The Last Laugh
Until Sat 16 May
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“I’ve written a play that imagines Eric Morecambe, Tommy Cooper and Bob Monkhouse sitting in a dressing room discussing life, death, comedy, and what it means to be funny,” explains Paul Hendy, the one-time television presenter who’s not only written The Last Laugh but also produced and directed it. “Anybody who likes comedy and has an interest in the history of comedy - or, to be honest, just wants a good laugh - will enjoy this show, because ultimately it explores what it means to be funny, even if you don’t know these actual comedians.”
Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury
Wolverhampton Grand Theatre, Wolverhampton
£20 upwards
Tommy, Eric and Bob the focus for new play coming to the region.
Three of the UK’s most revered comedians are brought together in a new play visiting the region next month. Featuring an imaginary conversation between Tommy Cooper, Eric Morecambe and Bob Monkhouse, The Last Laugh has been written and directed by one-time TV presenter Paul Hendy, who explains to What’s On why the show has been such a labour of love...
“I’ve been obsessed with comedy, and in particular what I call the golden age of British comedy - the 1970s and 80s - ever since I first saw Morecambe & Wise on television. Tommy Cooper, Les Dawson, Frankie Howerd… that’s my era.”
Paul Hendy, writer, director & producer of new play The Last Laugh is nothing if not effusive about comedians and comedy of a certain vintage.
“I’ve written a play that imagines Eric Morecambe, Tommy Cooper and Bob Monkhouse sitting in a dressing room discussing life, death, comedy, and what it means to be funny; why some people are funny, and why some people aren’t funny.”
The TV presenter turned writer/producer arguably has an inside track on the debate, and even has something in common with Monkhouse, having hosted game shows such as Don’t Try This At Home (with Davina McCall), Stash The Cash and Wheel Of Fortune. Paul was the kiss of death for the latter - it was cancelled after his single year in the hot seat, having been on air for 23 years prior to that - but the bulk of his work has been rather more successful. CBBC show Dear Mr Barker, which he hosted, was nominated for a BAFTA, a 2023 play he directed about child star Lena Zavaroni earned major critical acclaim, and the production company he runs with his wife has won Pantomime of the Year at the UK Pantomime Awards on four occasions.
The Last Laugh has already earned rave notices in Edinburgh and London, and a short film version, which Paul wrote, directed and produced, scooped several awards. These included Best Comedy Drama at the Los Angeles Independent Film Festival and Best Film at the Manchester Film Festival.
“The success was great, but I always thought there was more in it, because that was just a 20-minute film,” he recalls of the 2016 movie. “There was so much more to be explored about these three legends of comedy and what they’d talk about.”
The film was written with specific actors in mind, to the extent that Steve Royle (Morecambe), Damian Williams (Cooper) and Simon Cartwright (Monkhouse) dictated which three comics would feature, not the other way around.
“They are all brilliant,” says Paul of the actors, two of whom (Williams and Cartwright) reprise their roles in the stage version, “and I’m not just saying that. They’re not just doing impressions; it’s about more than that. It’s about the spirit of those comedians, and that’s what seems to touch people.”
Having developed the film into a play during lockdown (“we all had a bit of time on our hands”), Paul took the show to the Edinburgh Fringe, where it proved a big hit. A West End run followed, and it’s also recently been performed, somewhat surprisingly given its quintessentially British content, in New York.
“It’s fascinating to see [the reaction of] the Americans, who don’t know [the stars] at all. Eric and Tommy appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show in the 1960s, but none of the audience would remember. So it plays not quite as a straight play, but they really have to listen to get who each of the characters are, whereas in Britain there’s already a love and nostalgic warmth for them.
“What we found in the West End was that people who like that style of comedy really love it because it brings back memories of watching with their mum and dad or grandparents and so on.
“It’s funny, but it’s also poignant and very nostalgic. I think if anybody remembers and loves these comedians, they’ll get a lot from it, because it’s my love letter to the golden age of television comedy.”
But as much as he thinks it will appeal to people who remember that time (“over-50s is the sweet spot”), Paul believes the show goes beyond being a nostalgia trip and has something for younger audiences too.
“Anybody who likes comedy and has an interest in the history of comedy - or, to be honest, just wants a good laugh - will enjoy this, because ultimately it explores what it means to be funny, even if you don’t know these actual comedians. Last year at Edinburgh, we had a lot of comedians come to see it, and they responded so positively because it was all so relevant to them.”
Comedy and comedians have always been fertile ground for drama and pathos - from the ‘tears of a clown’ cliché to a need to be validated, accepted, lauded, or even loved, that borders on obsessive.
“Bob Monkhouse was originally in a double act in the 1950s and early 60s, and his comedy partner [Denis Goodwin] committed suicide. He also had a son who was severely disabled, so he had quite a life of tragedy. He was also rejected by both his parents.
