|   HEADLINERS 
              COMEDY CLUB CHISWICK 
               
              Is Harry over the Hill? Will Watts reviews 
              a recent show at Headliners 
             
                
            
               
                 
                     
                     
                    Forthcoming shows 
                  Jeff 
                    Green has been rescheduled for two weeks time and is replaced 
                    by John Maloney (Jan 25th) 
                  JAN 
                    24/5 : KITTY FLANAGAN, OTIZ CNNELONI, MIKE MILLIGAN 
                     
                     
                     JAN 
                    31 : MEN IN COATS, ANDRE VINCENT, NORMAN LOVETT, 
                    SHAPPI KORSANDI 
                    FEB 1 : MEN IN COATS, ANDRE VINCENT, NORMAN 
                    LOVETT, JON FOTTERGILL 
                  All 
                    shows start at 8.30 ( doors open 7.30 ). 
                    Entry is £10 pay on the door 
                  You 
                    can reserve seats on 020 8566 4067 
                  Headliners 
                    is at George IV, 185 Chiswick High Rd, London W4 
                     
                    Note - Acts at Headliners can be subject 
                    to last minute changes. Call the number above on the day of 
                    the event to confirm the final programme  | 
               
             
            Half 
              an hour to go, and the club was packed to the gunwales (whatever 
              they are) on the promise of Harry Hill. The George IV’s frenetic 
              bar staff seemed to be turning American with the pressure (‘Hi. 
              My name is Katie and I am your waitress for the evening’), but still 
              there was a nagging anxiety among experienced Headliners attendees: 
              would the great man show up? There would surely be a riot if he 
              didn’t, with a mob of enraged Hill-billies overturning and torching 
              the Police Portakabin, and possibly even snapping the remaining 
              brushes off the Hogarth statue. Then, phew, Mike noticed the Great 
              Man at the bar. Disaster was averted and the evening secured. 
               
              If there was a theme, it was that the physiognomy of the comics 
              accurately predicted the type of material that they performed. Keith 
              Dover’s boat race – as I suppose he would put it, for he is an emphatic 
              Cockney who boasts of East End roots – has a well-fed and slightly 
              dissipated look making one think of a pub landlord, a black cab 
              driver, Richard Littlejohn. It was therefore unsurprising to find 
              that Mr Dover’s concerns were Ken Livingstone (‘what a tosser!’), 
              the police handling of the Hackney siege (‘they just kept it going 
              for the overtime’) and mini-cab drivers who require direction from 
              their fare (‘Right… Left here… third gear… clutch…’). Mr Dover had 
              some good material, but his comic persona was so briskly and consistently 
              foul-mouthed and bigoted that it was too much like being on a building 
              site during the lunch hour to be very funny. 
               
              Sean Lock is visually the favourite NHS dentist onto whose list 
              you can’t get: the one that combines a distracted air with professional 
              competence and being good with children. Sure enough, Mr Lock turned 
              out to be interested in biting and chewing. He worried about the 
              fate of the blue whale, the largest animal in existence that, famously 
              in an Attenborough-dominated age, feeds exclusively on microscopic 
              krill. ‘The poor things, never get a proper mouthful of food… never 
              get to eat something satisfying… it’s like being Geoff Capes and 
              living off hundreds-and-thousands…’ After ruminations on the fate 
              of the Senegalese, who apparently have no word for tangerine – ‘not 
              hilarious, just worth mentioning’ – and a lecturette on the necessity 
              of swearing – ‘well “Flip off you Mother-Flipper” doesn’t work, 
              does it?’ – he rounded off his set with an analysis of Bernard Manning’s 
              technique which was shrewd, skilful and not in the least repeatable 
              here. 
               
              Now it was time for Harry Hill, who only looks like Harry Hill. 
              I would claim that he is an acquired taste. After watching his rather 
              feeble TV Burp series on the telly, I had very much not acquired 
              it. Instead I had noticed that his surname lends itself to scornful, 
              punning headlines: ‘Over the Harry Hill’, ‘Hill Street Blues’, ‘Hill-man 
              Limp’.  
               
              In the event, he was fine. His hesitating, twitchy flights of fancy 
              – the ones that are irritating and unfocussed when seen on the small 
              screen – work much better as part of a live act. As he bounced around 
              the little stage, pretending to introduce himself to the front row, 
              his whimsical patter was strangely compelling: ‘Hmmm… hmmm… what’s 
              your name, what’s your star sign? Hmm… what’s your name, what’s 
              your star sign? Hmm… What’s your – ooh! A beard! A filthy beard! 
              I thought I said no beards. If you want to keep your teeth warm, 
              get a scarf! Hmm… Acupuncture, acupuncture – good for many things 
              but not for pins and needles… Hmm… The dachshund, the stretched 
              limousine of the dog world…’ I admit I’m still not a big fan, but 
              I would go again, which is surely the crucial test. Not over the 
              Hill. 
               
              The last performer, and the unanimous favourite of the evening among 
              all six at our table, had the aristocratic, hawkish features of 
              a successful general or the lead in a superior production of Sherlock 
              Holmes and the Speckled Band. Simon Evans, for it was he, talks 
              proper – it’s definitely Newcahstle not Newcassle – and makes a 
              virtue of it. (He’s that posh, I bet he can even make ‘forehead’ 
              rhyme with ‘horrid’, as it does in the old children’s ditty about 
              the little girl with the little curl.)  
               
              Mr Evans presented a sort of nob’s eye view of life. He had suggestions 
              on what to do when confronted with street beggars: ‘Why give them 
              money when you can give them good advice?’ He hinted at royal connections: 
              ‘The Queen has the knees of a twelve-year-old girl. They were the 
              gift of the grateful people of Tonga.’ He had a shark-proof watchstrap 
              ‘although if all a shark wants is your watch, I say give it up’. 
              All standard-if-good material, which reviewed by daylight doesn’t 
              by itself explain his popularity. I think it was his timing that 
              was absolutely on: both in the telling of jokes, and in coming on 
              as the last act, when the alcohol was further loosening a well-warmed-up 
              audience.  
            Will 
              Watts 
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