REVIEW: The Last Laugh, Grand Opera House, York, until Saturday ****

The fez, the spectacles and the bow tie: Damian Williams’s Tommy Cooper, Bob Golding’s Eric Morecambe and Simon Cartwright’s Bob Monkhouse in The Last Laugh. Picture: Pamela Raith

AFTER five hollow weeks in New York, Paul Hendy’s love letter to the quintessentially British – even English – humour of Tommy Cooper, Eric Morecambe and Bob Monkhouse opens its UK tour in old York.

Morecambe & Wise may have appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show 16 times, Cooper on six occasions too, but if ever affirmation were needed that the USA and UK are divided by a common language, then the Big Apple audiences’ bewilderment at their reactivated larks in Hendy’s 90-minute play provided it.

Unlike last summer’s Edinburgh Fringe premiere and February and March’s West End run at the Noel Coward Theatre, it was more a case of ‘no laugh’, rather than ‘last laugh’, judging by the New York recollections of Hendy’s cast at the question-and-answer session that followed Wednesday’s matinee.

Hendy just happened to be there too, adding further insight into his affectionate play, and his hand-picked cast – who first appeared in his 19-minute film version in 2016 – will be on hand after each performance to take more questions. Well worth staying for their banter, nostalgia and comedic camaraderie, prompted by questions deposited in a Cooper fez in the interval.

Damian Williams’s Tommy Cooper, minus trousers, Bob Golding’s Eric Morecambe and Simon Cartwright’s Bob Monkhouse in a moment of musical camaraderie in The Last Laugh. Picture: Pamela Raith

If Hendy’s name is familiar to you, he is the writer of York Theatre Royal’s pantomimes under the fruitful partnership with his Evolution Productions company since 2020. You will know his style too: meticulous crafting of puns, putdowns and pratfalls, allied to a rebellious streak and a passion for storytelling.

Those qualities will be seen again in Sleeping Beauty from December 2 to January 4 2026, and they are writ large in The Last Laugh, his exploration of what makes comedy work, what drives comedians to perform and at what cost, and why the laughs last long after their passing.

Hendy, a jokesmith who lets others do the telling, has chosen his comedians carefully for his study: Cooper and Morecambe, who died within six weeks of each other in 1984, were naturally funny, but whereas Cooper merely had to walk on stage to engender laughs, using silence like no-one else, Morecambe needed partners, whether Ernie Wise on stage, or writers for him to then apply his alchemical gifts of timing, mannerism and mischief.

Hendy, by his own admission, is closer to Monkhouse, the craftsmen who would chisel away at a gag like a sculptor until it had the right balance and comic weight, honed and polished to the last word. He kept his jokes in books; he knew who wrote every famous line; he knew how to deliver a punchline.

After all, it was Monkhouse who quipped: “People used to laugh at me when I said I wanted to be a comedian. Well, they’re not laughing now.”

The Last Laugh writer-director Paul Hendy

You can imagine Hendy applying such fastidious skills when writing The Last Laugh, pulling the strings as a writer must to make a piece of theatre with resonance and meaning, rather than rely on an overload of familiar jokes.

He does so by placing the comedy triumvirate in a dressing room of memories, where one wall is filled with black-and-white portraits of comedians, all dead, from Sid Field to Sid James, with the space for one more. Then he lets them chat, lock horns, reflect, perform to each other, and dress for their next performance.

He entrusts the roles to two of his regular dames, Bob Golding and Sheffield Lyceum’s Daman Williams, and Simon Cartwright, who first made his name as an impressionist. Golding first played Eric 16 years ago in his own Morecambe show; Williams had wanted to follow Cooper on to the stage since childhood days; Cartwright knew Monkhouse, working on his act with him.

Williams’s Cooper enters first, after a spluttering and fizzing of the lights that frame each dressing room mirror and the pre-show ghostly sounds of comedians past. Williams, in his underwear, is wearing huge yellow bird’s legs.

In New York, a woman objected to his lack of trousers. “It was going to be a long night,” Williams shrugged in the Q&A. He goes on to give a towering performance as the play’s fulcrum, not an impression, but a full picture of a giant of comedy, amusingly dismissive of others, a quick thinker, an astute observer and both inventive and re-inventive.

