Ed Byrne: Tragedy Plus Time

SYNDICATED INTERVIEW

By Jason Barlow Images: Roslyn Gaunt

Is there no end to the manโ€™s talents? A staple of revered panel show Mock the Week, Ed Byrne has also sledded down the side of a volcano for Dara and Edโ€™s Great Big Adventure, upstaged Martin Sheen and Robert Downey Jr on The Graham Norton Show, and demonstrated his driving skills on Top Gear and The Worldโ€™s Most Dangerous Road. He’s also proven himself to be quiz show dynamite on the likes of The Chase: Celebrity Special, The Hit List, Pointless Celebrities and All-Star Family Fortunes. Never agree to attend a pub quiz with Ed Byrne. You will lose.

But for all his dalliances with the world of television light entertainment, Ed remains at heart one of the worldโ€™s truly great stand-up comedians. He has honed his craft for a remarkable 30 years now, garnering a hatful of awards and a constant, borderline bewildering stream of five-star reviews along the way. Whisper it, but itโ€™s tempting in 2023 to take story-telling skills and a wit as sublime as Edโ€™s for granted. However, while he prepares to take his 14th show, Tragedy Plus Time, to the Edinburgh Fringe and onwards for a comprehensive UK tour, audiences need to ready themselves because Ed Byrne is heading into highly emotional new territory.

โ€œItโ€™s something of a departure, and Iโ€™m slightly worried about that,โ€ he concedes. โ€œIโ€™ve never really had the desire to write a show that had an overly serious element to it. I got a lot of five-star reviews on the last show [2019โ€™s If Iโ€™m Honest], but some four-star ones that opined, โ€˜well itโ€™s funny, but thatโ€™s all it isโ€ฆโ€™ As if thatโ€™s not enough these days. Frankly, just being funny is a furrow Iโ€™ve been happy to occupy. But this new show features some heart-wrenching, soul-bearing stuff.โ€

That much is indisputable. For Tragedy Plus Time, Ed bravely ventures into the world of grief and loss, a decision prompted by the passing of his younger brother Paul, aged just 44, in February 2022. Comedy that takes death as its cue is not unprecedented, but itโ€™s a path that takes considerable creative courage to explore.  

โ€œI was in two minds about whether to do a show of this nature,โ€ Ed explains. โ€œThen I decided this was the subject I was going to tackle but I wasnโ€™t quite sure how to go about it. But once I started down that road, that was itโ€ฆ Then my main worry was, how funny is it going to be and is it going to work?โ€

These were legitimate concerns. Of course, thereโ€™s funny and thereโ€™s funny. In Tragedy Plus Time, Ed consistently delivers the latter while expertly locating the poignancy that sits at the intersection of sadness and loss. This isnโ€™t gallows humour; this is something else altogether.

โ€œThe first time I performed it,โ€ he continues, โ€œit lasted more than an hour. That surprised me, but it was too long, so I had to decide whether to cut funny jokes or material thatโ€™s meaningful. That kind of decision was new to me, and whatโ€™s really annoying is that the one person I would have asked for advice on that is the guy the showโ€™s about. Itโ€™s like when you get dumped by someone and youโ€™re heartbroken. The one person youโ€™d usually want to talk to about it is the very person who dumped you.

Says Ed, โ€œIโ€™ve spoken to people who worked with Paul, who was a comedy director, and theyโ€™ve said that his thing was, โ€˜you can be as emotional as you like and as serious as you like, but there has to be a jokeโ€™. So the idea of saying something purely for the emotional gut punch was off the table.โ€

Nor is Tragedy Plus Time unrelenting by any means. The genius of it is that it takes the most difficult of subject matter and encourages the audience to laugh in its face in a way they would otherwise simply never do. Ed has also deliberately eschewed a linear narrative structure in favour of an approach that mirrors the unpredictable nature of grief itself.

โ€œObviously I donโ€™t want the whole thing to be an onslaught,โ€ he says. โ€œThatโ€™s partly because of the digressions, and thatโ€™s why theyโ€™re there. But they also illustrate how grief works in that you can still have a good time, you can still be happy, you can still have a laugh about other things and be frivolous. But grief is always there waiting for you when youโ€™re done with being silly.

Image: Roslyn Gaunt

โ€œThe show does elicit a very pure emotional response in the audience. Thereโ€™s something about the fact that when somebody dies, everyone else carries on like nothingโ€™s happened. Because nothing has happened to them. So thereโ€™s an anger in grief, tooโ€ฆ how can everyone else carry on as though nothing has happened?โ€

Ed candidly admits that mining his familyโ€™s bereavement for comedic effect would challenge his performing skills โ€“ and emotional bandwidth โ€“ in a unique way. Is this a nightly catharsis for the Irish comedian? To an extent, yes.  

