Comic Details

Greg Davies

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Videos

Sexual Knowledge

From Live At The Apollo


More Greg Davies videos

Sexual Knowledge
On FCUK
Beneath The Fringe
On Dave's One Night Stand
Genuine fairytale giant
Greg Davies on CBBC

Other footage

Greg Davies on The World Stands Up
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Biography

Former drama teacher, now one third of the We Are Klang troupe. And as a solo stand-up, he was nominated for best breakthrough act at the 2007 Chortle Awards and best compere in the 2008 awards.

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Reviews

Greg Davies: The Back Of My Mum's Head
Live Review

Greg Davies: The Back Of My Mum's Head

Let’s address the title first. While the name of Greg Davies’s last, excellent, show Throwing Cheeseballs At A Dog was an accurate representation of the central anecdote, The Back Of My Mum’s Head is more esoteric.

It turns out that it refers to the last thing the young Davies would see after being chastised for his odd behaviour. ‘It’s not normal, love,’ his mild-mannered mum would say, turning on her heels and walking off in exasperation.

Thankfully, though, those 44 years of not being normal – he’s not entirely changed his behaviour as he’s become what could laughably be called an adult – has given him a hugely fertile seam of stupid anecdotes, which he exploits to magnificent effect.

The density of stories is most impressive. While many comics spin out their tales seeking laughs in the details, Davies distils many his yarns down to only their funny essence, moving quickly from one tale to the next. A couple of times, he presents a series of tales as a Top 5 countdown – of his favourite involuntary noises, or most shockingly inappropriate lines he’s heard – the former being punctuated by the audience’s cacophonous, ill-timed attempt at the old Pick Of The Pops theme.

Foolish behaviour is just as likely to be celebrated than mocked, provided it comes from a place of child-like abandon. A vague theme of the show is that Davies resents the fact he’s had to grow up, and wants to remain that teenager confusing his mum.

Not that the former teacher likes actual youngsters, of course, just adults who behave like them. One of the items on the menu outlining the show is ‘discrediting children’, which he delivers as promised, along with a soundscape (largely for Davies’s own amusement that one) and ‘fun with a racist’ – a taxi-driver, naturally, whose ignorance towards different people is matched only by his ignorance towards pie composition.

Is it part of a comedian’s personality that means they attract more than their share of strange experiences – or are they simply better equipped to spot them and retell them? Either way, Davies doesn’t seem short of material, some of which seems too good to be true. He concedes that the minor details in a creepy tale from an American driving holiday make it sounds like it was written by Stephen King; while the pair of childhood mates he takes to a rock festival in a hideously misguided attempt to recapture their youth seem like a comic-book threesome: one giant, one tiny man, and one pencil-thin.

Davies is an outstanding storyteller, and while the writing is tight, his delivery has a loose confessional air. He seems genuinely excited to be brining the audience into his confidence, like close mates, even starting off by confessing to problems with his undergarments this evening. The cynic might wonder if he says this every night, but it certainly doesn’t feel like it.

Actually, the mood is set even before the support act takes to the stage. Ed Gamble was delayed by a miserable rail service meltdown, and in voiceover Davies delights in the fact he’s shoving him straight on to the stage, 20 minutes later than planned, sweating and breathless after his run from the station. Still, Gamble – whose material is a good match for Davies’s self-deprecatory tales – deals with it well and slowly warms up the large audience with his tales of an intimate medical examination.

Davies himself doesn’t shy away from similarly ikky ground, and his stories can be charmingly horrific as he sugars the pill with his easy-going charisma. That also gets him over some bumps in the show around the three-quarters mark where the stories don’t quite hang together perfectly, although they remain very funny.

He over-eggs a reconstruction of a phone call between himself and his mother that shows their contrasting views on life, but it does come with a great punchline, courtesy of Davies’s ebullient father, who fans will remember from the previous show. Davies Snr makes a couple of appearances here, perhaps to recalibrate the meter of ‘normal behaviour’ and serve as a reminder of where Davies got his eccentricities from, even if watered down over the generation.

All is tied up smartly with a closing song, which sees Gamble return to the stage, in a hilariously humiliating guise. It’s a great conclusion to a uproarious night of anecdotes, told by a real pro, who rather than resting on his TV laurels is cementing his position of one of Britain’s finest storytelling comedians.

