 with help from YouTube star Harry Pinero. He was asked: 'When fully grown, which of these species of shark is typically the largest? Great hammerhead shark, Great white shark, Tiger shark or Basking shark.' Unfortunately for Jonathan, Harry confessed he had 'no clue' but answered Hammerhead Shark - but the correct answer was a Basking Shark. Gillian was up next and faced a £26,000 question with Mark Wright. They were asked: 'Which country is the world's largest producer of coffee? Brazil, Colombia, India or Kenya.' While they were both drawn to Columbia, they were gutted to learn the right answer was in fact Brazil. Luckily for Gillian, she had another shot at cracking The Wheel, with comedian Katherine Ryan stepping in to help her with a £13,000 question. They were asked: 'Of these restaurants, which opened in the UK first? KFC, McDonald's, Domino's or Wagamamas.' Katherine, 42, admitted she hadn't been in the UK that many years to know for sure, but noted that McDonald's is long in business. Gillian agreed, sharing how she remembers having birthday parties there as a child. Have you guessed it? In a shock to them both, it was revealed KFC was the oldest restaurant chain from the list. While Gillian was devastated at the result, funnyman Michael, 49, called the episode a 'heartbreaker' and pointed out how it's 'rare' contestants leave the show empty-handed. Closing the show, he told viewers: 'We have no winner tonight, but thank you to all our experts. We'll see you next time - and hopefully we'll have a winner then - on The Wheel.' The Wheel airs on BBC One and is available now on iPlayer.

Love Island's Arabella Chi shows off incredible post baby body in bikini just three months after giving birth
Love Island's Arabella Chi shows off incredible post baby body in bikini just three months after giving birth

The Sun

time8 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Love Island's Arabella Chi shows off incredible post baby body in bikini just three months after giving birth

ARABELLA Chi looked incredible as she showed off her post baby body in a crochet bikini just three months after giving birth. The Love Island star, 34, posed for sunkissed photos in the beige two-piece swimwear. Arabella who welcomed her baby daughter Gigi in June with partner Billy Henty, looked in her element as she posed on a sun lounger. She showed off her golden tan and her toned figure in the holiday snaps, which she simply captioned: "Getting my Vitamin C." Her followers were quick to flood her comments with flame emojis, while one gushed that she was "gorgeous". Last month, the new mum stunned in a white floral maxi dress with a thigh split, before sizzling in a backless mini dress. Arabella recently opened up on facing her first parenting struggle after being left home alone by her partner just days after giving birth. Confirming Billy had jetted off to work, the star revealed she'd found it "challenging" having to look after the tot on her own. Cradling Gigi in a mirror selfie, the ex of Ruben Dias declared: "One tired mumma." She added: "Billy has been away for work this week which has been challenging but has also given me so much confidence in getting out the house alone. "Can't wait for another pair of hands and to have a long shower when he's home." She confirmed she was expecting shortly after she went public with her romance with Billy which The Sun revealed in September last year. Pregnant Love Island star Arabella Chi shows off huge bump as she lifts weights in the gym They begun dating just weeks after she took part in the first ever All Stars edition of Love Island early last year. Confirming their tot's arrival at the end of May, Arabella uploaded a black and white snap of Gigi to her profile. She added the caption: "Our worlds are complete. "Gigi Harper Henty, 20/05/2025, 6.2 lbs." She was recently forced to defend herself from trolls who took aim at her showcasing her toned body within days of giving birth. Arabella had chronicled her fitness journey throughout her pregnancy and clarified that her post was a means of continuing her regular content and not to be insensitive towards women struggling with their bodies just a few days after giving birth. She said online: "I was amazed that my body did bounce back as quickly as it did and I am proud of myself." "I was proud that all that training I had done had paid off and to inspire other people that if you train safely throughout your pregnancy it does make a difference." Arabella concluded by writing: "Don't get me wrong, post partum isn't always glamorous, most days I'm covered in sick, milk, blood or poo. But it's also nice to share the small wins on here." Arabella first shot to fame on series five of Love Island in 2019. 5 5

How the era of the ‘angry young men' sowed the seeds for the Swinging Sixties
How the era of the ‘angry young men' sowed the seeds for the Swinging Sixties

