FIVE STARS
FAME. What is it and is
it really all it's cracked up to be?
Someone well placed to
spill the beans is comedian and writer David Baddiel. Thanks to a
career which has spanned 20 plus years, he's seen the good, the bad
and the ugly when it comes to being famous.
And now, coming back to
stand up after a hiaitus of about 15 years he's ready to tell all
thanks to his show Fame: Not The Musical.
In fact it's not really
so much a stand up show than a chat with the audience, punctuated
with screen shots of his family or his own public embarrasment and
blunders of one sort or another.
Throughout, he explains
what fame is and means to him, how it's impacted on his work and his
family, how he still gets mistaken for Ian Broudie of pop band the
Lightning Seeds, Ben Elton and Alan Yentob even after all this time
and what it's taught him over the years.
A fair amount of the
show is taken up by exploring the relationship David has with people
- those who he knows, and those he doesn't.
And unsurprisingly
Twitter gets more than a passing mention with David talking about how
it has allowed people from all over the world to contact him at any
time of the day and night about anything and how he deals with the
trolls of which there are many.
Before the interval he
asks for the audience to tweet him and promises to read out a few in
the second half - my tweet generated a big laugh.
But the whole show is
absolutely hilarious - with some of the biggest laughs being gained
by his own public humilation on TV shows, meeting Madonna, being
mistaken for other people and his enounters with some of his own
idols - Peter Gabriel to name but one.
It also showed that
despite the passage of time, he's lost none of the fantastic,
intelligent and well observed wit that made him famous in the first
place.
Fame: Not The Musical
is on at the Menier Chocolate Factory until May 23. Tickets from £21.
Visit www.menierchocolatefactory.com or call the box office on 020
7378 1713.
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