Overview
Ticket Price: £50.16 for two from Eventbrite.
A blog to record my immediate post-gig thoughts. Don't expect professional criticism. I'm just a punter with a sense of humour.
The Wonder Room is Glasgow magician Ryan K. Davidson’s new one-man show in residence in one of the city's most historical and iconic venues, offering a unique, up-close experience of magic and storytelling to a strictly limited audience.
Set in an intimate, purpose-designed suite in the luxurious voco Grand Central Hotel in the heart of Glasgow, The Wonder Room opens its doors every week by ticket or invitation only.
Each show is limited to 20 tickets, ensuring everyone in the room is a participant and not merely a spectator.
WRITTEN AND PERFORMED BY: Ryan K. Davidson
RUNNING TIME: 1 hr 50mins without interval
AGE RESTRICTION: 16+
Ticket Price: £50.16 for two from Eventbrite.
I am struggling to find the words to review this show. Tim's unique take on comedy encompasses outrage, shouting, stamping his feet, reciting poetry and stressing parts of words in an unusual manner (e.g., scroTUM), all under the guise of being an underdog who's award-winning and artistically famous.
The show is about what happened while he was writing it. Sitting in a cafe, with his special pen (blue, green, red, AND black), he sets out to write his next award-winning opus. He's distracted by the waitress, by the unexpected appearance of Greg Rusedski (why not?) and by the invitation from Gabby Logan to appear on her Midpoint podcast, triggering a rumination about his life - at 38, half of 76, he might be regarded as middle-aged, so what does that mean when he's actually 48? {he's actually 49, but not when he wrote the show}
As we enter the performance space, he's already on stage, in his dishevelled suit, shirt open at the collar, wearing a white baseball cap. He acknowledges our arrival with a nod as he paces slowly around the tiny stage, sometimes facing the wall or grasping the microphone stand. He pulls nervous smiles like a child. He does this for nearly twenty minutes while the audience fills the sold-out venue.
I'm sitting at the side, right against the wall, probably one of the worst views in the room. The bloke behind me is standing up, chatting with his female company. Suddenly, I feel a wash of beer slap against my head, splashing inside my glasses, soaking down my front.
"Oh, sorry, mate," he quips casually.
An innocent accident, but I feel rage boiling. I've got beer blotches expanding across the front of my lime green shirt. Nothing I can do, though, much as I want to confront the bloke and retaliate by chucking the remainder of my Irn Bru can across his face. I use my shirt tail to dry the inside of my spectacles. Fucker! Now, my drive home from Edinburgh will be stinking of beer. Yuck!
Eventually, Tim steps off the stage and wanders to the back of the room. A spotlight hits him as he recites a poem, beginning the show. He ambles towards the stage, kicking a carrier bag forward. He lifts it and throws it from a distance onto the stage, joining it shortly afterwards. He puts on a tie (he's not a barbarian) and opens the bag, taking out a can. He pulls the ring. Lager sprays in the air like a fountain, which he struggles to stem using his hand and jacket. He's got it all over him. He blows the foam off the top of the can into the audience, reaching the third row, then takes a drink. Suddenly, I'm not the only one in the audience beer-infused, but at least when it happened to them, it was part of the show. He passes the can to a man in the front row to look after (he'll request its return several times throughout the show).
He talks about his mother, his father, being single and a celebrity. He should be a catch. He's got eight thousand pounds in the bank. He lets the waitress kiss his Richard Osman House of Games suitcase. He doesn't care. She's allowed.
Every poem is bizarre, a vignette of truth and humour, a word painting of his world. He recites them from cards the size of playing cards, discarding them onto the floor when they're done.
His outbursts away from the microphone rail against the injustices of his life. He has no kids. He's frozen his sperm. "No grandmother wants to visit a block of frozen cum," he rails.
The sixty-eight-minute show takes a turn near the end when a poem introduces us to his malignant melanoma - the C-word. He'll say it. He's not scared. That cunt of a doctor told him he had cancer. The swear word punctures the tension. He had it removed. He's fine. He goes on Gabby's podcast.
So ends his tale of mortality. We should be blessed for hearing his wisdom. He walks off, with his stick and bindle (he's ashamed he had to Google the word) over his shoulder, to continue his life as a lonely traveller.
