Trevor Crook: Crookwit
Note: This review is from 2009
Crook’s persona is of a broken man beaten up by the relentless series of disappointments that pass for his dull middle-aged life. He’s been left such a weary husk that he almost hasn’t the energy to perform, but he musters just about enough to vocalise his many aggravations.
Britain – where he spends half the year working – is one of his irritations, complaining at great length about how it’s full of whingeing Poms without any apparent sense of irony at the fact that whingeing is his entire act.
He moans self-effacingly about his own inadequacies, particularly in the bedroom, although most scorn is reserved for his ex-wife, with material that can easily seem misogynistic, even though it’s only really her that he hates. But the bitterness is almost tangible.
This is the same shtick, and sometimes the same material, that he’s been performing for years now, so as a festival show it holds very little surprises – and the monotone delivery that can sustain a 20-minute set does become wearying over the full hour. But there are some gems if you stick with it.
Reviewed by: Steve Bennett
Melbourne, April 2009
Review date: 1 Jan 2009
Reviewed by: Steve Bennett