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This is an agreeable showcase of a fine performer: three character
pieces followed by a short stand-up set about Gloucester's bizarre
annual ritual in which locals chase cheese down a dangerously
steep incline.
Bridget Christie is from the town, but of Irish stock, and
has bags of winsome charm. She comes to praise eccentricity,
not to mock it.
The first of her characters is millionaire Da Vinci Code novelist
Dan Brown but Dan Brown as if attempting stand-up. Could
this have been inspired by author AL Kennedy turning to comedy
this Fringe?
It's a nice idea, of this odd American telling corny old standards
as if in the overblown style of his lucrative potboiler, though
applying that winning formula to four set-ups is pushing it a
bit.
Second up is Irish car-park attendant Eamonn McGuire, whose
tedious conversation is strictly limited to his job. Again it's
a comedy that relies on repetition, this time the monotonous
repetition of phrases such as 'pay and display machine'. But
there are also some real jokes, and funny ones at that.
Christie plays both these male characters relatively straight,
and even thought they are clearly caricatures, they are all the
more convincing because of her restraint.
The real star of the show, though, is Charles II, performing
observational stand-up on such modern topics as trainers, speed
dating and Andrew Lloyd Webber musicals, from a distinctly Civil
War perspective. It's a brilliant and unique idea, very well
executed and witty in the writing. Christie has real fun with
the persona, too, which would make a perfect novelty act on the
circuit proper.
Odd as it may seem, she seems more natural as a 17th Century
monarch than she does in her stand-up, which comes over as too
heavily scripted and over-rehearsed. It's admirable that she's
chosen such a ridiculously specific subject as the Cheese Roll
to talk about, although other gags are hung from it, and it is
an entertaining set. But only in brief unguarded moments does
she let her true self shine through.
For the finale, she recreates the event with utmost reverence
and gravity, almost as if we were watching some ancient Japanese
puppet art form rather than a demonstration of foolish yokels
chasing a dairy product. The juxtaposition is an absurd idea,
but this cod-seriousness subdues Christie's natural vivacity
and sense of fun; and even in such contrived stand-up, we ought
to see more of the real person.
But overall this is an enjoyable 50 minutes and Charles
II is genius.
Steve Bennett