He refers to the female principal as "Cleavage" and one of the students, from Laos, as "Chopstick" - but the kid has told him to, so that's absolutely fine, right? Another student, whom Laurie mocks for using a groin protector as a mouth guard, is a "downsie".
But Laurie really cares for the kids, and we're told they love him, and that's all that matters.
The play's focus is the training of goody-two-shoes student teacher Annie (Cian Elyse White) - beautiful, Maori and Christian - and the reactions she provokes in Laurie, his assistant Pat (Brett O'Gorman) and the principal (lively, sparky Bronwyn Bradley).
Armstrong has created characters complicated enough for our sympathies to see-saw between them during their enjoyably candid arguments. A discussion on abortion is handled with surprising sensitivity, and Laurie gets a great speech on the modern problems of being a teacher with a "novodraft" and an increasing admin and assessment load: "The only thing I like is teaching - and there's less and less of that."
Rachael Walker's set puts wooden climbing bars to excellent use for that nostalgic, cramped gym-office effect.
Overall, the play is as unreformed as Laurie himself (publicity flyers quote approval of rightwing political commentator Kiwiblog). Change grandpa into his unstained tracksuit pants and take him along for a treat.
Theatre
What: Kings of the Gym
Where: Maidment Theatre, Albert St until March 2