โ€œDeath is universal. We will all lose someone. So the best thing to do is laugh at it,โ€ he says. โ€œAlthough I was aware, when I was first writing and performing this new show, that there was a danger I might, you know, lose it onstage. I did a work-in-progress at the Museum of Comedy and there was an audible crack in my voice. On the third performance I did actually cry on stage, and Iโ€™m sure for anyone who was there [assumes a very theatrical voice] โ€˜it was a very powerful experienceโ€™. But I donโ€™t want it to be the sort of thing where I rip my heart out and stamp on it for the audienceโ€™s delectation. Iโ€™ve been able to throttle back my emotions and keep them in check.โ€  

What of the origins of the concept that comedy is Tragedy Plus Time? Itโ€™s widely credited to American writer, humourist and quote machine Mark Twain, as many of these things are. Having researched it, Ed says thereโ€™s no conclusive proof that he coined it. Twainโ€™s contribution to the arts might have benefitted from an audio/visual dimension, if such a thing had existed in the 1880s, but itโ€™s something Ed has avoided. Until now.

โ€œThere are WhatsApp messages from Paul that I wanted to share and I could have just read them out. But that wouldnโ€™t have the same resonance, and you have to see them to fully appreciate the context. Then thereโ€™s a video of a weird guy who produces celebrity obituariesโ€ฆto be honest, Iโ€™m still tinkering with the audio/visual aspect, so there may well be more of that in the show. Itโ€™s a supplementary element, though, itโ€™s not integral. I donโ€™t want anyone to worry unduly about the introduction of technology to the proceedings.โ€

Tragedy Plus Time isnโ€™t Ed Byrne deconstructing comedy or going meta. Thatโ€™s not what he does. Nonetheless, this is a satisfyingly left-field move from one of the undeniable masters of comedy. It is as moving as it is funny, and vice versa.

โ€œIs it OK to talk about this stuff? Iโ€™d say this. Every night hundreds of people who didnโ€™t know who Paul Byrne was will leave the theatre knowing who Paul Byrne was. Iโ€™m happy with that, and I think I give a good account of him on stage. I wouldnโ€™t say heโ€™s up there with me every night, but heโ€™s there every time I think about the show, and Iโ€™ve got to make sure I do right by him. I briefly entertained a notion of writing a one-man play, with me sitting and talking to him towards the end of his life. But you know, Iโ€™m a stand-up comic. Itโ€™s what I do. I said to the audience in one of the early previews, โ€˜yes, it is sad. But donโ€™t worry because the show is funny. Because believe it or not, Iโ€™m actually quite good at this.โ€™โ€

Ed Byrne is touring nationwide. For more information, please visit http://edbyrne.com/

Ed Byrne is at The Wyvern Theatre, Swindon on 27th September and The Cheese & Grain in Frome on the 28th September.


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An Interview with Ed Byrne

With my ribs near fully recovered from giggling injuries caused by the one Ed Byrne, it’s nice to note if you missed him at the rescheduled Devizes Arts Festival evening, he’s playing Trowbridge’s Civic Centre on the 26th September, March 13th at the Wyvern, Swindon and Bath’s Forum on March 19th.

Here’s an interview with the man himself, to tempt your taste budsโ€ฆ.ย 

Jason Barlow

A household name teetering on the brink of national treasure status, award-winning comedian Ed Byrne enjoys worldwide acclaim for his stand-up. With 25 years under his belt, Ed has parlayed his on-stage success into a variety of notable television appearances. A regular on Mock The Week and The Graham Norton Show, Ed has recently co-presented Dara & Edโ€™s Big Adventure and its follow-up Dara & Edโ€™s Road To Mandalay, and managed not to disgrace himself on Top Gear or whilst tackling one of The Worldโ€™s Most Dangerous Roads. As a semi-professional hill-walker himself and fully paid-up humanist, he also brought a refreshing warmth and honesty to BBC2โ€™s recent hit The Pilgrimage.

But the Irishman is still best-known and best appreciated for his stand-up performances. A quarter of a century at the comedic coal-face has equipped Ed with a highly evolved story-telling ability and a silky mastery of his craft. Yet his wit, charm and self-deprecatory observational humour is often underpinned by a consistently hilarious vitriol and sense of injustice at a world that seems to be spinning ever more rapidly out of control.

Having recently hit a new peak with shows such as the sublime Spoiler Alert and reflective Outside, Looking In, which explored the minefield that is modern parenting and a generational sense of entitlement, Edโ€™s new show If Iโ€™m Honest digs ever deeper into a fatherโ€™s sense of responsibility, what it means to be a man in 2019, and whether he possesses any qualities whatsoever worth passing on to his two sons. Occasionally accused of whimsy, If Iโ€™m Honest is a show with a seriously steely core.

