Ania Magliano: Forgive Me, Father review – winning comedy about commitment and a lost coil

Ania Magliano: Forgive Me, Father review – winning comedy about commitment and a lost coil

Pleasance Courtyard, Edinburgh
The standup delivers bullet-proof set-pieces in a masterclass on threading emotional significance through joyful autobiography

Last year, a late reveal recast Ania Magliano’s lighthearted comedy set as something more meaningful entirely. There’s nothing quite so eye-catching this year, but Forgive Me, Father is another masterclass in threading emotional significance through otherwise weightless and joyful autobiographical standup. It finds the 26-year-old teetering on the edge of romantic commitment: now cohabiting, and ostensibly very happy, with a boyfriend who has form for long-termism – and yet prone to starting arguments that erode the relationship’s likely longevity.

Why? To discover, we must revisit Magliano’s infancy as the child of divorce, and her several recent trips to the doctor to hunt down her lost contraceptive coil. Intrusive medical procedures have long provided standups with crowd-pleasing material, and that’s the case again here. But it doesn’t feel as cheap in Magliano’s hands as it can elsewhere, because it’s well woven into the tale of her commitment-phobia. Nor is it the show’s biggest-hitting sequence. That would be a set-piece about “the world’s most powerful vibrator”, which our host must connect (droll image, this) via extension cable and whose awesome powers extend not just to satisfying the sex drive but, on this evidence, the funny bone too.

At Pleasance Courtyard, Edinburgh, until 25 August

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