This playful knockabout romp through the chaos of Jewish voices responding to the growing influence of Jeremy Corbyn back in the later years of the last decade is light, harmless fun that certainly won't bother any Palestinian or Corbyn supporters and should raise a smile from most other people.
It also has something important to say about Jewish people that in this crazy period is quite brave. With satiric enthusiasm, it paints a picture of a community that is diverse in its manner, its views and its actions. There isn’t just a single Jewish voice robotically repeating the word anti-Semitism at anyone daring to march in protest at the bombing of Gaza.
It is true that the appearance of the gun-toting Israeli agents of Mossad seem a bit robotic, but even they point out they could have removed him with a small bomb any time they wanted had they not had something else in mind for him.
But that scene with its guest appearances from MI5 and US agents comes later in the piece, and given they all seem to have guns, you can guess how that scene ends.
The central story revolves around the adult twins Lauren (Gemma Barnett) and Dan (Dylan Corbett-Bader) who meet gangster Malcolm Spivak at their grandfather’s funeral (levoyah), who, following Lauren’s later encounter with a racist plumber called in to mend her boiler, decides he’s had enough of the likes of Corbyn and, along with others, kidnaps Jeremy, who has been lured into a trap by being told he is attending a Holocaust memorial event.
Among the other characters making an appearance are Jewish Corbyn supporters, the Holocaust survivor Moishy and a Rabbi who, having been accused of antisemitism, is bewildered about its meaning.
This light, politically pertinent satire has the comic style of the slapstick Keystone Cops with its crazy car chases and exaggerated physical comedy. The packed audience seemed to love it, despite its cartoonish humour.
Even right-wing Israeli supporters might take a day off from their morbid pastimes to have the odd chuckle, and I expect theatre scouts from across London are rushing to sign it up for their schedules.
Hmmm.