“In the play, the characters discuss what drives somebody to be funny, and Bob Monkhouse really analyses that. Is it maternal or paternal rejection? Or both, in his case? What makes them continually search for the next laugh?”
Monkhouse’s sparring partners in the play also had their crosses to bear. Eric Morecambe was an only child constantly looking for a brother figure - a role eventually filled by Ernie Wise, who he bonded with for nearly 50 years - while Tommy Cooper was a natural clown ultimately burdened by people never taking him seriously.
“In the play, Tommy tells a true story of when he was upset and sitting down on a pavement, crying. A group of people saw him and started laughing at him. So Tommy Cooper crying was actually funny… it was like a curse to him.
“He couldn’t help being funny, which I imagine was great 90 per cent of the time but not the other 10, when you want to be taken seriously.”
Although The Last Laugh is a split between humour and drama, it errs very much on the side of the former - as well as being a celebration of the three much-loved icons featured in the show: “It’s in no way an exposé of these comedians’ lives - it’s a love letter. It’s joyous. When we played in the West End, there was so much love and warmth; you could feel it in the theatre, which was great. We live in difficult times, with everything that’s going on in the world, and I think we need that at the moment.”
The Last Laugh shows at Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury from Wed 13 - Sat 16 May and Wolverhampton Grand Theatre from Wed 9 - Sat 12 September
on Wed, 29 Apr 2026
Eddie Braben was still writing sketches for Morecambe and Wise long after the duo's demise. He couldn't stop himself. He'd take a piece of white paper, lay it down on his desk, imagine Eric and Ernie walking onto it, and write down what they said. Perhaps unwittingly, Paul Hendy has performed the same trick again... but with an expanded cast list.
In The Last Laugh he puts Eric, Tommy Cooper and Bob Monkhouse in what appears to be the same theatre dressing room and gets them talking. The result is an ingenious, intelligent, and above all, hilarious stage show that is thoroughly entertaining and surprisingly enlightening. I wouldn't have missed it for the world.
Damian Williams, Simon Cartwright and Steve Royal are three very fine actors who are not just impressionists putting on a tribute act, imitating Cooper, Monkhouse and Morecambe. No, they absolutely inhabit their heroes to such an extent that you begin to believe Theatre Severn possesses a secret time portal. The voices are perfect (just close your eyes), the gestures are spot on, and the body language beautifully observed - from Cooper's square-on-stance, to Morecambe's lamb-like gamboling and Monkhouse's effeminate, pink-pullovered, elegance. And, of course, they have some great material to work with.
All your favourite moments put in an appearance. Eric's paper bag, Tommy's blindfolded wooden duck, jokes about Des O'Connor, Bob's famous 'Golden Shot' one liners and Cooper's 'glass bottle - bottle glass' routine - only the bottle is now full of whisky which disappears. The mere mention of 'playing all the right notes' earned a round of applause - not just for its fame but for the inventive way the cast got to the punchline with no piano involved.
The architect of the show is Paul Hendy who also writes Shrewsbury's annual pantomime. His script snaps and crackles, sets up the gags and pauses for pathos. He had seen the three actors playing these characters in existing one man shows. His genius was to bring them all together. Which means they can play off each other, revealing their craft.
In Bob's case it's his dependence on his voluminous handwritten joke books, each gag analytically chiselled to perfection. Tommy is funny just standing there. Damian Williams re-enacts Cooper's famous 'come on, stand there and do nothing' routine, waiting for the audience to give in. For Eric it's his foolish enthusiasm and his generosity in sharing the lime light.
Tommy is dour. Being born funny, he doesn't find anybody else funny. Eric laughs helplessly at his own material. And Bob is driven by his fear of failure and the incessant need to revise his punchlines to perfection.
Hendy has done his homework with complete diligence and total affection. Using a white wooden gate as a centre-stage prop, each comedian walks through it in turn to earn a laugh. It's a very observant routine which beautifully pin points the three great entertainers' styles.
The first half is 80 minutes of sheer joy for anyone who reveres the comics of the day. The second half is just as funny - a Q&A with the actors which reveals why the do the same.
Finally, two foot notes : in part two, Damian Williams tells a story of Tommy Cooper ordering a 'hot' coffee in a cafe. I wonder if he's aware local legend has it that incident happened right here in Shrewsbury - years ago, when Cooper went for a coffee at the National Milk Bar between houses at the Granada?
And today happens to be Eric's 100th birthday. So you know what to sing.
Five stars
Reviewed by Chris Eldon Lee at Theatre Severn, Shrewsbury, on Wednesday 13 May. The Last Laugh continues to show at the venue until Saturday 16 May. It then returns to the region in the autumn, playing Wolverhampton Grand Theatre from Wednesday 9 to Saturday 12 September
5 Stars on Thu, 14 May 2026