Rick Shapiro – Original Review

Note: This review is from 2008

Review by Steve Bennett

It’s a stand-up’s job to be an outsider, and the default way of expressing that is often to adopt sexually depraved, hedonistic stance: uncensored and uninhibited by the conventions of polite society.

But usually this persona packaged in a measured, unthreatening way. Unacceptable thoughts and deeds are exaggerated for the sake of a joke, but audience and comedian alike tacitly accept this is to some degree an act, a safe outlet for antisocial feeling as part of the game.

With an exclusive band of comics, however, you can never quite sure that they’re playing quite by these rules; and Rick Shapiro falls squarely into that category. There’s an authenticity to his wired, wild act that’s raw, visceral and risky, leading to a genuine frisson of unpredictability.

He never knows quite what he’s going to say next – despite the sheath of papers, the notes on his hand and the Post-Its pinned to the inside of his jacket as useless aide memoires – so how can the viewer?

When you hear of his past, it’s no wonder that his powers of recall are fading. He’s a former street hustler who prostituted himself for heroin. With all the chemicals he pumped around it, his brain no longer functions in the same way as everyone else’s – so it gives him a unique comic voice, albeit at a cost.

His sensibilities are forged from a tough life. There might be a degree of emotional tourism here – laughing as you vicariously relive his past misery – but you can’t deny he has experience you wouldn’t get from a well-to-do Oxbridge graduate.

Save for a mimed finale – pretty much the only bit of the show that seems prepared, and even then he bungles it – Shapiro doesn’t dwell too much on his past. But it is an ever-present factor, giving a rough, street edge to his every routine.

At last year’s Edinburgh Fringe, he performed to in an intimate, near-empty bohemian venue in The Green Rooms; where his in-your-face intensity was genuinely unsettling. In the formal surrounds of London’s Soho Theatre, that intimidaying force is gone; but Shapiro is none the more restrained.

The material is not for the faint-hearted; it’s uncompromisingly aggressive, often misogynistic and, to be frank, frequently unfunny – as he simply hasn’t the discipline to channel his crude emotions into punchlines.

But he gets laughs not so much from gags as from his screw-you attitude – whether in contempt for the audience when his failing memory causes a routine to unravel to nothing, riding the ‘oohs’ of indignant offence, or simply being brutally blunt in his reactions to incidents and people in his white-knuckle life.

Such a stance makes him more of a troubled artist than a reliable entertainer and – like Lenny Bruce – you can admire what he does without finding it all that amusing. Because of this, he’s probably for hardcore comedy fans only, a refreshing change for those blasé about slick, polished routines and prepared to accept such an mesmerisingly ill-structured, but undeniably honest, performance for what it is.

Reviewed by: Steve Bennett
Soho Theatre, March 2008

Review date: 1 Mar 2008
Reviewed by: Steve Bennett

Live comedy picks

We see you are using AdBlocker software. Chortle relies on advertisers to fund this website so it’s free for you, so we would ask that you disable it for this site. Our ads are non-intrusive and relevant. Help keep Chortle viable.