Show Details
David O'Doherty: Let's Comedy
Show type: Edinburgh Fringe 2008
Starring Comic:
David O'Doherty

David O'Doherty: Let's Comedy


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Description

Winner of the 2008 if.comedy prize

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Reviews

Original Review:

Show Rating:David O'Doherty: Let's Comedy rated 4/5

David O’Doherty may have been if.comedy-nominated, but he’s quick to instruct his audience to lower their expectations, bemoaning the hyperbolic praises attached to so many so-called ‘geniuses’ at the Fringe. As he outlines in the song The Finest Minds In History even the likes of Einstein and Marie Curie were fools in love, though thankfully, they resisted the rudest ménage ŕ mathematical equation a great brain has ever misguidedly conceived in a moment of drunken weakness.

Describing his act as ‘basically, man faffs while light points. Plus chair’, O’Doherty is a faffer of real eloquence, who revels in his tiny victories, such as stealing wireless broadband, while profiting from his failures, spinning a decent routine out of his inability to write a Jay-Z joke.

Triumph and despair, laughter and tears are ever-present flipsides in the Dubliner’s world, the genuine emotion he conveys at the death of his grandmother making the laugh so much richer when he catches himself sniggering at the church heater’s explicit German brand name.

Charming as O’Doherty is, his whimsical optimism is invariably qualified – his great love will have to appreciate Irish cyclist Stephen Roach and stay true to his principle of not cooking fruit.

His parents had a simpler courtship and he traces the blame for contemporary alienation and loneliness to our persecution by choice. There were a million other things we could have done tonight rather than come to see him he points out, yet none of his amusingly bittersweet suggestions convince you that you’d rather be anywhere else.

As ever, O’Doherty’s mildly nerdy perspective underscores everything – has any other stand-up written quite so many consistently good routines about text messaging? – but there’s also greater aggression emanating from him this year, beyond the faux-posturing of his surprise physical violence during board games.

His badger-attack story is beautifully set up, but it’s still surprising to see this mild-mannered comic recreating vengeance in such a brutal manner. Such moments afford the show real energy and lay the ground nicely for his keyboard hammering finale, My Beefs 2008, an hilariously angry lampoon of all the things people do that make them dicks, performed as green and red lights flash around him like a Hammer horror movie.

In O’Doherty’s instance, believe the hype. This is furiously funny faffing from a comedian at the top of his game.

Reviewed by: Jay Richardson

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Comments

Last Edinburgh, there was nine 5-star reviews and the actual if.comedy winner didn't achieve one. Hmm? I wouldn't be surprised if the panel hadn't bothered watching all the eligible shows. It's elitism.

Marcia Connor, July 2009


David O'Doherty is a sweet, harmless comedian that provides a welcome break from the bile that most comics this funny spew. Intelligent but not elitist, charming but not without substance, he's probably the most deserving winner of the if.comedy/Perrier award in the last 15 years.

Ally, September 2008


For the love of Elvis, will reviewers stop badly explaining jokes in their articles. You can offer an intelligent opinion without listing every instance in the show which, for someone who hasn't yet seen it, is just blooming annoying, DoD is as fabulous as ever - don't undermine his comedy with cack-handedly commentary which gives too much away.

Sian, August 2008



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