review star review star review blank star review blank star review blank star

Dan Mitchell: Fringe 2012

Note: This review is from 2012

Review by Steve Bennett

Here’s a cautionary tale to comics tempted to do a TV show for the ‘exposure’. Dan Mitchell was one of the contestants on ITV’s prime-time reality programme Show Me The Funny last year – which now means he has the nationwide profile to pull an audience numbering… well, six.

And perhaps the TV appearances forced his hand in to coming to the Fringe too early, as well, for this does not seem like an hour-long show demanding to be heard; more like a comic with a strong 15 minutes trying to make it the next stage. Like so many shows here, the price point (up to £12) just  does not match the expertise on offer.

Isolation and illness are the none-too enticing themes,  and some of the more bizarre images in the show are explained by a restless dizziness, caused by sickness, scrambling his mind.

It results in some amusing, surreal images – though nothing that really takes off – sitting aside more predictable stand-up about the list of side-effects on medicines, the advertising slogan ‘food you can trust’ and googling symptoms that prove to be not nearly as scary as the internet suggests.

More successful are the more whimsical elements about his upbringing in a sleepy part of Wales, dryly commenting that he’s an observational comic from somewhere there’s very little to observe. The vagaries of his mother tongue are nicely handled, though the subject is hardly new, as are recollections of schoolyard bullying for wearing glasses and being epileptic.

But such nifty bits of stand-up are few and far between, sitting amid set-ups that are often unnecessarily wordy and heavy-handed digressions that lead to dead ends. It’s almost as if he’s playing for time.

Mitchell used to be an undertaker, which provides the best anecdote of the night, but while it would be unfairly glib to suggest his set requires the service of his former colleagues, it’s hardly brimming with life.

Although there are enough nice touches to suggest Mitchell has some potential, but he doesn’t yet have a show.

Review date: 17 Aug 2012
Reviewed by: Steve Bennett
Reviewed at: Assembly Roxy

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.