I Wanna Meet Shatner
If a week is a long time in politics, it's certainly a bit of a hike in Stand Up Comedy. I did two very different gigs on Thursday and Monday, and completely misunderstood a booking I made which meant I didn't do a gig on Saturday as I expected. As I write this, I'm wondering how many times the word gig, or derivations thereof, appears in this rambling blog. At least four times I would imagine. Also, I often mistype imagine as imahine.
I think I'm prevaricating to avoid talking about Jesters on Thursday. So, deep breath. I died on my hole. A proper big time, spectacular death of a proportion I have not experienced in a very long time. I had no nerves before boarding the stage, and the crowd had been pretty good for the support act, Mr Adam Crow, but I still had a suspicion that I'd find it more of a struggle. It wasn't a self-fulfilment thing, they just hated me. Batman, got nothing. Except a heckle that Robin was a rodent not a bird - twunt. Beckham, got nothing. Plus I fumbled the punch by tripping over an important word. My new joke got feck all, but by then I knew it wouldn't, and threw it in only to walk myself through it once more. I could hear them blinking, but for some reason, I wasn't particularly phased.
So, here I was, on the verge of a lengthy six minute piece that requires rhythm and performance to hide its actual lack of proper jokes - facing an audience riddled with total apathy for me. Many full moons ago, I'd have cut my losses and legged it, but it's a bit that has worked now many times at this place, so I knew it was worth the effort. I fed them a line, which got devoured. I said "I nearly died a few weeks ago," knowing full well what the response would be, and sure enough, there it was, "You're dying now!" That was my cue to address the atmosphere. I said I was well aware of that fact, that we were still only halfway through, and that we should knuckle down and get through it together. There was immediately a marked change in the mood, they shifted and sat up a bit, many of them even cheered. From then on, they were with me, in the sense that I had given them permission to enjoy the failure, and I got a huge cheer and applause at a rant inside the storm story, which I must admit, I delivered very well. I left the stage to a good response, but all in all, though it was a nice recovery in its own way, I'd rather have had a really easy gig.
Yesterday, I had the opposite experience at The Reckless Moment in Leamington Spa. I love the Moment, and I love Tom Hughes who runs it - he's turning into an excellent compere, and has some great, funny, original and quirky material. If anything, the gig was too easy, and I didn't have to work for it, but it's just what I needed after my heart attack at Jesters. I cheated a bit, because it's a new act, new material night, but I did most of my set, with only a minute or two of new material - and even then, that was it's fourth or fifth outing. That said, the new joke about being pregnant got my biggest laugh of the set. I had an odd moment at the beginning, where I was very aware of my feet. I could feel myself minutely shifting on the spot as I spoke, and as I felt myself doing it, it was like my mouth was on auto pilot - it didn't last long and I came out of it and back into the room pretty quickly, but it would explain why that bit of the performance was comparatively flatly received. After that, it was a breeze.
Just a reminder that I do have another blog, one that talks about my writing and other crap on MySpace.
I think I'm prevaricating to avoid talking about Jesters on Thursday. So, deep breath. I died on my hole. A proper big time, spectacular death of a proportion I have not experienced in a very long time. I had no nerves before boarding the stage, and the crowd had been pretty good for the support act, Mr Adam Crow, but I still had a suspicion that I'd find it more of a struggle. It wasn't a self-fulfilment thing, they just hated me. Batman, got nothing. Except a heckle that Robin was a rodent not a bird - twunt. Beckham, got nothing. Plus I fumbled the punch by tripping over an important word. My new joke got feck all, but by then I knew it wouldn't, and threw it in only to walk myself through it once more. I could hear them blinking, but for some reason, I wasn't particularly phased.
So, here I was, on the verge of a lengthy six minute piece that requires rhythm and performance to hide its actual lack of proper jokes - facing an audience riddled with total apathy for me. Many full moons ago, I'd have cut my losses and legged it, but it's a bit that has worked now many times at this place, so I knew it was worth the effort. I fed them a line, which got devoured. I said "I nearly died a few weeks ago," knowing full well what the response would be, and sure enough, there it was, "You're dying now!" That was my cue to address the atmosphere. I said I was well aware of that fact, that we were still only halfway through, and that we should knuckle down and get through it together. There was immediately a marked change in the mood, they shifted and sat up a bit, many of them even cheered. From then on, they were with me, in the sense that I had given them permission to enjoy the failure, and I got a huge cheer and applause at a rant inside the storm story, which I must admit, I delivered very well. I left the stage to a good response, but all in all, though it was a nice recovery in its own way, I'd rather have had a really easy gig.
Yesterday, I had the opposite experience at The Reckless Moment in Leamington Spa. I love the Moment, and I love Tom Hughes who runs it - he's turning into an excellent compere, and has some great, funny, original and quirky material. If anything, the gig was too easy, and I didn't have to work for it, but it's just what I needed after my heart attack at Jesters. I cheated a bit, because it's a new act, new material night, but I did most of my set, with only a minute or two of new material - and even then, that was it's fourth or fifth outing. That said, the new joke about being pregnant got my biggest laugh of the set. I had an odd moment at the beginning, where I was very aware of my feet. I could feel myself minutely shifting on the spot as I spoke, and as I felt myself doing it, it was like my mouth was on auto pilot - it didn't last long and I came out of it and back into the room pretty quickly, but it would explain why that bit of the performance was comparatively flatly received. After that, it was a breeze.
Just a reminder that I do have another blog, one that talks about my writing and other crap on MySpace.