Damian Williams’s Tommy Cooper: Comedy magic in The Last Laugh. Picture: Pamela Raith

Cartwight has the Monkhouse manner and voice off to a T, a man of candour, kindness, precision, admiration for others and forensic knowledge, with Hendy dropping in stories that may not be familiar but make for a rounded portrait.

Golding’s love of Eric is in every moment, every movement, from the pipe smoking to the chirpy demeanour, while resisting too much twitching of the spectacles.  Again, as with Cooper and Monkhouse, Hendy judges so well what to include of Morecambe’s life story, in particular his resolute devotion to working with Wise.

Who has The Last Laugh? No, it would be wrong to give away the ending, but let’s say it could not be more moving. Joy and sadness, the two faces of theatre, are never more interlocked than in Hendy’s finale.

We miss these comic titans, the fez, the spectacles and Bob’s books, but you will have the first laugh, the last laugh and so many more in between in their memory.  

The Last Laugh, Grand Opera House, York, 7.30pm tonight; 2.30pm and 7.30pm tomorrow. Box office: atgtickets.com/york.

The tour poster for Paul Hendy’s The Last Laugh

The Last Laugh cast and writer visit Borthwick Institute’s archive of Eric Morecambe notebook and diaries

The Last Laugh actors Simon Cartwright (Bob Monkhouse), Damian Williams (Tommy Cooper) and Bob Golding (Eric Morecambe) take a look at the Borthwick Institute comedy archives

THE cast and writer of The Last Laugh undertook an emotional trip to the Borthwick Institute for Archives at the University of York on June 11 to view the notebooks and newly acquired diaries of Eric Morecambe.

Writer-director Paul Hendy and actors Bob Golding, Damian Williams and Simon Cartwright, who play Morecambe. Tommy Cooper and Bob Monkhouse respectively, were joined by the archive team for a private viewing. 

The collections include original material for the Morecambe and Wise 1977 Christmas BBC Special, written in Morecambe’s distinctive handwriting, together with notebooks, diaries and jokes owned previously by legends of British comedy.

Gary Brannan, keeper of archives and research collections at the Borthwick Institute, with The Last Laugh actors Damian Williams, Simon Cartwright and Bob Golding

Hendy said: As a lifelong fan of Eric Morecambe, it’s been absolutely fascinating to visit the archive.  To be able to read Eric’s joke books, written in his own hand, is incredible and actually quite emotional”.

The Borthwick Institute’s comedy collections, acquired by the university, provide an insight into the history of British entertainment. Gary Brannan, keeper of archives and research collections, said: “It’s been a delight to welcome the cast of The Last Laugh to Borthwick and we have loved seeing them connect and with our amazing archives.

“We always say that archives aren’t just records of the past; they are a source of modern creativity, so it has been wonderful to see the cast bring this material to life.”

The actors were thrilled to look at the original documents. Cartwright said: The archive has been an absolute joy to discover.  I was particularly thrilled to find two original radio scripts written by Bob Monkhouse and his writing partner, Denis Goodwin. It serves as a reminder of Bob’s longevity in the industry – over  60 years.”

The Last Laugh writer-director Paul Hendy, centre, with Gary Brannan and Simon Cartwright studying documents at the Borthwick Institute

What happens when you put Eric Morecambe, Tommy Cooper and Bob Monkhouse in one room? The Last Laugh ensues at Grand Opera House, York

The fez, the spectacles and the bow tie: Damian Williams’s Tommy Cooper, Bob Golding’s Eric Morecambe and Simon Cartwright’s Bob Monkhouse in The Last Laugh. Picture: Pamela Raith

WHO will have The Last Laugh at the Grand Opera House, York, when British comedy triumvirate Eric Morecambe, Tommy Cooper and Bob Monkhouse reconvene in a dressing room in Paul Hendy’s play?

Find out from June 10 to 14 when Bob Golding, Damian Williams and Simon Cartwright take on the iconic roles in this new work by the Evolutions Productions director, who just happens to write York Theatre Royal’s pantomimes too.