Gender politics, for example, is something Ed readily engages with โ€“ deploying his customary comedic zeal. โ€˜Iโ€™ll admit that there are things where men get a raw deal,โ€™ he says. โ€˜We have higher suicide rates, and we tend not to do well in divorces, but representation in action movies is not something we have an issue with. It was Mad Max: Fury Road that kicked it all off, even though nobody complained about Ripley in Alien or Sarah Connor in Terminator 2. Of course, social media means this stuff gets broadcast far and wide in an instant, which emboldens people.

โ€˜The problem with menโ€™s rights activists is that itโ€™s not about speaking up for menโ€™s rights, itโ€™s about hating women. If youโ€™re a menโ€™s rights activist, youโ€™re not going to care about the fact that thereโ€™s an all-female Ghostbusters remake. Thatโ€™s nothing to do with menโ€™s rights or female entitlement. Thatโ€™s everything to do with being, well, a whiny baby.โ€™

Photo by Idil Sukan

As ever, Ed manages to provoke without being overly polemical, a balancing act that only someone of his huge experience can really pull off.

โ€˜I did stuff about Trump and the Pizzagate right wing conspiracy,โ€™ he says, โ€˜and a couple of the reviewers said, โ€œOh, I would have liked to have watched a whole show of thisโ€. And I think, โ€˜well you might have, but the average person who comes to see me would not like to see thatโ€™. I like to make a point or get something off my chest, or perhaps Iโ€™m talking about something thatโ€™s been on my mind, but the majority of stuff is just to get laughs.

โ€˜People who come to see me are not political activists necessarily, theyโ€™re regular folk. If you can make a point to them, in between talking about your struggles with aging, or discussing your hernia operation or whatever it is, you can toss in something that does give people pause as regards to how men should share the household chores.โ€™

He continues, โ€˜Itโ€™s not that I feel a responsibility, I think it just feels more satisfying when youโ€™re doing it, and it feels more satisfying when people hear it. When a joke makes a good point, I think people enjoy it. Itโ€™s the difference between having a steak and eating a chocolate bar.โ€™

Ed, who broke through in the mid-1990s when the New Lad became a genuine cultural phenomenon, doesnโ€™t want to submit to any unnecessary revisionism, but admits that if the times have changed, he has changed with them. He reflects a little ruefully on one of his most famous jokes. โ€˜Thereโ€™s an attitude towards Alanis Morrisette in the opening of that routine that Iโ€™m no longer comfortable with, where I call her a moaning cow and a whiny bintโ€ฆ slagging off the lyrics of the song is fine, but thereโ€™s a tone in the preamble that I wouldnโ€™t write today.โ€™

The new show also takes his natural tendency towards self-deprecation to unexpected extremes. โ€˜I do genuinely annoy myself,โ€™ Ed concedes. โ€˜But the thing of your children being a reflection of you, gives you an opportunity to build something out of the best of yourself only for you to then see flashes of the worst of yourself in them. Itโ€™s a wake-up call about your own behaviour.โ€™

When I challenge him over the degree of self-loathing he displays, he disagrees. โ€˜Self-aggrandising humour is a lot harder to pull off than self-deprecating humour,โ€™ he insists. โ€˜A lot of people get really annoyed when Ricky Gervais is self-congratulatory. I always find it very funny when he accepts awards and does so in the most big-headed way possible. I think itโ€™s a trickier type of humour to pull off, talking yourself up in that way.

โ€˜So no, I donโ€™t think Iโ€™m being massively hard on myself. The fact is when youโ€™re the bloke who is standing on the stage with the microphone, commanding an audienceโ€™s attention, youโ€™re in a very elevated position anyway.โ€™

Photo by Idil Sukan

That said, If Iโ€™m Honest brilliantly elucidates the frustration that arrives in middle age โ€“ and lives up to its title. โ€˜Iโ€™m bored looking for things, Iโ€™m bored of trying to find stuff, because I can never find it, and it is entirely my fault,โ€™ Ed says. โ€˜Nobodyโ€™s hiding my stuff from me. Although my wife did actually move my passport on one occasionโ€™.

