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Sarah Kendall Is Well Balanced
Scotland's Best And Guests
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Sexual Fetishes With Fish
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Stewart Lee: Pea Green Boat
Stop The Tardis
Sucker
Susan and Janice: Out Of Our Heads
Sweethearts And Body Parts
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Stewart Lee: Pea Green Boat
A confused owl wakes up at sea in a pea green boat, accompanied by a cat - its natural enemy and some honey. What caused this dangerous situation?
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Original Review:
Reviewing Pea Green Boat is somewhat redundant, as Lee himself points out the show's strengths and weaknesses in a modestly self-effacing introduction. Though possibly just a ruse to get us on his side, Lee apologies in advance for the boring bits ahead - although qualifies this by explaining that some bits appear boring, but are actually interesting in this, his "first mid-thirties pretentious one-man show". But it's not actually a true one-man show, as Lee is joined on stage by Jane Watkins, who provides an atmospheric cello backing, and comic Simon Munnery, taking the joint roles of Edward Lear and Ray Winstone, from Scum, and Sexy Beast. And it's not pure stand-up either, meshing as it does esoteric and thoughtful rights-of-passage fantasy into a comedy monologue. At its heart is a hilarious deconstruction of Lear's nonsense rhyme The Owl And The Pussycat, a theme Lee has previously used in his stand-up. Applying a winning blend of faux naivety and steely logic, Lee ponders the wisdom of sending two natural enemies on such a sea voyage, woefully ill-prepared with nothing more than honey for sustenance. The analysis is taken to ridiculous extremes, with extracts from the owl's diary, reading like a shipwreck survivor's heart-wrenching ordeal, peppering the narrative. Heaped into the mix is Lee's research into a possible Lear biopic starring Winstone, problems with the plumbing of his toilet, a statue in the courtyard of the British Library and Lear struggles with hissexuality. They are all magically, intrinsically - but obliquely - linked in this whisky-fuelled fantasy of parrot sketches and excrement. Though all these disparate themes and ideas merge in a conclusion of sorts, it's by no means a neat ending with a satisfying pay-off. Instead loose ends and ideas are left hanging half-resolved in the air. But when did real life ever end with an elegant closure? It's a spellbinding mood piece, where the mood is uncertainty, but with rich seams of laugh-out-loud comedy. It's storytelling, it's stand-up, it's biography and autobiography, fact and fiction. By all rights, such an eclectic mix shouldn't work - but it does. It's indescribable. But indescribably good. |
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This is one of the funniest shows I have ever seen. Full stop. Ms Mustard, August 2002 |
Stewart Lee: 90s Comedian
Stewart Lee's Comedy Vehicle
Stewart Lee
Stewart Lee's Badly Mapped World
A Seriously Funny Attempt To Get The SFO in The Dock
At Last! The 1981 Show
Ha Ha Hammersmith II
Malcolm Hardee tribute show
Nine Lessons and Carols for Godless People
Stewart Lee: What Would Judas Do?
Tedstock
Teenage Cancer Trust Benefit 2007
Ten Best Stand-ups In The World Ever. Gig 1
Jerry Springer The Opera, Cambridge Theatre
Jerry Springer: The Opera, National Theatre
Johnson and Boswell: Late But Live
Stewart Lee: 41st Best Stand-Up Ever
Stewart Lee: Scrambled Egg
Britcom 2006
Stewart Lee: If You Prefer A Milder Comedian Please Ask For One
Stewart Lee: Silver Stewbilee
Stewart Lee: Vegetable Stew
Stewart Lee: Flickwerk 2011. Work In Progress
Stewart Lee: Carpet Remnant World
Stewart Lee: Much A-Stew About Nothing