“I’ve always been fascinated by what makes something – or someone – funny,” says the award-winning Hendy. “I wrote The Last Laugh to explore those questions, to examine comedy’s mechanics.  How a pause, a look, or one word can change the way a joke lands – or doesn’t.  I hope The Last Laugh brings some of the joy and laughter that these three men brought to so many.

“As you’ll see, Damian Williams is the perfect Tommy Cooper, Bob Golding embodies Eric and Simon Cartwright is Bob Monkhouse”

The Last Laugh writer-director Paul Hendy

Here the cast discusses the nostalgia and poignancy of The Last Laugh, the public response and the craft of comedy.

Do you have your own memories of Eric, Tommy and Bob?

Bob Golding: “I have strong and fond memories of all the comics. I especially remember a Christmas special where Eric & Ernie were dressed as turkeys. I was mesmerised at their ability to make not just me laugh but my parents, my younger brother and my elderly grandmother, who would chuckle and mutter “silly b***ers” under her breath.”

Damian Williams: “I have so many fond memories of these iconic men from watching them at Christmas with the family, particularly sitting with my dad watching Tommy Cooper and seeing him crying with laughter. I grew up with them and was certainly influenced by them. Tommy is the reason I got into the business.”

Simon Cartwright: “All three were iconic legends of British light entertainment and featured in positive childhood memories for me. I enjoyed watching Bob Monkhouse presenting in the very early  ’70s – I would have been six years old  – on programmes like The Golden Shot and then into the ’80s with Bob’s Full House. They are fond memories of a time that I can recall, happier family environments when we’d all watch stuff together.”

Having a laugh: Damian Williams’s Tommy Cooper, Bob Golding’s Eric Morecambe and Simon Cartwright’s Bob Monkhouse in The Last Laugh. Picture: Pamela Raith

Without giving too much away, what happens in The Last Laugh and why does the play resonate with audiences today?

Golding:  “Well, put simply, The Last Laugh is what happens when you put three comedy legends in a dressing room and lock the door. You’ve got Tommy Cooper, Bob Monkhouse, and yours truly – Eric Morecambe – putting the world to rights, one laugh at a time.

“It’s a love letter to comedy, to friendship, and to those glorious gags that never get old (unlike us!). But it’s not just about jokes—it’s about legacy, about life, and about how laughter carries us through the darkest moments.

“Audiences are coming in expecting a chuckle and leaving with a lump in their throat – and possibly a stitch in their side. It reminds people why comedy matters, especially in today’s world where we could all do with a bit more joy and a lot more heart.”

Williams: “Watching The Last Laugh is the closest you’ll get to spending 80 minutes in the company of these great men. It’s about the art of comedy, the relationship between these three men and what’s it’s really like to be funny for a living. It’s full of laughs, nostalgia, warmth and love.”

Cartwright:  “It reflects on a time when families would sit down and watch television together. Nowadays that’s very rare because of streaming, people being dissipated around family lives and watching things on their smartphones.

“I think people do remember times when they sat down together, the halcyon days. Looking back into the ’60s and 70s, people seem to think they were happier times.”

Dressing room discussions: Damion Williams’s Tommy Cooper, Bob Golding’s Eric Morecambe and Simon Cartwright’s Bob Monkhouse in The Last Laugh. Picture: Pamela Raith

The show has played the Edinburgh Fringe, London’s West End and New York ahead of its UK tour opening in York next week.  What has been the response so far?

Golding: “Oh, it’s been an absolute riot – in the best possible way! Edinburgh? Huge laughs and standing ovations. The West End? Packed houses, five-star reviews and audiences who didn’t want to leave the theatre. And New York? Well, they absolutely loved it, even if they didn’t know who Eric was!

”We’ve had people in tears – happy ones! They have told us how much it meant to see their comedy heroes brought back to life. And the joy is infectious. Every single night has felt like a celebration, not just of these three men, but of what it means to really laugh. It’s been the experience of a lifetime.”

Williams: “The response has been amazing. It really has struck a chord with people. The comments and the reviews have been fantastic. We really didn’t know how it would be received when we started and it’s totally blown our minds.”

