The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)
So, who’ s up north for having a great laugh?
Has the north-east of Scotland ever seen a week for comedy performances as strong as this one?
Next Wednesday alone, there are three difficult options for audiences to choose between, with two of the biggest names in the business – Romesh Ranganathan and Michael McIntyre – taking to stages in Aberdeen, and exciting young Glaswegian talent Larry Dean and friends also playing a gig in the city.
Meanwhile the week also sees Frankie Boyle, a familiar UK-wide talent with an especially devout
home support in Scotland, also make an Aberdeen appearance, while Inverness’s Eden Court will host a tribute to one of the most-loved sitcoms of all time.
Even the fiercest stand-up fan can’t see them all, so to help with the decision let’s delve more deeply into what each has to offer.
A CELEBRATION OF FATHER TED WITH JOE ROONEY
Of all the sitcom successes which could inspire surefire blockbuster levels of attention if it was ever revived, one we’ll never see again is Father Ted.
A quirky cult show when it arrived in 1995, by its final appearance 25 episodes later in 1998, even church-going nanas could recite the catchphrases of a surreal show which lampooned the lives of Irish Catholic priests.
Of the four mismatched inhabitants of Craggy Island, however, the ever-thwarted Father Ted himself, Dermot Morgan, and sweary, alcohol-soaked Father Jack Hackett, Frank Kelly, are sadly no longer with us.
Among the surviving supporting cast, some – Graham Norton, especially – have gone on to big things, while others like Joe Rooney still pound the stand-up circuit.
Here Rooney revisits his role as the rebellious Father Damo Lennon by screening Damo’s episode Old Grey Whistle Theft, telling behind-the-scenes stories and hosting dancing priests competitions.
■ Eden Court, Inverness, Tonight, eden-court.co.uk
FRANKIE BOYLE: LAP OF SHAME
One of Glasgow’s finest comedy exports, which puts him in great company indeed, Boyle’s finelyhoned live show hits the sweet spot between delivering exactly what the
audience expects, and leaving them on the edge of their seat guessing just how brutal it’s going to get.
One reviewer in The Guardian described Lap Of Shame as “breathtakingly rude jokes and thoughtprovoking ghastliness”, which is exactly what a fan of Frankie’s is here for.
Most familiar to TV viewers as a Mock The Week panellist and as the host of Frankie Boyle’s New World Order, recently he’s pivoted towards podcasting and his debut crime novel Meantime.
He suggested at the Edinburgh International Book Festival that writing novels is what he would
prefer to do with the rest of his life, cutting out the need to travel. Is this Lap Of Shame the last lap of victory? Either way, it comes recommended.
■ Tivoli Theatre, Aberdeen, Monday, thetivolitheatre. com, aberdeen performingarts.com
ROMESH RANGANATHAN: HUSTLE
Hustle is a good name for Romesh Ranganathan’s new stand-up show, because the ubiquitous comedian has taken over the mantle previously worn by Richard Ayoade and David Mitchell of “television star most willing to make hay while the sun shines”.
In other words, he’s everywhere, from hosting The Weakest Link to his own shows The Misadventures Of Romesh Ranganathan and The Ranganation, to starring in the sitcom Avoidance, to panel shows, books and, oh yeah, let’s not forget stand-up.
Reports of Hustle suggest it looks at all of this from an indirect angle, in that world-weary everyperson Romesh has hit middle age and he’s wondering just what all the effort to hustle our way through life is really for. Beware – the shows promises “no real answers”. You’ll have to make do with some masterful observational material instead.
■ Music Hall, Aberdeen, Tuesday and Wednesday, aberdeen performingarts.com
MICHAEL MCINTYRE: MACNIFICENT
Speaking of comedians who are everywhere… what Michael McIntyre currently is, Romesh Ranganathan must surely dream of one day being.
Once a superstar of the stand-up firmament, he’s made an extraordinarily successful transfer to being prime-time light entertainment host. His gameshow The Wheel has been a hit in the UK and sold around the world.
Except does every stand-up star really hope to move into a career like McIntyre’s?
Their bank balance does, of course, but where he was once a bright, edgy young thing of the medium, now the work he’s known for on The Wheel and Big Show borders on the cosy.
In which case, getting back on the horse with Macnificent – his first original stand-up tour since 2018 – will hopefully give anyone who loved McIntyre’s work then or now the opportunity to reacquaint themselves with the breathless, frantic energy of his live set which made his name.
■ P&J Live, Aberdeen, Wednesday, pandjlive. com
THE BIG FAT COMEDY SHOW WITH LARRY DEAN
Presented by Edinburgh Fringe Festival venue and comedy specialists the Gilded Balloon, this show is a multi-performer package tour of some of Scotland’s finest emerging talent.
Hosted by Jay Lafferty, it also features Stephen Buchanan, Lauren Pattison and Sam Lake, and is – anyone who’s been paying close attention to this round-up might notice – the best place to see women in stand-up this week.
Yet making Glasgow’s Larry Dean headliner is undeniable.
Finding fame with a show about coming out to his Catholic family, he’s been Scottish Comedian of the Year and has appeared on Live At The Apollo and Mock The Week, a well-trodden route to big success by those appearing elsewhere in Aberdeen on the same evening.
■ Tivoli Theatre, Aberdeen, Wednesday, thetivolitheatre. com, aberdeen performingarts.com