Date of live review: Saturday 13th Oct, '12
Review by Steve Bennett
Montreal Just For Laughs 2011: One-Stop World Tour
Montreal Just For Laughs 2011: One-Stop World Tour

Thursday 28th Jul, '11-
Teenage Cancer Trust benefit 2011
Teenage Cancer Trust benefit 2011

Tuesday 22nd Mar, '11-
Greg Davies: Firing Cheeseballs At A Dog
Greg Davies: Firing Cheeseballs At A Dog

Wednesday 11th Aug, '10-
Carlsberg Cat Laughs 2010 [6]
Thursday 10th Jun, '10- Kilkenny Skyline
We Are Klang
We Are Klang

Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2004 -
Greg Davies : Original Review
Greg Davies : Original Review

Monday 19th Nov, '07-
We Are Klang: Klangbang
We Are Klang: Klangbang

Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2006 -
Three Men And A Giant
Three Men And A Giant

Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2003 -
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Comments

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He's brilliant! One of my comedy highlights this year so far.

Colin, July 2008


Saw him in Islington. Very funny, his stories had us hooked, and the punchlines were human, honest and hilarious.

Elena, June 2008


I've not seen him live yet but he used to be my drama teacher at Sandhurst, the man is a fucking legend!!

paul wogel, May 2008


I witnessed this fellow's set at Jongleurs recently and it left me cold. He made fun of every kind of animal known to mankind and several that are not. Throughout his 'act' he pretended to be really tall. Come on who do you think you're kidding Mr Davies? Everyone in the front three rows could see he was standing on a pile of newspapers painted to look like legs. Here's a tip - next time you should wear brown trousers to match your painted legs. And another thing...why oh why oh why must modern day comedians resort to such foul language. Mr Tommy Cooper or the equally talented Paul Melba never lowered themselves to such filth. By my reckoning he used the F word 37 times, the C word 15 times, the H word twice and countless variations on the word SHIT throughout his half hour set. I laughed once...at his ridiculous attempts at playing the guitar. I don't mind telling you I was very close to taking said guitar and donating it to the Nordorff Robins Music Charity as it is doing nobody any favours in the hands of this loud, sausage fingered buffoon. Honestly I think Mr Davies has a raw talent. Alas I do not think it lies in comedy. Does anyone know if he has ever tried his hand at surveillance work? I'm told it is highly paid and offers excellent travel and promotion prospects for someone of average intelligence and girth.

Janice Honnelly, Debden, Essex, May 2008


Brilliant. Saw him at The Comedy Store on a bill that included Dara O'Briain, Russell Howard and Al Murray where he was head and shoulders above them all on the night both comedically and physically

John S, November 2007


Greg’s a natural. Sure it’s meticulously planned – every last line, last giggle, last grimace – but all along you feel he’s being himself. Greg may mince around like John Inman, muck around like Rik Mayall or scream the place down like Alexei Sayle, but you take to him like you take to your mates down the pub. It’s the kinda rapport most comedians would auction their mother on Ebay for. But if there’s a sneer behind every laugh, there’s a laugh behind every sneer. Underneath that laddish, Frank-Skinner smile there’s caddish, Bill-Hicks guile.

Michael Monkhouse, October 2007


A superb storyteller. I cannot imagine an audience that Greg couldn't win over. Wholeheartedly recomended. Hilarious.

Adam Montgomery, September 2007


A natural comedian who is irresistably funny. Anyone who likes stand up comedy should see him as soon as they can.

Mark C, February 2007


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Where can I see Greg Davies next?

Where can I see Greg Davies next?

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20:00 - Tuesday 12th Nov, '13
Venue: Margate Winter Gardens
Prices: £25
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20:00 - Wednesday 13th Nov, '13
Venue: Ipswich Regent
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20:00 - Thursday 14th Nov, '13
Venue: Cambridge Corn Exchange
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20:00 - Friday 15th Nov, '13
Venue: Portsmouth Guildhall
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20:00 - Monday 18th Nov, '13
Venue: Nottingham Royal Centre
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20:00 - Tuesday 19th Nov, '13
Venue: Bridlington Spa Theatre and Royal Hall
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20:00 - Thursday 21st Nov, '13
Venue: Derby Assembly Rooms and Guildhall
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20:00 - Friday 22nd Nov, '13
Venue: Coventry Warwick Arts Centre
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20:00 - Saturday 23rd Nov, '13
Venue: Wolverhampton Civic Halls
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20:00 - Sunday 24th Nov, '13
Venue: Bristol Colston Hall
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20:00 - Tuesday 26th Nov, '13
Venue: Southend Cliffs Pavilion
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20:00 - Wednesday 27th Nov, '13
Venue: Cardiff St David's Hall
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20:00 - Thursday 28th Nov, '13
Venue: Hull City Hall
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20:00 - Friday 29th Nov, '13
Venue: Newcastle City Hall
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20:00 - Sunday 1st Dec, '13
Venue: Birmingham Symphony Hall
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20:00 - Monday 2nd Dec, '13
Venue: Liverpool Philharmonic Hall
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20:00 - Tuesday 3rd Dec, '13
Venue: Sheffield City Hall
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