Cartwright: “We’ve had a remarkable reaction from the public, getting standing ovations and moving people – particularly men of a certain age becoming quite emotional. I think they can apply positives memories from their youth, and somehow connect with these comedians, triggering those thoughts and memories.

“It was also a time when comedy was a lot more innocent, and I think people appreciate that the comedians we’re representing were not particularly political or had an agenda other than being funny and making us feel good.”

In character, not caricature: Bob Golding’s Eric Morecambe, Damian Williams’s Tommy Cooper and Simon Cartwright’s Bob Monkhouse. Picture: Pamela Raith

How do you find the balance between playing a caricature and making it your own?

Golding: “I try to avoid the word ‘caricature’ as it conjures a larger-than-life interpretation of the person I’m portraying. When it comes to playing a well-known person, I think it’s all about capturing the spirit of them and avoiding cliché impressions or over-used gestures etc. I also feel that with every character I play there will always be an element of myself in it. It’s almost unavoidable.

“I’ve played Eric for over 16 years now, so I think my connection and respect for him has almost certainly become stronger and I have never lost sight of the fact that I’m merely on the coat-tail of his greatness and talent. It’s been a huge honour.

Williams: “As an actor, I wanted to play Tommy as the man he was and try to avoid just doing an impression. It’s been interesting to really study him and to learn more about who he was. The three of us have worked incredibly hard to capture them without doing a caricature.”

Cartwright:  “First and foremost, I knew Bob Monkhouse personally, so from a method-acting point of view, I can really draw on and recall what he was like off-stage, so I have that distinct advantage. These are three very vulnerable men who share the love of making people laugh, and they get there in different ways.

“It’s all about finding authenticity and truth, rather than trying to create a caricature or an impression. We’re not doing that, we’re going for truth and sentiment. I think the more we perform this, the more truth we’re finding in the words, and it’s resonating with our own personalities as well.”

“It’s very much a ‘feel good’ piece of theatre and a reassuringly British experience,” says Bob Golding, centre, of Paul Hendy’s play The Last Laugh. Picture: Pamela Raith

Are there any cities or venues on the tour where you will be especially excited to perform?

Golding: “I love touring! Of course, I miss my family, but I love seeing all the different theatres and feeling the energy of the different audiences.

“I think we are lucky here in the UK as it does provide many of those lovely pockets. I love the history and charm of a place like York, for example, but then also the buzz of the Glasgow nights is exciting and appealing too.

“Milton Keynes is very close to my actual home, so I will certainly look forward to being able to sleep in my own bed during that week, but overall, I am comforted by the ‘safe space’ of every theatre we visit. For an actor, the theatre is the home away from home.”

Williams: “I can’t wait to start the tour and bring it to some amazing cities. Personally, I’m looking forward to the Sheffield audiences, as it’s where I do panto every Christmas [playing the Lyceum dame], and Southend as it’s my hometown.”

Cartwright: “I’m looking forward to Sheffield – I have an affinity to Sheffield. There’s always this feeling that the audiences get warmer as you go further north, even though the temperature might get cooler outside.

“It will be interesting to try Glasgow as well – we mention the Glasgow Empire [in the play], the infamous venue where every comic failed. Will we be able to get the Glaswegian crowds to reflect warmly on our efforts? I do hope so.”

The poster for The Last Laugh, bound for York next week after playing the Edinburgh Fringe, the West End and New York

What do you hope audiences will take away from The Last Laugh:  not only laughter, but maybe something deeper too?

Golding: “What we’ve certainly found with The Last Laugh is that people of a certain age have left in a bit of an emotional state after enjoying the play. They’ve laughed and they’ve cried as I think it awakens a more innocent time in our youth when elder family members were still with us, and possibly reminds us of what those times mean to us.

“The laughter hopefully evens out the more poignant and sadder feelings though. It’s very much a ‘feel good’ piece of theatre and a reassuringly British experience.”

