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Tag: Kevin Bridges

  • Scottish comic Kevin Bridges picks quite the time for his American debut – Houston Press

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    “At least people need a laugh right now,” the Scottish joker Kevin Bridges sighs when asked why he chose now to make his North American debut.

    “I always considered coming over,” Bridges continues. “I even joked about it a bit on stage on the timing of coming to the US. But usually, I think comedy thrives in times like this when people need some escapism. I give my take as an outsider, and it seems to be well received, so it is fertile ground for comedy with everything that is going on in your country.”

    After 20 years in the business of joke telling, the 38-year-old Bridges has truly reached high highs in the comedy industry of his native United Kingdom.

    “Part of why I came to the state is I’m not that known here,” the warm-voiced comic explains, hyping up his single night at Cullen Performance Hall on Saturday, Nov 8. “So in a way it is quite good to not have immense pressure, where as in the UK, I’m playing in arenas with 10,000 or 11,000 people. It can be hard to improvise. But over here, the venues can be like 800 to 1000.”

    “So for me,” he continues, “it’s a bit like going back in time. But what is good is I have the experience and I can go back to enjoying these slightly smaller rooms, and the show is much more live because I’m trying things out and experimenting. I’m enjoying the fresh crowds and the challenge of being in a brand new country with my own take on everything.”

    While Bridges has proven to be a smash on social media, he prepares the audience to prepare for his thick accent and rapid fire delivery. “The audience is probably initially taken aback by my accent,” he admits. “I’ve tried to soften it a little bit, but not be a fraud. The Scottish people are probably like, ‘why is he talking like that – is he taking elocution lessons?’

    “The challenges have made me, forgive the cliché, really appreciate stand up again: the idea of getting an idea during the day and trying it out at night. American audiences have been very enthusiastic and receptive.”

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    Describing his perspective is tough for the young comic, but he essentially breaks his act along the lines of two types of bits. “My comic style, I try to keep it fairly topical, fairly current – and also personal stuff. I’m always talking about whatever is going on in the world, and also my own life. I started at 17, and I used to talk about being a teenager and being overweight. I lost weight, and my whole life has been documented through stand up. I’m a father to a 4-year-old, and I’m a husband approaching 40.“

    While many U.K. comics approach their stand-up specials from the foundations closer to the one-person show, Bridges sets expectations that this show at least will be closer to traditional stand-up, with bits on all subjects open to him. “I try to find funny angles, I don’t say I need to have a comedy routine about this subject,” he explains. ”Instead, I have this joke about deodorant, so that finds it way into the show. I have a funny joke about my son. So I find the jokes, and I place them. Certainly a theme or overarching narrative begins, [but] it’s trial and error where I work it out in comedy clubs, and there’s an hour or so of stuff coming together, a fairly organic product.”

    One unique distinction that 90 percent of touring headliners might envy, but Bridges has the rare distinction of having had his filmed stand-up specials released in movie theaters. “That’s right, seeing your face up in the cinemas was pretty exciting,” he says of the thrill that few American comics beyond Eddie Murphy or Kevin Hart have had in America. “It was pretty well received, and it was totally different rather than just release it as a [streaming] special.

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    “I think it’s only when you are going to the cinema do you remember how fun going to the cinema is. We’re so saturated by all these streaming services, last night me and my wife say down and are just browsing and browsing for hours – but don’t watch anything! There’s something about going to the cinema and somebody else has decided what you are watching for the night that takes the pressure off!”

    An underrated element too is how much funnier a comic play in a room full of people, be they at a live concert or in the cinema. “People who went, some admitted to being a little anxious since COVID to be going to live events, but they really enjoyed this kind of happy medium where they are still with people, but much smaller setting to see it in this communal experience.”

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    In some ways, this return to smaller venues for Bridges has been like a wish-fulfillment. With the pressure lifted, he discovered his perfect environment for stand up comedy. “When you’re on the way up and you’re playing venues that size, there is a lot of pressure. But as you say, looking back, I don’t know if I enjoyed that stage in my career. So getting back to that experience and actually taking it in? I think between 1,000 and 2,000 is actually the perfect size for stand up. When it gets bigger, it can still be good – but 1,000-2,000 is really that sweet spot.”

    While this North American leg has taken the Scott all over, he’s doing more than bringing laughs – he’s checking off American bucket list items left and right.

    Here’s Bridges Top 4 To-Dos:

    1. Texas-Sized Meal: “I have done BBQ in Austin, Texas and it was 91 degrees. So before the show, I think I gave myself sunstroke and gout in one go.”

    2. Meet an American Icon: “The other [night], there was Steve Van Zandt, from Bruce Springsteen’s band and The Sopranos. My agent has seen them 3 or 4 times, so I would like to walk over and say hello and what a huge fan I am. So meeting Steve Van Zandt was immediately on the bucket list.”

