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Michael Redmond
At the Stand, Glasgow |
More Michael Redmond videos |
At the Stand, Glasgow |
On Friday Night Live |
Dedapan comic Michael Redmond started his career writing comedy for Irish radio and television. After moving to London in 1987, he quickly established himself on the comedy circuit, headlining at clubs throughout the UK. He has performed a number of one-man shows at the Edinburgh Fringe, including Eamon, Older Brother of Jesus, which was later developed as a series for Radio 4. He now lives in the Scottish capital and hosts a regular Sunday-night gig at The Stand comedy club there. Over his long career has appeared on a number of stand-up TV shows, including BBC2's Comedy Nation, LWT's Friday Night Live, BBC One's The Stand Up Show and Clive Anderson Talks Back. But he's probably most recognisable for his role as the lightning-hit Father Stone on Father Ted. |
It's Not Father Stone - It's...Michael Redmond |
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The comedian clambers into the front row, delivering material as he lies awkwardly across their laps; moments later he’s suspended upside-down by a bodybuilder in the crowd, before causing a frisson of tension as he flirts dangerously close to breaking the law. This must be one of the hot young comics pushing boundaries at Late N Live, right? Wrong. It’s a 59-year-old man with a face that looks like it’s run in the wash, performing in a broom closet at five o’clock in the afternoon. Anarchy can be found anywhere at the Edinburgh Fringe. Father Ted actor Michael Redmond has a reputation for lugubrious one-liners – most famously the one squeaky-voiced thief Joe Pasquale shamelessly stole: ‘People often say to me... “Hey you, get out of my garden.”’ But his time as a long-running compere at The Stand in Glasgow has clearly transformed his deadpan style, as this hour is largely built on casual exchanges with the modest audience. Describing comedians as being just like your mate down the pub is something of a cliché, but this is an atmosphere so unprepossessingly cordial, punters feel happy to chip in whenever they like, and Redmond is happy to humour them. Thus we get taken to spontaneous discussions about the geography of Azerbaijan, the right hair products for Redmond’s barnet and discussions about what sounds like the worst beach in Ireland. This free-form banter is necessarily hit and miss, but it’s so genuinely friendly natural, that the laughs do come. Occasionally, and when he’s permitted to, Redmond remembers he really ought to be doing material, which is always affable and sporadically peerless. For example, he can condense an entire chapter of Dawkins into one pithy gag: ‘I was born a Catholic, which came as a surprise to my parents, who were Protestant.’ His flirtation with criminality came by almost lighting a cigarette on stage, but other prepared segments are flatter, without the comic invention of his best material. Nonetheless, this is a uniquely odd hour in the company of a man not afraid to busk it when the need arises.
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Date of live review: Friday 20th Aug, '10 | |
Review by Steve Bennett |
Cried with laughter, his patter with the audience is unsurpassed! JIM, August 2010 |
This was very funny but it wasn't a show. The weekly MC job that he has at the stand in Glasgow kind of enveloped the whole act. Michael had a bunch of really funny material but the show ended at 50 minutes and at least 15 of that was either audience participation or similar. having said that he was funny for the 50 minutes so if you haven't seen him at the stand in glasgow go along - nearly 4 out of 5 Andy B, August 2010 |
Made me weep with laughter whenever I saw him. The funniest comic I've seen, bar none. Paul Caulfield, February 2010 |
Great comedian worth going to see nicky, August 2008 |