Williams: “What we’ve learnt so far is that the audiences are totally transported back to a time when they sat as a family and watched these great comedians on the TV. We can totally feel the love from the audience as soon as the play starts. You’ll be laughing one minute and crying the next. You’ll learn more about these men and what it was really like to be them. “

Cartwright:  “I hope that audiences take away a new and fresh insight into the three comedians. I hope that a younger generation, who might not have seen the comedians before, discover them and walk away with an interest, and we ultimately keep their memories alive. I hope for the older generations we’re a warm reminder of a bygone age, the golden age of British comedy.”

The Last Laugh, Grand Opera House, York, June 10 to 14, 7.30pm plus 2.30pm Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday matinees. In the second half, a Q&A session will enable audience members to put their questions to the cast. Box office: atgtickets.com/york.

Three shows in three nights at Theatre@41: Elysium Theatre’s Reiver tales, Frankie revelations in Howerd’s End and Ria Lina

Elaine MacNicol in The Widow’s Path in Elysium Theatre Company’s Reiver: Tales From The Borders, on tour at Theatre@41, Monkgate, and the Grey Village Hall, Sutton-on-the-Forest

ELYSIUM Theatre Company presents Matthew Howden, Elaine MacNicol and Steven Stobbs in artistic director Jake Murray’s touring production of Reiver: Tales From The Borders at Theatre@41, Monkgate, York, tonight at 7.30pm.

The Reivers were lawless families who terrorised the Anglo-Scottish border for 400 years from Newcastle to Edinburgh, Carlisle to Dumfries, until King James I broke their power. Living by blackmail, extortion, protection and theft, they grew to become some of the most powerful families of their time: the Nixons, the Armstrongs, the Charltons, the Maxwells and many more.

Steeped in the folklore and history of the northern borders, writer Steve Byron weaves three tales of ordinary people caught up in the Reivers’ web, a farmer, a lawman and a young woman, as they take a stand against their murderous ways in a world of violence and injustice.

In Blackmail, an innocent farmer is forced to take a stand against the bullying threats of a powerful Reiver family. In Godforsaken Place, a southern lawman exiled to the north by the corrupt London authorities tries to save a Reiver child from a terrible fate.

In The Widow’s Path, a Scottish woman sold into servitude as a child pursues the murderers of her husband. She will not rest until she has overturned the Reiver order to gain her revenge.

As law and order do battle with corruption and greed, will good triumph over evil, or will evil win the day?

Simon Cartwright’s Frankie Howerd and Mark Farrelly’s Dennis Heymer in Howerd’s End. Picture: Steve Ullathorne

Tomorrow night, at 7.30pm, Mark Farrelly’s play Howerd’s End goes to the heart of York-born comedian Frankie Howerd’s secret. A secret called Dennis Heymer, his lover, friend and anchor, with whom he had a clandestine relationship from the 1950s until Frankie’s death in 1992.

From the writer of Quentin Crisp: Naked Hope and The Silence Of Snow: The Life Of Patrick Hamilton comes a show packed with humour in a glorious opportunity to encounter Frankie in full-flight stand-up mode, but also unafraid of the truth.

Howerd’s End portrays a shared, defiant journey through closeness, love, grief and all the other things that make life worth living. Come and say farewell to a legend… and learn the art of letting go as Farrelly’s Dennis is joined by Simon Cartwright’s Frankie in a touring production directed by Joe Harmston.

Ria Lina: Riawakening makes it three nights in a row at Theatre@41 on Friday at 8pm. In the aftermath of a global pandemic, comedian and scientist Ria Lina has undergone a Riawakening and now sees the world differently.

In her debut tour show, she tackles the issues of coming out of a pandemic, the new normal, divorce, dating in a new digital world, motherhood and what it really means to be a woman today.

Fearless and provocative, Ria is the only Filipina comedian working on the British stand-up circuit and has appeared on Live At The Apollo, Have I Got News For You, House Of Games, The Last Leg and Celebrity Mastermind.

Tickets are on sale at tickets.41monkgate.co.uk. Durham company Elysium Theatre’s Reiver: Tales From The Borders also visits the Grey Village Hall, Sutton-on-the-Forest, near York, on October 28 at 7.30pm; tickets, 01347 811428. Ria Lina plays The Wardrobe, Leeds, on October 19, 7.30pm; box office, thewardrobe.seetickets.com.

Ria Lina: York and Leeds gigs on Riawakening tour