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Alistair McGowan: The One and Many - Fringe 2009

Note: This review is from 2009

Review by Steve Bennett

Alistair McGowan is a brilliant impressionist – but a hugely unimaginative writer. So if you’re happy to hear a man sound like a lot of other men, you’re in for a treat. If you want great jokes, well, that’s not really what he does.

Here’s just one exchange. Accurate-sounding voice of someone off the telly No 1: ‘Can you hold your own?’ Accurate-sounding voice of someone off the telly No 2: ‘No, I’d rather someone else hold it for me.’

It’s been 13 years since McGowan was last at the Fringe, not that the gap matters: His act would have been dated in 1976, let alone 1996, only with the voices updated.

Each new impersonation does get a laugh of recognition, but it depends only on how much you know the original. And the fact that his Stewart Lee and Dylan Moran got almost no response suggests that his audience aren’t comedy-savvy Fringe devotees, but have chosen to come out too see a safe, famous face – and getting scores of famous voices thrown in.

But if you’re unfamiliar with the people he’s talking about, you’re stranded. I pay no attention to sport, so can’t vouch for the accuracy of his impression of BBC athletics commentator Michael Johnson, Five Live’s Sportsweek host Garry Richardson or Portsmouth FC manager Tony Adams – and McGowan’s gags aren’t enough to overcome that. This is a sport-heavy show, and I was often left floundering.

Sometimes he does hit the perfect combination of voice and joke. His portrayal of Adrian Chiles as an enthusiastically inquisitive child was spot-on, while depicting Terry Wogan having sex generated unexpected funnies from the boilerplate set-up. But mostly this was a show of party-trick voices rather than genuinely funny writing.

Which is why it was probably a mistake to include sections when he dropped the masks and performed as himself. Well, I say ‘himself’ – the stand-up was so generic it could have come from anyone, with obvious near-jokes about budget chain hotels or a poem about how he’s turning into his father.

He might have appeased his target audience, but it seems McGowan can convince you he’s anyone – except a top-notch comedian.

Review date: 12 Aug 2009
Reviewed by: Steve Bennett

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