Ken Cheng: Best Dad Ever | Edinburgh Fringe review by Steve Bennett
review star review star review star review blank star review blank star

Ken Cheng: Best Dad Ever

Note: This review is from 2018

Edinburgh Fringe review by Steve Bennett

Best Dad Ever marks an evolution in Ken Cheng’s style, away from the super-nerdy, often maths-based jokes, that are his natural metier and into the more personal storytelling style of show. He’s not mastered the new approach – certainly his delivery is a little too dry for pouring his heart out – but offers some interesting yarns and smart punchlines. 

He starts with a forensic deconstruction of why Toblerone are offering a Best Dad Ever version of their confectionary and who the target market is, which very much plays to his over-analytical strengths before leading into an appraisal of his own father, distant both geographically and emotionally. 

So, despite the title, his mother is a more significant figure in both his life and his show. She’s a hoarder and works as a translator for the immigration services, which gives Cheng an understanding of the subject beyond his first-hand experience as a second-generation British-Chinese man.

There’s a little on casual racism, and he confesses to sometimes playing up his ‘Chinese-ish-ness’, for while he doesn’t want to be defined by his ethnicity he recognises how it gives him a point of difference, not least in comedy.

As he picks away at his parents’ lives he finds more questions than answers – their actions not always clear or their motives understood. So he finds a little more comfort in the certainties of childhood nostalgia, recalling his large menagerie of stuffed toys.

On to this, he tags on some geekier elements, not always fluidly. These include examples his terrible pre-teen writing  – which is becoming an overused device in comedy and feels like padding here – to his spreadsheet routines, finding patterns in fractions he cannot find in real life. The take-out is that he cannot use his logic to explain the emotional.

Squaring this off proves something of a challenge for the show as well since there are no satisfying resolutions. But a tidy set piece provides the best narrative closure in the circumstances.

Review date: 26 Aug 2018
Reviewed by: Steve Bennett
Reviewed at: Bedlam Theatre

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.