DYLAN MORAN: MONSTER II
Palace
Theatre, London WC2
Opened
17 May, 2004
***
No music reviewer would make a
career writing about pianists solely from repeated performances of a single
concerto, nor any pianist out of playing just the one piece. Yet sometimes
writing about stand-up comedians can feel worryingly like this. They all hit
more or less the same notes: London... young people... children and
parenthood... today's dreadful music... religion... growing up in Ireland
(obviously not every comic includes this movement, though sometimes it feels
like it)... finishing off with differences between men and women, usually with
reference to naughty bits and/or naughty business. The difference lies in the
phrasing, the flourishes, the individual expression brought to the work by the
performer.
Dylan Moran, appearing for
seven nights at the West End's Palace Theatre while it spends the summer
between blockbuster musicals, plays the standard concerto. It's in the phrasing
that his skill resides. His slurred, bellowing delivery and shambling, half-cut
persona (although in almost two hours he put away perhaps a third of a glass of
white wine) are no longer as novel as they once were, but they belie a greater
than average discipline in his material.
Moran certainly has a gift for
the surreal image and the unexpected adjective, but his spontaneous flights of
fancy are brief and a little diffident. He prefers to hone his phrases and
seems to script them quite tightly; like a snooker player, he can control
exactly the angle at which the ball will come off the back cushion. At times he
simply sounds like an early-middle-aged grouch, berating young people for
"texting each other because they've given up on speech", but when he
stretches out and lets fly with his magnificent vocabulary, he's in a different
league. He can use a near-nonsense word like "quadrangulate"
meaningfully, or wonder about Ann Widdecombe's voice, "How do you get that
many fingernails on one blackboard?" Sometimes the word-images work
through bizarreness, sometimes they're simply there to add colour or emphasis in
unexpected ways: a granny mentioned in passing is so much less prosaic when
she's an emphysemic granny. And the mere phrase "fellating a
Smurf" is as euphonious as the image it evokes is disconcerting.
Moran's growing film and TV
career are vying with his live work for supremacy now, and indeed he's slightly
less appealing a performer on stage than one might expect. But the words, oh,
the words...!
Written
for the Financial Times.
Copyright © Ian Shuttleworth; all rights reserved.