North West

Neil Curran’s ‘Café Amour’ – Liverpool Improvisation Festival – Unity Theatre

Do you date?  Do you use dating websites?  A look into online dating on the modern world of love and romance.  Neil Curran has set the show in a French café so that it doesn’t sound so seedy, searching the audience for someone who is not an improviser to make it feel more authentic.  Well done Lucy for volunteering, you are about to be grilled about your dating life. 

Lucy who is half Manc and half Liverpudlian, has been with James for twelve years, and they met on a dating website, although James prefers to say that they met through friends.  The thing that stood out for Lucy on his profile was that he found it funny when old people fall over – ok Lucy, we won’t judge you!  Asked about what her opinion on the secret to longevity in a relationship, her answer is trust, and making each other laugh.  Curran spent time interviewing Lucy as though she was filling in her dating app profile, and then announced that on the stroke of midnight, Lucy would be visited by three dating matches.

Photo: Andrew AB

Lucy’s first two matches are Carl, who has a phobia of spiders, and an ex-manager of Everton Football Club who will not pay for the meal and admits that Lucy’s mother sent him.  With no success with the first two, the audience, and Lucy are wondering where Curran can go with this next – to James, of course!

Looking back to a show many years ago with Cilla Black and our Graham who gave the quick reminders of the lovely ladies and gents who were competing for a date, this is a reminder, that no matter which era we look at, humans have been dating since the beginning of procreation.  Even though our dating methods may have changed, our desire for connection has not, and Curran is using this fact to cleverly create his dating show.  He is fast on the uptake, and using an audience member helps to create dialogue, and gives him material to work with, which could easily be upscaled to include members of the audience to stand in as some of the male suitors, if he wished to have more audience inclusion.

Overall, I like the concept, and Curran has a good rapport with the audience making it an entertaining show.

Reviewer: Caroline Worswick

Reviewed: 26th April 2025

North West End UK Rating:

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Caroline Worswick

Recent Posts

Disney’s Beauty and the Beast – Montgomery Theatre

In the sweltering heat the audience of Woodseats Musical Theatre Company’s production of Beauty and…

15 hours ago

Operation Blank – Etcetera Theatre

Just off Camden High Street and up the stairs of the wonderfully cosy (and air-conditioned)…

18 hours ago

Richard III: The Cockpit Theatre

This is an extraordinary production.  Directed and starring Nicolas Perez Costa it was per formed…

18 hours ago

East – The King’s Arms

Nearly 50 years after its premiere, Steven Berkoff’s East still has the power to provoke.…

1 day ago

Romeo and Juliet – Greenwich Theatre

Greenwich Theatre’s current production of Shakespeare’s much loved play has some interesting and innovative features.…

1 day ago

The Karate Kid – The Musical – Sheffield Lyceum

The hit 1984 film ‘The Karate Kid’ has marched into the Sheffield Lyceum, now reimagined…

1 day ago