The Scotsman

Steve Martin and Martin Short

- FIONA SHEPHERD

Hydro, Glasgow

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The Glasgow Comedy Festival delivered a slick, shiny, safe Hollywood hit with The Funniest Show In Town at the Moment, starring the world’s other great banjo-playing comedian, Steve Martin, and his buddy, saturday night live regular Martin Short.

The pair first met and bonded in the mid-80s as co-stars on Three Amigos and a film clip of their silly soft shoe shuffle provided a portent of the old school entertainm­ent to come across a two-hour variety show of gags, song, chat and impersonat­ions, seasoned with local and topical references, and served up in bite-sized chunks for easy, contented digestion.

Their soft targets ranged from Trump to the royals, coronaviru­s to each other – predictabl­e territory which they needled rather than savaged with their practised repartee. Although the bigger star, Martin often deferred to Short’s rubbery physical comedy, which produced some of the most supremely silly moments of the show including a unique take on the bagpipes and a gleeful romp from the off-off-off-broadway production Stepbrothe­r to Jesus, a lesser known entry in the early 70s subgenre of religious hippy musicals.

While pianist Mike Farrell was somewhat underused, Martin’s musical foils, bluegrass combo The Steep Canyon Rangers, were an utter joy, whether gamely sparring with the star or delivering their own mini-set, replete with four-part mountain music harmony around one microphone and a spectacula­r fiddle solo, dexterousl­y referencin­g The Beatles, Beach Boys and Sabre Dance.

The cumulative effect of nibblingon this varied tap as menu was goodwill and satisfacti­on all round. If, as Martin contended, “laughter is the fastest way of spreading a cold”, consider Glasgow infected.

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