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Brydon: Prejudiced?

Geoff (produced by Steve Coogan’s Baby Cow production company), encapsulated the ambivalent darkness of much of his previous work, including the seminal Human Remains with Julia Davis. I was keen to find out why he eschewed this in favour of the light-hearted Keith Barret Show concept – in Brydon’s own words changing “beautifully crafted monologues” into, superficially at least, easy pickings. “I am drawn to a sort of bleakness in comedy, but the Keith Barret show was s a satire on light entertainment. People can walk straight off from Big Brother into these chat shows, so why not a divorced taxi driver? Why not Keith?” On closer inspection, however, even in his less demanding format, Brydon’s Barret is an impossibly incisive and quick-witted character.

The Keith Barret Show, along with his recent Annually Retentive, a pastiche of the panel-show format complete with behind-the-scenes bitching and devising, both gleefully take the piss out of B-list and C-list celebrities, but Brydon insists that this is all in good nature. “I’m very fond of

Richard and Judy, the guests on the Keith Barret pilot. Some of the guests on these shows understand it. You want to be captain of the ship but you’re not - you’re the cabin boy. Lembit Opik didn’t want to play the game and Eamonn [Holmes] did.” The success of these shows comes in no small part from the fact that Brydon is often on the panel himself, though he admits he “only picks the good ones”.

One of these is surely the Big Fat Quiz of the Year, which Brydon has returned to for the past four years on the trot. I’m interested to know the degree of preparation involved in something like this, but he assures me it’s kept to a minimum. So which guests do the best? “It’s Russell [Brand] and Noel [Fielding]’s show, really. You’ve got to assume roles on these shows, and Dave [Walliams] and I play it as the straight guys. I can’t compete with their stream of consciousness. I don’t do gigs. I’ve never taken a drug in my life. I’m married! But you’ve got to be on your toes because I watch these things as a fan and I say to my wife, ‘we haven’t heard much from him this

evening have we?’” I put it to him that Fielding often stumbles through these shows with a permanent vacuous spastic grin, entirely unable to pull out a single funny quip or comment, but Brydon is admirably unwilling to put down any of his costars, and comes to his defence quickly. “Comedy is so much about attitude – look at Woody Allen or Russell Brand. Once you have that attitude everything is easier, but getting it is not easy.”

He has recently branched away from pure comedy, playing roles in shows such as Napoleon and Gavin and Stacey, which took away a clutch of prizes from the British Comedy Awards last year, and is soon to start its second series. “Comedians have a certain way of looking at the world, close to filtering life.” He’s keen to stress the more difficult, studied approach he takes to straight acting. “You’re constantly thinking, ‘Where can I give a good reaction shot to keep me in the scene?’. You want to win every scene. Not in that way – god, that sounds horrible. You’re not going to print that are you? I bet you are.”I assure him that