An explosive collision between old school carpentry and contemporary sexual politics sends sparks flying in Tadpole Productions' rollicking comedy of manners, The Pink Hammer.
Playwright Michele Amas cleverly engineers a scenario that has an authentic kiwi bloke blackmailed into providing carpentry lessons for a lively quartet of women who are more interested in socialising than acquiring DIY skills.
The chippie, who has managed to remain oblivious to the decades of feminist advancement, finds the sanctuary of his shed turned upside down as the women casually deposit their emotional baggage all over his meticulously ordered work benches.
Director Janice Finn has assembled a dream cast who seize the comic opportunities in a script that makes good use of the abundant sexual innuendo lurking within the terminology of the building trade.
Lisa Chappell is exuberantly bold and brassy as an Irish good-time-girl with a fondness for phone sex. By contrast, Darien Takle is nervous as a mouse playing a put-upon nurse weighed down by the demands of caring for her mother.