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Review
Phil Kay doesn't care. Actually, he does care, a lot in fact,
about the things that he considers to be worth bothering about,
but the rest he doesn't give a fig about . He has the air of
a man having reached 37 who knows what his priorities in life
are and that's all that matters. That said, Kay's always been
a bit like that.
Seeing Kay is a liberating experience. He doesn't bother with
any rules of the stage or grand entrances; Kay casually, yet
somehow simultaneously manically, wanders on to the stage and
begins chatting while the audience are still taking their seats.
The feeling of freedom continues when following a wolf-whistle
from the audience he drops his trousers to reveal his penis and
cries: 'What's the matter? It's what we all strive for
nakedness!'
What follows is a typically shambolic show that he confesses
has no structure. He picks up his guitar to strum a impromptu
ditty based on how a man in the audience had hurt his wrist falling
from a shopping trolley, then as it begins to peter out he reveals
he has no plan and despite his exuberance it looks like it could
be one of those Kay shows that could falls flat.
However, he reveals he has tales to tell and proceeds to chat
breathlessly of his children, his lover and the magical place
he lives a remote Scottish village with two pubs and a
post office that doubles as an off licence. The setting is enchanting
already but even the most ordinary village stories sound like
fairy tales in his hands.
The hour flies by but Kay appears not to have a finale so
the crowd, like a freshly ditched lover, are reluctant to leave
when he remains on the stage telling them it's over.
A woman in the front row reminds him of the two rackets and
ball he brought with him and thus she's drawn in to the least
competitive and most affable game of tennis ever witnessed. A
suitably uplifting finale to possibly the most feelgood show
you'll see at the festival.
Marissa Burgess