Theater
DYLAN
MORAN
“Monster”
The Village
Theatre
158 Bleecker St.
Tue.-Sat. at 8 p.m.
Through July
3
$30-$35, 212 253
0623 or ticketmaster.com
A Wit Freighted With
Fatigue
Dylan Moran,
Irish-born toast of London comedy, gigs at the Village Theatre
By JERRY
TALLMER
Dylan Moran recently
garnered rave reviews in the U.K. for his stand-up performance in
“Monster.”
The
Monster sank into a chair and arranged the glasses before him — one glass of
ginger and fizz, the other of wine. It is from both liquids, he confirmed, that
he sips at close intervals throughout the hour and a half of his show — in
between the constant drags on cigarettes.
“I
myself would not be standing up under all that wine,” a Yankee journalist
remarked.
“It’s
something that I grew up with,” the Monster dryly replied. He’s a darkly
handsome 32-year-old Irish-born, London-seasoned man named Dylan Moran, and
“Monster” is how he’s billed throughout Britain and Europe and now at the
Village Theatre on Bleecker Street, but he isn’t really. It’s just that his wit,
when he collects it between sips and puffs, can be pretty
scathing.
On
stage, he makes much, of course, of New York City’s anti-smoking laws and other
local oddities. Now, at the end of a long, hot afternoon, an hour and a half
before show time, he stared at the message window of a tiny cell phone and
muttered: “If you don’t have a car to get around, it’s worthless to try to get
across this fucking town.”
Indeed
— the Monster was told — there was once a crotchety, lovable, pipe-smoking
traffic commissioner, the late Henry Barnes, who used to say the only way to get
across town in Manhattan is to be born there.
“True,
actually,” said Dylan Moran.
He
was first in the United States for a gig (now reprised) in producer Arnold
Engelman’s British/Irish Comedy Invasion at the Village Theatre (formerly the
Village Gate) in April, presented by WestBeth Entertainment and BBC America
Comedy Live. His American experience brought him to Chicago and Los Angeles,
about the latter of which he complained, “A toilet of a city. I would never go
there voluntarily again. You need a Jag to get
out.”
What’s
a good Irishman doing with a Welsh first name like Dylan
anyway?
“You’ll
have to take it up with my parents.” But he doesn’t discuss his parents, his
family, or any of that. Well, they were working-class, and his father makes
furniture. Period. It is on record in the London press that Dylan Moran has two
children, and he now, between sips, confirms their existence. Period, full
stop.
The
London Evening News has tagged him “the Oscar Wilde of stand-up,” and he isn’t
quite that, but who is? You will probably nevertheless sit up and take notice
when the Monster gets on the subject of religion, or religiosity, or, as he
coolly, caustically puts it, “just people talking to you at length about their
imaginary friend.”
Fatigue
is, in a sense, his hallmark in performance, and it is with (professional)
fatigue that, in performance, he addresses the question of, say, the ignorance
of those who attack gay marriage.
Dylan
Moran was born and bred in Navan, “a middle-sized industrial, no, manufacturing
city in County Meath, in the middle of Ireland, surrounded by farmland,” and his
summation of his alma mater, St, Patrick’s Classical School, is: “I was bored. A
lot of priests, a lot of theocracy, a lot of small-town
mediocrity.”
There
is, both in Britain and Ireland, “a huge conservative streak, but in Britain,
anyway, it’s not as enmeshed in religion as here”—i.e., in the United States —
“where politics and religion are entwined. Right-wing Christian people live in
fairyland,” Moran said as he diddled with and squinted at the tiny cell
phone.
Do
you know any…?
“Right-wing
people?” He stared at the questioner as at an aardvark. “I know Christians. But
people for whom God informs social policy — I don’t want to live around
them.”
Last
month he’d told the London Sunday Times: “I don’t do interviews, but I’ve done
at least 13 million interviews.
“And
now it’s 14 million since I got here,” Moran
lamented.
Okay,
let’s make that 14 million and one.
It
was to a small Dublin club called the Comedy Cellar that Dylan Moran at age 20
“went one week, watched the people,” and then — like the kid, Bobby, in “A
Chorus Line” — said: “I can do that!” and went back the next week and
did.
“Because,
believe me, there were plenty of things I couldn’t do — such as find a job, or
go to college.”
Are
there any people or things this blue-denimed misanthrope
admires?
A
long thought.
“Well,
writers and artists. Iconically brave people like Martin Luther
King.”
Which
writers, for instance?
Another
long thought. “My favorite novelist is Don DeLillo. At the moment I’m reading
Lorca.”
Moran
had a bit part (as Rufus the thief) in “Notting Hill,” and has been in a couple
of films that are yet to be released in the U.S. One is “The Actors,” opposite
Michael Caine, written and directed by Conor
McPherson.
“Michael
Caine plays an older actor, I play a younger actor and lots of different parts,”
Moran said.
The
other movie is “a ridiculous zombie parody called ‘Shaun of the Dead.’
”
Does
he like acting?
A
shrug.
“It
pays the rent. A lot of fun… sometimes. Couldn’t have it my mainstay. I’d be
bored out of my mind.”
What
he most dislikes in the culture around us, the American culture in particular,
is “its relentless positivity—like unhappiness is a crime. A certain kind of
advertising-speak that bleeds into the everyday talk of very ordinary people. An
unwillingness to admit failure or anxiety. And I don’t think that’s the case,
since a lot of things in this world are fucked up and always will
be,”
He
does, however, like the audiences who come to see and hear him on Bleecker
Street in Greenwich Village.
“They’re
not the kind of people who are going to throw beer cans at you or ask you to
take off your top. Which is very good for them, I can tell
you.”
Maybe
he can do striptease when he goes on Letterman, Tuesday, June 29. Remember,
Oscar Wilde came here and conquered the Wild West.