Telegraph

time8 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

How the era of the ‘angry young men' sowed the seeds for the Swinging Sixties

The 1960s, that much-loved decade, revived with gusto during the Britpop era, still surrounds us with its images and iconography, from Bond to Sgt Pepper – but where does this distinctly English narrative come from? When did it start? Look a bit deeper, and in the decade between the end of the Korean War and The Beatles releasing Please Please Me, something stirred in the provinces. Drama, fiction and cinema started to produce a body of work that was distinctly at odds with what had passed as appropriate entertainment in the 1940s. During a time when people knew their place – and were often trapped as a result – the era of the 'angry young men' took shape. Full of 'outsider' characters and regional settings, and dubbed 'kitchen sink' by critics in recognition of its determinedly down-to-earth style, this is what gave birth to today's cultural landscape. It's part of our national DNA, and language, giving us phrases such as 'I believe you, thousands wouldn't' as well as immediately identifiable characters such as Billy Liar and Archie Rice. While there had been writing of this type before – notably by Arnold Bennett, JB Priestley, and George Orwell – what came after the post-war austerity period was much greater in scope, drawing heavily on the class consciousness of the 1930s and the bitter, traumatic experience of the war. (Especially the latter: this was a time when everybody spoke about 'the war'.) Dominating voices Within a few years, disparate talents such as the Goons; Tony Hancock; writers William Cooper, Kingsley Amis and Philip Larkin; film producers the Boulting brothers and actors such as Stanley Baker, Diana Dors and Dirk Bogarde were presenting the public with new characters, novel situations and a questioning approach to status quo. Influenced partly by US noirs and European social realism, both of which were readily viewable on screen or available to read in paperback, 'kitchen sink' drama provided readers with everyday plots and strongly drawn working-class characters. Usually male, they rent a room somewhere. It's signalled that they may have been in the war, but none were officers, and they avoided heroism. Their appearance is important to them, and as this is a time of full employment, they drink and smoke continuously. Disaffected and denunciatory, they aspire to owning property and embrace materialism. Such plots are common in the work of John Osborne, John Braine and Alan Sillitoe. In terms of women writers, it was the idiosyncratic voices such as Muriel Spark and Iris Murdoch who dominated; yet, at the end of the decade authors, such as Shelagh Delaney emerged, whose narratives were grounded in reality: they described mixed-race relationships and affairs with yet-to-be-divorced older men, and broke new ground by allowing pregnancy and abortion to haunt their narratives. Frustrated, one morning our hero (or heroine) may pack a suitcase and head down to the station. On a long, slow train of blood-red carriages hauled by a black steam locomotive, they depart for London, throwing aside the conventions and restrictions of regional life. Distinctly realistic depictions All of this takes place in a country markedly different to the one we live in now: a landscape clogged with coal smoke from countless factories, yards and depots set amidst geometric rows of tiny houses. In some ways, the shadow of the war persists. Rationing has either just ceased or is still in force, and National Service remains a rite of passage for young men. How far we are from this world is apparent when viewing the images of Salford and Wakefield captured for posterity by Walter Lassally and Denys Coop in A Taste of Honey and This Sporting Life respectively. Crisp and perfect, almost every frame could be an LP cover or book jacket. Given today's London-centric arts scene, it's interesting to note the importance of Liverpool in launching the kitchen sink as a phenomenon, with two juvenile delinquency dramas, Violent Playground and These Dangerous Years, both shot there. Reminding us that current concerns about toxic masculinity are nothing new, both were outliers for the musical explosion that erupted in the city just six years later, and showed audiences a world very different from the BBC-style, Received Pronunciation dramas that still proliferated. Nor was this solely a 'northern' thing. London – Soho in particular – came into its own with distinctly realistic depictions. Prior to the mid-50s, film-makers rarely strayed beyond Mayfair and W1, and, if they did, usually shot on sets. Now there was an abundance of bedsit dramas, lots of crime and, by the standards of the time, sex (the Lady Chatterley trial helped fell those boundaries). Sowing the seeds for kitchen sink cinema The medium for showing these dramas varied. Despite being limited to only two channels, each broadcasting about six hours a day, television sowed the seeds for much of what