Coogan wants to make Fringe comeback
● Alan Partridge star says Perrier Award victory was his ‘ most exciting’ prize
Alan Par t r i dge s t ar St e ve Coogan has revealed he wants to return to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe with a new show – nearly 30 years after he shot to fame at the event.
The award- winning actor and comic has told how has had a “romantic notion” to become part of the festival again when he has visited to see shows in recent years. Coogan has also revealed that he regards winning the Perrier Award in 1992 as the pinnacle of his career.
Si nce his t r i umph at t he Fr i n g e , whe n h e wa s u p against Jo Brand, Bruce Morton and John Shuttleworth, Coogan has been nominated f or Oscars and Golden Globe, and won BAFTAS and an Emmy Award for Alan Partridge and films like Stan and Ollie and Philomena.
Coogan will be discussing the prospect of staging a new show at the Fringe as part of “Shedinburgh,” an online festival of shows filmed in pop- up sheds.
Interviewed by Shedinburgh co- director Gary Mcnair for an event which will be broadcast on 3 September, Coogan said: “Not to blow my own t rumpet, but I have won a bunch of Baftas and all the rest of it over the years But the most exciting thing I ever won in my life was the Perrier Award.
“The great thing about the festival is that you can go from zero to hero in t wo or three weeks. In my first show, which I did with John Thomson, we had six people in the audience.
“I have been back virtually every year since as a punter. I sort of feel, when I go as a punter, this romantic notion that I wish I was doing a show, as then I would really feel part of the festival. I will definitely do a show at the festival at some point, but I don’t know what, something odd and mis- shapen.
“My romantic notion is that it’s a great place to do something experimental and different. I wouldn’t do what I would do if I was doing a big tour. I would do something off and unusual and maybe only half funny.
“I don’t know what I’d do, but I would definitely do something that I’d never do anywhere else. Edinburgh is a fertile environment where you can experiment and if it fails that’s okay, it’s fine.
“If I was taking a show to Edinburgh I’d try to say things that you’re not supposed to say, not in a vindictive way, but to play with the idea of what is the right way to think.
“The only sort of ethic I’ve ever applied to my comedy is you punch up, not down. You don’t pick on people in council houses or ethnic groups who are disempowered.
“You do pick on the powerful, the unaccountable and people who regard themselves as unassailable. That is just healthy. I don’t like comedy that bullies the weak.
“I would also challenge and affectionately mock the Edinburgh crowd, who are probably generally speaking reasonably liberal in their outlook. I would do something that would tease them.”