Resistance is futile - they have vays of making you laugh. Thoroughly enjoying themselves the in-house cast of this stage version of the 1980s' TV show, provides a fine tribute to the late David Croft's sure touch for British broadside humour with its farcical foreign accents, double entendres by the dozen and brilliantly daft plots.

The stage set recreates the wartime French cafe under German occupation run by Rene - played with resigned aplomb by Nick Guy - the reluctant Resistance hero who's oddly irrisistible to his female staff.

The French regulars include Jane Haynes as Rene's long suffering wife, while the two Rene besotted barmaids are Kate Knight and Trina Harman.

Louise King is the Resistance leader 'I will only say ziz once' Michelle, Brian Foley, the master of see through disguises Leclerc, and Chris Martyn-Potts the 'Good Moaning' gendarme.

Among the largely unoccupied occupation officers, David Gillard beams as genial guzzling Colonel Von Strohm, Adam Donoghue is the 'Camp' Lieutenant Gruber, and Jason Green the brassy Captain Bertorelli.

Playing the heavies, Ian Knight makes a fearsome wooden-legged one-eyed General Von Schmelling, and Douglas Child is splendidly sinister as the Gestapo's Herr Flick, with Marie Mellor his soul mate Private Geerhart.

With a titillating old masters painting, a giant sausage, an inflatable Hitler doll, and a secret agent cockatoo, what more could Rene's fans ask for? Runs until Saturday.