followed. The feature-film-length TV play was a key element in the evening inventory, with ITV leading the way. At its peak, over 200 original scripts per annum were being commissioned, providing young actors and directors with critical early career exposure. TV today – including subscription platforms – could only dream of this. As for the theatre, director Joan Littlewood broke down stylistic norms and tackled themes rarely seen on stage before. Brendan Behan, John Arden, Lionel Bart, Shelagh Delaney and Arnold Wesker all benefited from her support. Much influenced by Bertolt Brecht and happy to stage big political ensemble pieces, her output at the Theatre Workshop, Stratford (formed in 1953), was youth-orientated and anticipated the satire boom that followed. There were hits, Fings Ain't Wot They Used T'Be, deprecating the replacement of community with consumerism, intriguing misses (Ned Kelly, with Harry H Corbett comes to mind) and one undeniable classic, Oh! What a Lovely War (1969). Most people encountered the kitchen sink in the cinema, though. The Odeon, Gaumont, Granada and ABC chains remained uniquely accessible and popular; and yet, the conservatism of traditional producers – for a while – made getting Osborne, Sillitoe et al on the screen difficult. The Rank Organisation, anxious to maintain their role as custodians of family entertainment, declined to back Look Back in Anger. One explanation for this resistance came from the kitchen sink portraying 'difficult topics' previously considered to be of limited interest to paying audiences. One of these was politics. No Love for Johnnie, written by Wilfred Fienburgh MP, a predecessor of Jeremy Corbyn in Islington North, showed a world of cynical career advancement, no-confidence votes, late-night drinking and extra-marital affairs. The genre ended on a high. Back in Liverpool, A Hard Day's Night was written by Alun Owen, and directed by Richard Lester, an accomplice of The Goons. Filmed in black and white, with kitchen-sink actors Wilfrid Brambell and Norman Rossington in supporting roles (and Kenneth Haigh, uncredited), it repeated one of the main plot features – the cast goes down to London by train – while also beginning the swinging Sixties. Indeed, A Hard Day's Night feels like the archetypal 1960s film, marking the dawn of a new permissiveness – but in its breaking down of barriers, in its celebration of four working-class lads, the seeds of its success were sown in the previous decade. Top five kitchen-sink heroes The writers remain in print and many of the actors are still recognised names. But look deeper, and there are some no-longer-quite-so-well-regarded figures whose work repays study. 1. Mary Ure Glaswegian actress Mary Ure made a huge impression as Jimmy Porter's fragile, abused wife Alison in Look Back in Anger (1959), playing the part – definitively – on both stage and screen. A spell with the Royal Shakespeare Company followed, as did an Academy Award nomination for her role as Clara Dawes in Sons and Lovers (1960), but her career – like those of many women – remained defined by her marriages, in her case to John Osborne and Robert Shaw. Like Harvey she died in early middle-age, more than half a century ago. 2. Laurence Harvey A true outsider – Jewish, Lithuanian, brought up in South Africa – Laurence Harvey projected an undemonstrative, detached acting style whilst being simultaneously debonair and anti-heroic. It was an approach that fitted the times, and brought him Academy Award and Bafta nominations for his turn as proto-Thatcherite Joe Lampton in Room at the Top (1959). He also directed, including the black jazz musical Simply Heavenly (1958) and a film The Ceremony (1963), which, much influenced by Orson Welles, suggests a talent that might have been more widely used. 3. Tom Bell Leading man Tom Bell owed much to TV plays, appearing in 33 when that genre reigned supreme on the small screen. From Liverpool, Bell was famous for 'upsetting the establishment' something that lost him much work. With a background in provincial rep and a spell at the Theatre Workshop his best role during this period was in The L-Shaped Room (1962). 4. Kenneth Haigh Similarly, Kenneth Haigh, from Mexborough, never quite achieved star status despite creating the part of Jimmy Porter in Look Back in Anger, partnering Roberts in Maggie May and playing Joe Lampton in Man at the Top (1970-1972) on TV. During a long career, which saw him appear in 21 TV plays, he played Napoleon in Eagle in a Cage (replacing Albert Finney) and co-starred with Joan Collins in The Bitch. 5. Rachel Roberts Rachel Roberts lasted only a little longer, and like Ure was famous as much for her husband, Rex Harrison, as for her acting. This included Bafta-winning performances in Saturday Night and Sunday Morning and This Sporting Life. Lionel Bart built the stage musical Maggie May (1964) around her, but despite a third Bafta for John Schlesinger's Yanks (1979), alcoholism took its toll a year later.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store