Change »
Edinburgh Fringe 2000 (16)
Edinburgh Fringe 2001 (29)
Edinburgh Fringe 2002 (34)
Edinburgh Fringe 2003 (30)
Edinburgh Fringe 2004 (38)
Edinburgh Fringe 2005 (39)
Edinburgh Fringe 2006 (70)
Edinburgh Fringe 2007 (57)
Edinburgh Fringe 2008 (65)
Edinburgh Fringe 2009 (65)
Melbourne 2012 (2)
See Less »
|
|
|
|
Simon Donald's Dirty Great Fringepiece
Him Off The Viz opens wide the beef curtains of his big hairy Fringepiece, revealing a deep wet otter’s pocket of fishy material; outrageous characters interspersed with anecdotes from a life spent writing synonyms for genitals.
|
Simon Donald Dirty Great Fringepiece |
![]() |
|
Viz co-creator Simon Donald returns to the Fringe with a show closely modelled on last year's format of character comedy plus reminiscences about his cult comic's heyday. Donald has been performing since 2008 and says he has never looked back, given that the feedback from Viz was never as immediate as it is in live comedy. By the end of the show you wonder if he might take this assertion back, as he has endured a poor gig and he knows it. Going from page to stage means more than having a list of rude words and phrases and dropping them, er, willy-nilly, across some very old-school and two-dimensional characterisations including the reprised Jeremy Jitler (Mr Logic meets stand-up), market researcher Barry Twyford and Bingo, another cerebrally-challenged joker. Gratuity on the page has to be amplified but while projection is important in live performance too, the subtle use of language, even naughty words, is key to milking the humour out of them. Funny names or talking about testicles in various forms is not enough in itself and having two characters parody stand-up is a corner-cut. Of equal importance is the ability to relax with your own material and acting capabilities. Donald is nervous throughout and there is a lack of conviction that hampers his material. In someone else's hands the re-working of mother-in-law and racist jokes to apply to ginger people, might have stood more of a chance. At one point Donald refers to the show as ‘a work in progress’ which, with last year under his belt, can only really be true in the sense that a comic is always learning and shows are always evolving. The question is whether you get to a point where you know there's nothing you can learn that will make you any better – or indeed if you enjoy it enough to take on new information and instincts. Given his contribution to comedy I can't see Donald giving up in a hurry but it would be wise for him to draw inspiration from characters whose definition goes deeper than those he previously nailed in pen and ink. |
|
| Date of live review: Tuesday 9th Aug, '11 | |
|
Review by Julian Hall |
|
|
I watched the show on 13 August, and judging by your review one might think it was another show. He certainly got his assertiveness back and delivered his lines with aplomb, as well as reacting very well to the crowd. We might chalk this down to a difference of opinion or to Simon Donald's performance on the day, but quite frankly, I think we have a different idea what good comedy is about. It's not just about the genesis and delivery of comedic lines, or even vag jokes. Simon Donald's created characters as well as being original immediately strike a comedic cord and take the audience halfway to the sort of fits of laughter virtually everyone watching the show with me was having. At an overly bloated fringe where it is easy to get lost in a sea of mediocrity and hit-and-miss material, some of which from more established names in stand-up, it was very nice to have my faith restored to stand up- despite my initial misgivings about not being a Viz reader, I came away from the show having the sort of cathartic experience only great comedy delivers. Thanks! Henni, August 2011 |
|
Fringepiece is absolute comedy brilliance. Go and see it, I promise you won't regret it. Ali, August 2011 |

