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Hilary Watt, Undercover ReporterBennett Arron |
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| Stand Up: 2005: Edinburgh show: It Wasn't Me, It Was Bennett Arron It Wasn't Me, It Was Bennett Arron |
| Stand Up: 1997: Finalist in the BBC New Comedy Awards BBC New Comedy Awards |
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Colin Cole, Martin Coyote, MC Bennett Arron |
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![]() Glorious weather, light evening and World Cup football have devastated stand-up audiences across the board – and this night in St Albans’ Havana nightclub is no exception. This big room is clearly used to sizeable crowds – you can tell by the fact they use Robbie Williams’s Let Me Entertain You as the pre-show music. The comics on the bill are likewise more used to the raucous Jongleurs/Highlight style crowds. Yet tonight the audience in this elegant room numbers fewer than 40, and all here to listen. The comedians’ mob-control techniques won’t be needed tonight. Compere Bennett Arron’s traditional warm-up banter certainly struggles. As he asks around for people’s names and occupations in a series of comedic cul-de-sacs, the effect is like listening in to dull party chit-chat between people you don’t know, struggling to find common ground. It’s accepted practice that this is how you warm up a gig, but when it’s such hard work for everyone – and Arron landed very few comic hits – you have to wonder if it’s really the best way. When he eventually moved on to prepared material, the results were more rewarding, largely due to his exaggerated vulnerability. With his soft Welsh accent, ‘poor me’ demeanour and tales of being picked on from school onwards, he certainly engenders sympathy. His material is a mix of whimsy and wordplay, occasionally slightly cheesy, and relies on a certain glint in the eye to pull off. It’s affable stuff, rather than killer gags – though in this environment, many acts would struggle. Certainly Martin Coyote did; but then his unambitious set holds very little interest for those seeking more than reinforcement of gags they already probably know, whether consciously or not. The jokes flow, but they’re all very easy: about the irony of Tony Blair being a peace envoy, about late-night kebabs, about rough areas of East London. It’s a bland amalgam of the most common opinions on the circuit. Most people, for instance, probably pay little concern to the existence of Victoria Beckham in their day-to-day lives, but since she’s somehow become a reflex comedy reference, she gets a couple of familiar jokes at her expense here. A regular compere and member of the Comedy Store’s Cutting Edge team, the veteran Coyote is a technically adept act, and delivers the material with relaxed detachment that might draw a more raucous crowd in. But here, it seems flat, like he’s going through the motions, not engaging the audience. He gets only one decent laugh, and that’s for a pull-back-and-reveal dick joke (of the ‘and then I got off the bus…’ variety) – the oldest technique in the book. Headliner Colin Cole had a lot more stage presence, as you might expect from a 6ft 9in Australian ex-wrestler. He grabs the room with his energy and bonhomie, with a compellingly foreceful delivery and a strong sense of timing. It’s a gag-driven set; some good, some bad, but all told with such conviction that he propels the audience with him. However, there are some less edifying aspects of his material, especially in the barbs directed at air stewards that rely on tired, unappealing anti-gay insults. His attitude to ‘poofs’ isn’t not the only dated thing about his set either, with jokes about Blind Date, Steve Irwin – and even a recycled practical joke his countryman Barry Humphries used to play on planes when a student, which he claims as his own. Yet there are some great gags in there too, which told with that impeccable, no-nonsense delivery, prove irresistible. If only he gave his act a vigorous spring-clean, he could be unstoppable – but since his routine changes little over the years, that’s unlikely to happen now.
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| Date of live review: Sunday 4th Jul, '10 | |
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Review by Steve Bennett |
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It Wasn't Me, It Was Bennett Arron
Sunday 7th Mar, '10- | |
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Thursday 8th Oct, '09- Bloomsbury Theatre | |
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Thursday 1st Mar, '01- | |
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Absolutely fantastic, has charisma and charm and a way with the audience I haven't seen in a long time. And some excellent material Should be a huge star. Toni Phillips, October 2006 |
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He was the best comedian in Oxford last night. Everything he said had the whole audience in hysterics. Absolute quality. Anthony, October 2006 |
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Saw him at The Hob, East Dulwich, last night and he was absolutely fantastic. I think the description of him on here is either out-of-date or damning him with faint praise because there were no clunkers to be found at all. Great line about 'lovely blonde shoulder-length arms' too. Pete, August 2006 |
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I like Bennett alot and watched the BBC awards 1997 where he first came onto the scene. His material was the best of all the finalists, but his nervous stage persona left the judges wary that it might just be nerves. Basically he was robbed and having seen him handle the roudiest of Christmas party crowds at Jonleurs with aplomb without once diverting from his character, I am now in no doubt he is a master of his craft Evs, June 2006 |
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Bennett had me in tears laughing at his show at Rawhide in Liverpool last night. Absolutely fabulous stuff. Can't wait to see him live again soon. Paul Lockett, June 2006 |
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I watched Bennett for the first time at the Rawhide tonight. Great confidence, some very well crafted jokes. All delivered in a assured and capable manner. A joy to watch. Jay Ryan, June 2006 |
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Great comic, great writer. Never seen him not deliver. Harvey Oliver, June 2006 |
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great comic Jug, June 2006 |
Where can I see Bennett Arron next?
| 20:00 - Saturday 1st Jun, '13 | |
| Venue: | Funny Side Of Covent Garden |
| Prices: | £12.50 |
| Comics: | |
| Info: |
Plus: MC Gareth Kane
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| 20:00 - Saturday 8th Jun, '13 | |
| Venue: | Highlight Watford |
| Prices: | From £17 |
| Comics: | Bennett Arron, James Sherwood, John Gavin |
| 19:45 - Friday 12th Jul, '13 | |
| Venue: | Birmingham Highlight |
| Prices: | From £14 |
| Comics: | Bennett Arron, Pete Johansson, Rob Deering, Romesh Ranganathan |
| 19:45 - Saturday 13th Jul, '13 | |
| Venue: | Birmingham Highlight |
| Prices: | From £14 |
| Comics: | Bennett Arron, Pete Johansson, Rob Deering, Romesh Ranganathan |
| 19:45 - Friday 16th Aug, '13 | |
| Venue: | Highlight Camden |
| Prices: | From £17 |
| Comics: | Bennett Arron, Eddy Brimson, Geoff Boyz, Steve Gribbin |
| 19:45 - Saturday 17th Aug, '13 | |
| Venue: | Highlight Camden |
| Prices: | From £17 |
| Comics: | Andrew Murrell, Bennett Arron, Geoff Boyz |
| 20:30 - Saturday 7th Sep, '13 | |
| Venue: | Oxford Glee |
| Prices: | Adult - £14.50, Student - £5.00 |
| Comics: | |
| 20:00 - Friday 25th Oct, '13 | |
| Venue: | Nottingham Glee |
| Prices: | Adult - £11.00, Student - £4.00 |
| Comics: | |
| 20:00 - Saturday 26th Oct, '13 | |
| Venue: | Nottingham Glee |
| Prices: | Adult - £14.00, Student - £4.00 |
| Comics: | |
| 20:00 - Thursday 21st Nov, '13 | |
| Venue: | Cardiff Glee Club |
| Prices: | Adult - £9.50, Student - £6.00 |
| Comics: | |
| 20:30 - Friday 22nd Nov, '13 | |
| Venue: | Cardiff Glee Club |
| Prices: | Adult - £15.00, Student - £6.50 |
| Comics: | |
| 20:30 - Saturday 23rd Nov, '13 | |
| Venue: | Cardiff Glee Club |
| Prices: | Adult - £17.50 |
| Comics: | |



