Michael McIntyre seems to be about a quarter of a mile a way. Just a dot in a red shirt skipping up and downstage. From our seats we could see that he does have a face. We just couldn’t see couldn’t see any facial expressions. Fortunately, the NIA in Birmingham (see image below) had erected huge screens. So, for our £35, we swivelled around in our uncomfortable seats so that we were facing the stage, and watched Michael McIntyre perform his routine. On a great big telly. But enough complaining…he is a funny man, who appears to have popped up from nowhere but who in fact was roundly ignored by the critics for years before releasing Britain’s fastest selling ever comedy DVD in 2008. But for comedians the curse of TV fame is regular primetime exposure. TV devours material that will last on the non-televised circuit for years.
So for McIntyre, this will was the first time he has had to deliver an entire set of brand new material. And it works. His comedy is middle England, middle class, middlebrow. It’s not angry and it’s not confrontational. He skips and bounces around using the whole stage, using his self-acclaimed campness to its full theatrical advantage. His routines centre on the day-to-day frustrations and embarrassments of life. He sums up the discomfiture of everyone (except dreadful wine snobs) when the wine waiter asks us to taste the wine – he argues that he expects the wine to be fine, and really would expect the restaurant to operate on that presumption too. They wouldn’t, he reasons, ask you to sniff the milk before they put it in your coffee.
He tells stories about his wife, his children, his new house (the first one he’s owned after years in the wilderness) that are affectionate but still sharp and bright and without a trace of sentimentality.This all combines to make him a very easy to laugh along with comedian. You don’t feel you’ve let yourself down for laughing at his jokes as you sometimes do with Jimmy Carr, or feel that you’ve joined a pub-drunk rant as you do with, say, Frankie Boyle.
He is the comedian for the reasonable person. If Waitrose had a corporate comedian, it would be McIntyre.
(Michael McIntyre’s national arena tour continues until 2nd December 2009 at various venues)







