Review: Oliver Reed: Wild Thing, Gilded Balloon, Teviot

SET in a pub (where else?), this gregarious tribute to Oliver Reed’s life is everything a 
biopic should be – a highly entertaining representation of the facts, enhanced by distorting the lens on its subject’s more colourful periods.****

Rob Crouch not only resembles, sounds, scares and excites as Oliver Reed. He’s so convincing you feel like sharing a whisky with him 
afterwards in a bid to get even closer to the man who treated the pub as his theatre.

Based on Reed’s autobiography, one of the play’s highlights is a scene that, in lesser hands, could slow up the show.

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In it, audience members are enticed to play Johnny Carson and Shelley Winters during one of Reed’s infamous TV 
interviews.

Sit in the first couple of rows and you might even get a drink handed to you. But that shouldn’t be an enticement to pay tribute to one of cinema’s most rock-and-roll characters.

“Awe and respect are two different things,” Reed once said.

At this pub, you’ll find both.

Until August 27