    3. Witness an American Past Time Up Close: “I would quite like to see any American sport, go and watch something live. Basketball? Baseball?”

    4. Test His Endurance: “The Hollywood sign! I don’t know if I can put up with the traffic just to see something. But [if I hike it], I’ll just collapse onstage. Pretty hard to balance being a good tourist and being there for the audience.”

    Bridges performs on Saturday, November 8 at 7:30 p.m. at Cullen Performance Hall, 4300 University. For more information, visit cph.evenue.net. $46-69

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    Vic Shuttee

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  • Kevin Bridges Says the ‘Rougher Gigs’ Shaped His Stand-Up Comedy – Cleveland Scene

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    Over his 20-year career as a stand-up, Scottish comedian Kevin Bridges sells out arenas in the UK and tours theaters throughout Europe, Australia, New Zealand and the Middle East.

    Now, he’s finally booked a North American theater tour that brought him across Canada in September and will take him coast to coast across the states into November. Bridges, who’s starred in five terrific stand-up specials, released the novel, The Black Dog, in 2022 and his autobiography, We Need To Talk About Kevin Bridges, in 2015, performs on Tuesday, Nov. 11 at the Agora.

    He talks about his lengthy career and his narrative approach to comedy in this recent email interview.

    Your career started in Glasgow in the 2000s. What was the comedy scene like there?

    Comedy was nowhere near as big then as it is now. When I started there was one designated comedy club in Glasgow and loads of pubs that ran comedy nights in their basements or attics. Some of those were great rooms and some were wildly rough. I’d perform pretty much anywhere that would have me — pubs, clubs, bingo halls and even a prison. Looking back now, it was playing the rougher gigs that helped me improve and grow in confidence. Once you’ve performed to a room of convicted criminals or drunk angry pensioners, then performing to a room of people who have actually paid to see you is an honour! 

    Is there a distinctly Scottish sense of humor?

    I don’t think comedy has a postcode. I have met and saw funny people from totally different backgrounds and upbringings from me, but I reckon “Scottish humor” would be very self-deprecating with zero pretence, harsh at times but with charm and of course lots of strong language. 

    You have what is often called an “observational sense” of humor. What comedians influenced your approach?

    Billy Connolly and Richard Pryor would be the most famous ones. I loved how fearless they were and how they were always unapologetically themselves. They pushed boundaries back when there were real boundaries to push and above all they were hilarious and prolific. 

    You’re a particularly good storyteller too. How did you develop those skills?

    I think most of the skills from stand up just come from constantly doing gigs and doing gigs to different audiences. If you need to perform to a room full of drunks on a work night out or whatever, then you have to immediately grab their attention and then hold it, so I guess that naturally helps you develop into a good storyteller. 

    You’ve done five stand-up specials now. What did you aim to do differently with your latest one, The Overdue Catch-Up?

    There first four were filmed in massive 10,000 plus arenas, so for the 5th one, I thought it would be cool to shoot it somewhere smaller and more intimate and do longer stories and try something a little different. I think it worked, but I’ll probably film the next one in a big bastard again. 

     In the special, you joke that you don’t get InstaGram. Has that changed? How do you feel about it now?

    It’s a pretty grim app that has had a significantly negative effect on its user’s mental health. A hive of narcissism and misinformation packaged in layers of fake tan, teeth, lips and arses. I don’t like it and wish [Mark] Zuckerberg would do the World a solid and drag the whole thing into the recycle bin. However… it’s probably gained me loads of new fans from round the World and I probably wouldn’t be touring the USA without its help, so I take that all back. Add me on Instagram folks: @kevinbridgescomedian.

    You have a bit in the show where you say you’re not taking on any new mates. To what extent is that bit based on real life?

    Ha! I’m constantly meeting new people thanks to my job and parenthood, but I probably still have a core group of friends who I grew up beside and have known for years. Maybe it’s a working-class thing that Geography and History are two of the important qualifications that a friendship needs! 

    You have a pretty thick Scottish accent. Do you intend to tone it down for the U.S. tour?

    Within reason. I try and be clear but my accent is my accent, not everyone sounds the same and if I tone it down too much then it feels unnatural. There’s about 8 hours of my stand up online so take a quick course before the show, and we’ll all be fine.  

    Cleveland is a great city for comedy. What do you know about our fine town?

    The Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame and basketball! I started watching NBA during the lockdowns and love it. I read somewhere that Steph Curry and LeBron James are from the same area, which is incredible. Also, surely it’s time to get Oasis in to the Hall of fame! 

    And what do you anticipate the show here will be like?

    I love performing in new places, so it’ll be exciting for me and fresh and live. It’s a good time to be a comedian from abroad anywhere in the USA just now. The place is nuts, even by your own high standard of nuts, so hopefully we can take a night off and have a laugh about all of that! 

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    Jeff Niesel

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