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Natalie Haynes: Six Degrees of Desolation Perrier
Navelgazing
Newsrevue 2002
Nice Mum
Nicholas Parsons Happy Hour
Nicotine Nights!
Noel Fielding: Voodoo Hedgehog Perrier nominee
None The Wiser
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Natalie Haynes: Six Degrees of Desolation Perrier
The queen of confessional cool dissects the six things that have left her a broken woman at 27. She will make you laugh. She will try not to make you cry.
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Original Review:
Natalie Haynes's show just can't live up to its billing. 'Desolation, confessional, scary' these words suggest a bleak, moody piece exploring taboos and exposing the underside of her personality. Instead, we get some reasonable stand-up, but that's about it. From her tales, Haynes comes across as a bit impulsive, a bit bitchy, a bit opinionated. But that's hardly on the edge of darkness - in fact it's pretty much assumed for a stand-up. OK, she wanted to send a dead pigeon to an ex - but that's the extreme. Her on-stage persona reflects this supposedly bitter and twisted character even less. She's chatty, open and engaging, keeping interest levels up as the hour pootles along nicely. There's not a huge amount of structure here - there are the six categories of the title, but they are not issues to be explored, but just chapter headings for a rag-bag of anecdotes. The first heading, for example, is phobias, which she starts off by talking about her "phobia" of NHS bureaucracy - seemingly happy to lump a mild irritation in with morbid fears, just because she happens to have some material on it. Similarly, a row she had with a comedy promoter is categorised under 'death' - but for the most tenuous of reasons. It's all enjoyable enough stuff - and includes a genuinely informative tale of how Apple Computers got their logo, trivia fans - but at the end of the day it lacks the depth or substance that an hour-long show requires. |
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