Sunday, November 30

Lee Mack, Royal Concert Hall, Nottingham

It’s safe to say that comedian Lee Mack enjoyed the audience at the Concert Hall as much as they enjoyed him.

The stand-up and star of TV’s Not Going Out stayed a full 15 minutes longer than his billed timings last night – and for that we were grateful in what otherwise was a set that flew by.

From the outset he was gag-heavy. Rattling them out like a Ken Dodd for the 21st Century (in the nicest possible comparison, of course), he was on his way into the next story, punch line or observation while the sell-out audience was still recovering from the last.

OK, he could be hit-and-miss sometimes, and a bit of a lull 40 minutes from the end showed he was at his best working the audience rather than relating those scripted tales of home life, children and his sex life.  

From telling us why elephants actually have a short memory to the vagaries of Irish name-spelling, he covered a vast range of topics from the point of view of the punters. Fair enough, his topics were mostly end-of-the-pier stuff – and some of the punch lines could probably be spotted from the spaceship that landed on that comet recently. He even managed to fluff a few lines so completely that we never got to hear the end of his stories. 

But he was very visual on stage, using the space well, pacing, pausing and reacting to the crowd.

His audience interaction was the key – and got by far the biggest laughs. Good old Grace from Kimberley, and a wonderful hair-stylist from Burton-on-Trent who made up her own line and probably got the biggest laugh of the night, laid the foundations for some good old-fashioned spontaneous fun.

His contact with the crowd was a mix of the traditional “What’s your name” and “What do you do” to remembering their names and what they’d told him to bring back into his gags further into the show.

Indeed, the encore was simply inviting questions from the floor. A risky strategy but the good folk of Queen of the Midlands delivered – and gave him the perfect material to round off a busy night.

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Nottingham is full of fun, according to the traditional football chant. It's full of a few other things, too, so while I welcome comments, don't bother adding anything that won't get published...