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Captivatin­g comedy about the camp kid who became Alan Carr

» Changing Ends ITV1, 8.30pm ★★★★★

- ISOBEL LEWIS

Who was Alan Carr before he was Alan Carr: Chatty Man and national treasure? According to Carr’s autobiogra­phical sitcom Changing Ends, the answer is: exactly the same – just without the fame.

Last summer, this sentimenta­l look at Carr’s childhood launched on streamer ITVX. Now, the comedy is being given the terrestria­l debut it deserves. With sharp writing, and a captivatin­g central performanc­e, it’ll be a hit faster than you can say “ding dong”.

The real-life Carr, who co-wrote Changing Ends with the late Two Doors Down creator Simon Carlyle, serves as the show’s narrator. Carr is always on hand with a witty observatio­n and knowing wink, joking that little Alan needed to learn to run as a child “before he could mince”.

Some of Carr’s interjecti­ons are a little obvious – one comparing jeering, yelling football crowds to “being on Twitter” caused me to roll my eyes. But his presence as a nostalgic omniscient narrator is there to enhance, not steal focus from, the real star of the show.

Oliver Savell, the young Belfast actor portraying Alan aged 11, was a real feat of casting; in both looks and characteri­sation, from his gappy teeth to his gait, Savell embodies Carr entirely.

We’re transporte­d back to the sepia haze of the comic’s childhood: Northampto­n, mid-1980s. For a boy who’s a bit different – or “half rice, half chips,” as neighbour Angela (Gabby Best) euphemisti­cally speculates to his mother Christine (Nancy Sullivan) – it’s not exactly a tolerant environmen­t.

As a camp kid in a homophobic society, young Alan is called every name under the sun: “bummer, goofy, goggle-eyes, gappy”. Alan, who is obsessed with Murder She Wrote, Dynasty and bird-watching, is largely oblivious. He easily makes friends with older women, from dinner ladies to his “fabulous flamboyant” drama teacher. Boys his own age? Not so much.

The real Carr being such a distinctiv­e character, it would be easy for an actor to reduce him to a simple stereotype or hard-tomaintain impression. Yet Savell imbues his performanc­e with a precocious nuance, bringing depth and tenderness to the role.

At home, Alan is flanked by protective mum Christine and stoic dad Graham (Shaun Dooley). Both parents desperatel­y love their son, but worry about him in the outside world. Despite all evidence suggesting otherwise, Graham, the coach of the local fourth division team and a local celebrity-slashhate figure, insists that football is in his son’s blood. “I was a footballer, your granddad was a footballer. You see what I’m trying to say to you, Alan?” Graham asks. “I’m

Oliver Savell, the young Belfast actor portraying Alan, was a real feat of casting

adopted?” the pre-teen responds, flashing an awkward smile.

Christine and Graham’s own dramas run alongside Alan’s, creating a vivid world of bitchy neighbours and local sporting politics. The funniest moments in the script are between Christine and her frenemy-next-door Angela, the two women practising military levels of passive aggression.

Book club feuds and collapsing football stadiums are the low-stakes, small-town battlegrou­nds faced by the adults. For Alan, it’s competitio­ns in the local paper and skiving off school.

Yet Carr and Carlyle’s script is so tightly written and crammed with jokes that nobody could call Changing Ends twee. There’s Savell to thank for that, too. Less masterful child actors can push sitcoms into saccharine territory, but he keeps the show’s message on the right side of sweet.

 ?? BABY COW PRODUCTION­S ?? Oliver Savell (right) plays young Alan Carr in the sitcom written by the comedian himself and based on his childhood
BABY COW PRODUCTION­S Oliver Savell (right) plays young Alan Carr in the sitcom written by the comedian himself and based on his childhood
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