South Wales Echo

Honest, personal and very funny...

Sitcom star Tom Rosenthal is on the road with his first ever tour. Bruce Dessau finds out more

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SITCOM fans will know Tom Rosenthal for two roles. As Roman Empire nerd Marcus in ITV2’s Plebs and as Jonny, the perpetuall­y adolescent prankster son in C4’s Friday Night Dinner. But now everyone has a chance to see the real Tom Rosenthal in his first-ever tour, Manhood.

And fans will definitely be seeing the real Rosenthal on stage. The show is very funny but also very honest and very personal. Manhood is all about the fact that Rosenthal was circumcise­d as a baby and has suffered from psychologi­cal distress about this ever since he first realised what had been done to him. He playfully quips that he is doing the show to “avenge the theft of his foreskin”.

Rosenthal has turned his issues into a thoroughly entertaini­ng stand-up show with the help of graphs, statistics, playful jokes and rigid research. He spoke to experts and has thought long and hard – no pun intended – about the subject. Rosenthal has a Jewish background, but he was not brought up to be Jewish and that was not the reason for the circumcisi­on.

There was a lot of anger towards his parents when he was younger.

“Maybe I’m stuck in adolescenc­e. As soon as I found out what happened to me, I was just constantly searching for a reason and I’ve still not found one. That’s sort of the driving force of the show – going through all the justificat­ions for it being allowed.”

He does want to make the point that he is not actually anti-circumcisi­on.

“If you want to choose to do it when you’re old enough, go right ahead. It’s like any other kind of body modificati­on, like a tattoo or a piercing.

“To do it to a child against their will when they cannot take the decision to take that back, it feels as if it’s against our human rights. I want prospectiv­e parents to watch my show. Have a nice night out. Laugh with the boy from the sitcoms with the big nose, but also go away thinking ‘maybe that’s not cool actually.’

“I’ve always wanted to tour,” he explains. “The nicest thing about it is getting to meet the people who actually watch the TV programmes I’m in. I’m also really proud of Manhood. It’s a show that I always wanted to make. It has a dual purpose for me. Obviously, I wanted to put on the funniest show that I can. But I also want fans to go away thinking about stuff which most people don’t really think about.”

Rosenthal premiered Manhood at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival last summer to wide acclaim and did some national dates in autumn 2019.

Although he finds live performanc­e hard, he is looking forward to hitting the road.

“I’m really a molly coddled actor. It has surprised me how tiring live comedy is. Some of my friends seem to be able to walk onstage and be themselves whereas I’m always nervous. I have the utmost respect for all comedians. I guess an actor’s life is quite easy.”

Not that he doesn’t suffer for his art. He has just finished filming the next series of Friday Night Dinner. His voice is croaky from the long days on set and he pulls up a trouser leg to reveal fresh cuts and bruises.

“I had to wear shin pads to protect me where the other characters were kicking me. I think Tamsin (Greig, who plays his mother) was wearing high heels and kicked me in the wrong place. So actually, for my shins, acting is much harder than stand-up.”

The tour marks a new phase in his career. Although he started out as a stand-up, becoming joint winner of the Leicester Mercury Comedian of the Year Award in 2011 after graduating from London University with a Philosophy degree, acting has taken up most of his time in recent years.

“I was reluctant to call myself a comedian despite that I did stand-up. I felt like until you’ve done a tour, you can’t call yourself a comedian.”

While the subject matter is personal, Rosenthal thinks that the feelings of alienation he talks about are universal. We certainly learn a lot about Rosenthal in his distinctiv­ely hilarious show. But for those that know him from television is he really more like Marcus or Jonny? “I feel I’m more Marcus. He’s a neurotic schemer who thinks that he’s smarter than he is. Whereas Jonny is a sort of teenage prankster. Though, if you combine the two that’s my whole terrible personalit­y!”

■ Tom Rosenthal’s Manhood tour is at the Sherman Theatre in Cardiff tonight

 ??  ?? Tom Rosenthal
Tom Rosenthal

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