He insists that, while the show might have mordant and occasionally morbid aspects, itโ€™s also not without its quietly triumphant moments. โ€˜I thought I was being quite upbeat talking about the small victories,โ€™ he says. โ€˜You know, finding positivity in being able to spot when a cramp was about to happen in your leg and dealing with it before it does. I was very happy with myself about that.โ€™

Age, it seems, has not withered him. Especially now that heโ€™s figured out how to head off ailments before they become a problem. โ€˜You see comics who are my age and older but are still retaining a level of โ€œcoolโ€ and drawing a young crowd. I canโ€™t deny that Iโ€™m quite envious of that. But thereโ€™s also something very satisfying about your audience growing old with you.โ€™

Ed Byrne is touring nationwide, appearing at Trowbridge’s Civic Centre on the 26th September, March 13th at the Wyvern, Swindon and Bath’s Forum on March 19th. For more information, please visit http://edbyrne.com/


ยฉ 2017-2019 Devizine -Syndicated with permission from Jason Barlow.
Please seek permission from the Devizine site and any individual author, artist or photographer before using any content on this website. Unauthorised usage of any images or text is forbidden.


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Honest in Devizes: Ed Byrne Arrived in Devizes!

As an inexorable drunken dancer, have to steer clear of musical events on a school night at my age. I figured this wouldnโ€™t be so bad; sit in the Corn Exchange, listen to Ed Byrne telling a joke or three. I didnโ€™t weigh in the chance my ribs would be hurting in the morning and Iโ€™d still be grinning like a madman at the intricate weaving of observation comedy, yet they were, and I was, during my dark morning shift. This was, simply 250% side-splitting.

I had psychologically amassed hype in my mind, feeling like Iโ€™d been sitting in our grand hall since June waiting for this guy to show. Undoubtedly the only disappointment at this summerโ€™s Devizes Arts Festival, Margaret announcing Edโ€™s car had broken down and he wasnโ€™t going to make it, turned into a bogof for the punters. If we chuckled at the proficient two support acts in June, and we sniggered at Canadian comedian Paul Myrehaug on this occasion, thereโ€™s a clear distinction between the support comedian and a name like Ed Byrne. I have to hand it to Devizes Arts Festival for bringing such big names to our little town.

paul (51 of 122).jpg

Ed compered the show, popping on first to run a few annotations surrounding the unfortunate circumstances for his truancy in June, which although Iโ€™d anticipated, did it in such a hilarious manner it served as the perfect taster for what was to come. He introduced Paul Myrehaug with negative banter. A winner of the 2007 Yuk Yukโ€™s Great Canadian Laugh In, and second place in the Seattle International Comedy Competition in 2006, Paul is now a regular on the UK circuit and supports Ed on this โ€œIf Iโ€™m Honestโ€ tour. He delivered amusing anecdotes with natural flair, verging somewhat on crude, but executed courteously. Taunting one member of the audience, and effortlessly treating testing gags on us as part of his act, distinctively he owned the stage with magnetism.

Aptly titled, Ed Byrneโ€™s If Iโ€™m Honest never ventured into politics or current affairs, matter-of-factually threatening to bore with Brexit at one point remained but a one-liner. This was an elaborate interlacing of observational comedy and rumination, topics relating to family life and its subsequent cultures. With frank veracity that his children aggravate him a in manner others are unqualified of equalling, he concluded the inaugural with the unpretentious reason for this; their traits remind him of himself.

IMG_2794
Seriously shaky images from Devzine, except no substituteย 

From here he jests his self-esteem, expresses contempt for his own character, progressing into pondering precisely what qualities he has which he would like to pass on to them. At its pinnacle the routine examines his own liabilities, laying into copious cultural references from his past. This worked wonders for me, being only a year younger, I identified with his thoughts on the eighties Superman movie and like him, I wished for a Big Trac, which, thankfully looking back on it, never appeared under a Christmas Tree.

With spellbindingly funny narrative, it moves swiftly, to contemporary culture engulfing his kidโ€™s life, his abhorrence for online irritations and the interminable enticement to sabotage his career by daring himself to yell inappropriate language on Facebook or The One Show. If the great Billy Connolly mastered returning to previous points the audience mayโ€™ve forgotten about in the constant stream of bullet points, Ed Byrne nurtures this skill proficiently, and projects an non-stop laugh-out-loud show.

IMG_2795
What? I was laughing too much to steady a camera

Far from being the end to this yearโ€™s Devizes Arts Festival though, as their gallant effort to bring us big named stars continues into November, with a highly-anticipated one-off show from legendary R&B singer and keyboardist, Georgie Fame, I will not hold my breath for next yearโ€™s line-up until Iโ€™m done dancing to Yeah, Yeah; so Iโ€™d advise you grab tickets for that asap!

fame


ยฉ 2017-2019 Devizine (Darren Worrow)
Please seek permission from the Devizine site and any individual author, artist or photographer before using any content on this website. Unauthorised usage of any images or text is forbidden.


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