Shropshire Star

Stewart Lee talks ahead of Wolverhampton gig

Comedian Stewart Lee will be back in familiar territory when he heads to Wolverhampton’s Grand Theatre on Wednesday.

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Stewart Lee talks ahead of Wolverhampton gig

The Wellington-born funnyman is bringing his new show, Content Provider, to the city’s theatre, after wowing crowds up and down the UK.

Stewart is staying on the road until 2018 and will also play Stafford in September before beginning a three-month run in London.

His preparations for the show weren’t entirely straight forward. “I’m ok, but I got bitten by a spider during the previews of this new show and ended up in hospital for a week. They knew what it was at A&E immediately – a false widow.

“They came to the south of England about a hundred years ago but the winters normally kill them off. Because of climate change there is a population explosion and a lot of people are getting bitten. Donald Trump and Paul Nuttalls need to tell the spiders there is no climate change and then maybe they’ll stop biting everyone.”

satire

Stewart grew up in Solihull. His stand-up career started after he’d read English at St Edmund Hall, Oxford.

“Duty to the kids drives me forward. And it’s all I can do. I write more material than any other comparable stand-up, and I cover a lot of ground on the tours every year, but I am getting worn out. I started writing the new show in June and then the Brexit happened and obviously you can’t not mention it but I found myself staying awake for about a week trying to work out what was going on so I could work it into the set. In the end I realised nothing was going to change that fast and backed off a bit. Brexit and Trump have made comics’ lives hard though. How people are behaving is beyond satire, so what do you satirise?”

Content Provider is quite unlike Stewart’s recent BBC Two series Comedy Vehicle.

“It’s very different. Comedy Vehicle was four series of six 30-minute, self-contained sets. This is one two-hour through line, although I’ve had to keep the ideas and structure a little less rigid than usual to cope with the sudden surges in news events. There is also an apparently meaningless set which is actually very subtle and cleverly linked to the themes of the show in a way which becomes clear over the evening. It is made entirely from the second hand dvds of other stand-up comedians, none of which I paid more than 10p for. Other comedians’ DVDs are currently the cheapest building material in the world.”

Despite enjoying huge success over many years, Stewart isn’t immune to the swings and arrows of fashion. His BBC Two show was cancelled in February after 10 years and four mutli-award winning series. The performer, however, wasn’t surprised.

“Not really. The BBC is facing massive cuts due to the government trying to systematically dismantle it so something had to go from the comedy slate. Also, I’d done about all I could with that format. The truth is, financially I am better off touring that amount of material for two years, making a live dvd and then selling it to Netflix than I am giving more material away to BBC2 for less money. I am 48 with two kids and doing a job with no pension plan so I need to be realistic about making hay while people want to have my hay.”

Stewart has been described as ‘the comedian’s comedian’. He’s much-loved by established pros and the quality of his shows provide a yardstick. However, he doesn’t see things that way.

“I don’t think it’s the case. Most of the younger comedians seem to hate me, I think, and because I’m not really on the club circuit any more, and do my shows in theatres, I’m not part of any community and none of the new ones know or see my stuff anyway which is good I suppose, because if they did they would give up.”

His heroes are largely dead or unknown. Among his favourite comics are Lenny Bruce, Bill Hicks, George Carlin, Chris Rock, Eric Bogosian. Jerry Sadowitz, Ken Campbell, Dave Allen, Ted Chippington, Kevin McAleer. Nish Kumar, Harry Hill, Daniel Kitson, Bridget Christie, Paul Sinha. Johnny Vegas, Simon Munnery, Michael Legge and Josie Long.

slow

The performer is staying on the road into the New Year and is glad to be so busy. “Well I’m touring this Content Provider show until 2018. I’m supposed to be making a folk rock album with the group Trembling Bells at some point. I wrote a comedy drama about Brexit in September that is currently with a production company trying to find someone who’ll pay to make it. I’ll write another book for Faber, this one about doing stand-up on TV. But I need to slow down.

“I have no life and no friends. I don’t do enough with the kids. After the tour ends in the summer of 2018, I’ll lie on the sofa for a bit and watch 60s Italian Westerns. They’re all I’ve watched for the last few years really. I’ve see nearly 200. I like them because the directors and writers tried to slip weird and interesting and political things into them under cover of the movies being genre. I suppose that’s what I try to do with stand-up. At the end of the day it’s still just comedy, but maybe you can make it meet something better half way.”