Nathaniel Metcalfe: Chameleon, Comedian, Corinthian and Caricature | Edinburgh Fringe review by Steve Bennett
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Nathaniel Metcalfe: Chameleon, Comedian, Corinthian and Caricature

Note: This review is from 2018

Edinburgh Fringe review by Steve Bennett

The Edinburgh Fringe holds bad memories for Nathanial Metcalfe. Four years ago he was dumped by his girlfriend on the last day of the festival, after spending nearly four weeks telling strangers how much he loved her. During his show, that is, he’s not a weirdo.

Chameleon, Comedian, Corinthian and Caricature is about how he could bring himself to write another show after that heartbreak. Well very loosely. That’s the jumping-off point for a  number of substantial routines, bound together with some hefty structural scaffolding, based around the notions of what it means to be a performer.

Anecdotes include that time David Bowie, whose lyrics give this show its title, quit his Ziggy Stardust character on stage, while Metcalfe has unearthed a wonderful car-crash interview with a grumpy and intense Jeremy Irons that provides a great running gag.

Best of all, the comic imagines how Bob Dylan might sing the lyrics to the theme tunes of some British sitcom classics. It’s not so much the premise that makes this section, but the way he sells it with a sad desperation redolent of Tony Hancock’s hard-fought efforts to drill some entertainment into a reluctant audience. 

The other comic Metcalfe calls to mind is Richard Herring, for doggedly sticking to an idea and forcing it into the memory. Reference points become tropes become cornerstones of the show, through his frequent return to the same ideas 

However, the hour is rather too heavily dependent on such presentational devices as repetition and callback – another is using the Oblique Strategies cards Brian Eno designed to bypass creative blocks – which means the format is always noticeable, never concealed.

In some ways, that means the presentation overwhelms the content, with the monologue never truly soaring as any idea is grounded by the need to dovetail it with another segment. There’s no illusion of conversational spontaneity here. 

Yet Metcalfe’s ideas are strong and the oddities he’s found - especially that Jeremy Irons interview – memorable, suggesting this is a welcome return to the Fringe, if still a slightly tentative one.

Review date: 5 Aug 2018
Reviewed by: Steve Bennett
Reviewed at: Laughing Horse @ The Counting House

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