It was an experience unlike any other show I've seen. No wonder it received multiple five-star reviews. I'm glad I made the trip to Edinburgh, even if I came home stinking of beer.
Ticket Price: £46.00 + Booking fees £2.64 = Total £48.64 from Monkey Barrel (Presale)
John says this is his first time performing in the UK. Not for him the plaudits of the Edinburgh Fringe. He doesn't covet a 'San Pelegrino' Award or whatever. He much prefers the grimy lanes and haunted theatre of Glasgow. He even manages to pronounce the city name correctly (not so much with Edinburrow).
I've had emails and texts reminding me I'm not allowed to use my phone in the auditorium. To reinforce this message, there are signs blu-tacked to the backs of every other seat, plus ushers wandering about, holding aloft "No Mobiles" boards.
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| A souvenir |
Before the show, I wound my wife up that we were in the front row, even showing her the 'Row A, Stalls' ticket. She was unaware that the Theatre Royal has four rows in front of row A. Our seats were great, but not dangerously so.
The evening followed the typical American comedy club format, minus the MC, with an opening act, a feature (middle act) and then the headliner.
Mandal is first on. He's a US comic from Georgia. He complains he is fat, even though he's lost 30 lbs. He says people don't congratulate him. They just tell him to keep going. He doesn't like it when people shorten the word congratulations. He doesn't like congrats. He wants his 'ulations'. They don't do it for other expressions. "Sorry for your L'.
He was a gentle, cuddly start to warm us up. Good comic.
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| (Photograph by Emma McIntyre, Hair and makeup by Christina Spina) |
Andrea Jin is drier. She's a serial immigrant, moving with her family from China to Canada, and then to the US. She asks if it's complicated to move to the UK. We say yes, so now she's thinking she might move here. Writing this the next day, I can't remember any of her other material, but I did like her at the time.
At the interval, droves of the audience leave the auditorium. I doubt everyone needed to pee or to buy a drink. Most likely, it was phone addiction, craving their next screen flick. We stayed where we were and munched through a tube of Munchies (half a tube is one portion, it says on the pack). I'll admit to feeling a touch of phone withdrawal myself, not being able to Shazam the preshow and interval music. All I can say is it was a jumble of Southern blues.
After he returns from the bar, the chap on my left asks if I've seen John before. I reply no. He then informs me that he got married last year (congrat...ulations) and that he and his new wife saw John perform the following day in Boston. He tells me John was excellent. Andrea had played then, too, but not the first guy. Even though they've seen the show, they came back because they enjoyed him so much. I reckon it's partly to reminisce. His wife, who is beside him, is the right side of gorgeous. They appear still very much in love.
(Aside: I get the same feelies when I see images from The Angels Take Manhattan - we watched the filming in Central Park on the last day of our honeymoon).
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| Disclaimer: not my photo. I pinched it from the internet, rather than trawl through old hard drives. |
John Mulaney was immense. He has a presence that leaves you in no doubt that he knows what he is doing. This was my first experience of him as a comedian, and I was impressed. Whether he was discussing how creepy his son can be, or how he adopted thirteen Vietnamese when he married his wife (her extended family - "how much money you got, John Mulaney?") or his love of horror films despite all satanic possessions being the same (Satan inhabits a teen, make a mess of their bedroom, vomits copiously, says rude words, then gets sent back home to hell by a loud exorcist), he knew exactly the tone to pitch the comedy. A fine mix of writing, delivery and performance. The way he could step out of a routine to relate a funny anecdote and then dovetail back into the joke was so slick. He didn't even need a beat, and we were back where we were. I loved the line "From the moment my son was born, I'd known my now wife for exactly nine months and forty-five minutes" (That might not be exactly how he said it).
The only time he seemed perplexed was during the bit about hiring a religious person for the exorcism when he asked us, out of curiosity, what religion we were. Cue a spontaneous sharp intake of breath from the audience. You could tell John genuinely didn't understand the reaction, ending up nominating one person near the front to describe what had happened. The answer didn't explain, so he continued with the routine, barely referencing it again. A minor blip that the audience enjoyed more than he did.
Despite the high ticket price, John was good value. It was great to see a master of comedy at work.
Ticket Price: 96.40 x 2 = £196.75 including £3.95 transaction fee.
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| The images from Gregor's life and career scrolled across the screen in both directions. |
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| The Garage printer needs a new ink cartridge. |