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Brydon: Prejudiced?

I won’t. The underlying modesty he shows seems to be in harmony with much of his work – he chooses his projects incredibly carefully. One of them was the marvellous Cock and Bull Story, a big screen interpretation of Lawrence Sterne’s ‘unfilmable’ The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman, arguably driven by the constant quibbling between Brydon and Steve Coogan, both playing versions of themselves. “The banter on camera is an edgier, loveless version of what we really are. The only improvised bits were the sections that book-end the film – the bit about the teeth [Brydon is accused of havingat the start and the Al Pacino impressions at the end. I always turn to Al.” I ask him whether his pride takes a bashing at all when he mocks himself on screen – after all, much of Keith Barret was ultimately tragic, and there are plenty of personal snipes in Cock and Bull (“Have a look at the colour,” he says in the intro, tapping his teeth. “It’s what I call not-white. Actually it’s a nice colour – I think you could decorate a child’s nursery with this colour.”) He starts out with an utter Barret-ism. “You’re what I

call a young person, but as you get a bit older and more comfortable in your skin, you’ll do pretty much anything for a laugh. After all, your life isn’t what goes on screen. That’s your job, your work. I wouldn’t bring my career if I was evacuating the planet – I’d bring my family. “

His newest project is a documentary, and the decision came easily to him. “I wanted to do a documentary on things I have a passion for. Not Elvis Presley, that’s been done to death. Then I thought of Wales - it stemmed from the seed of dismissiveness in the character in Annually Retentive. So I booked a theatre in Aberdare for a stand up show – as myself, not Keith.”The premise of a booked stand-up show galvanised him into getting the documentary on track, as well as the desire to appease a friend jaded by constant (albeit fond) Welsh-bashing. When he toured as Barret, an exchange with an audience member epitomises this attitude: “Do you speak Welsh? You do? [a pause] Why? No, no, no- what I mean is, is it part of your job, or were you forced to learn it as a child?”


The gloomy Welsh attitude is summed up by Brydon’s meeting with Manics’ bassist Nicky Wire. “He told me that after If You Tolerate This went to number one, they were all delighted for 20 minutes; but after that they were gloomy again, on the tour bus, because it had sold 20,000 fewer copies than they expected.”But the show works. Some (wisely edited) stand up at the start shows his anti Welsh humour bombing, but as he turns the focus round to his favoured self-mocking, the audience at the show’s end empathises and is utterly won over. “I feel like I’ve rediscovered a part of me, and a part of my country. I was living here in London in my lovely media world with my friends, and I felt quite disconnected. But when I drove back, and heard the Welsh accent of the girl in the toll both on the Severn Bridge, it made me feel warm inside.”

Posted on Friday 29 February 2008