SillyBry
Sunday 19th July 2009 1:35am [Edited]
32 posts
I saw Shappi tonight at a local theatre. She did an Edinburgh preview in place of her support act (although as she said, considering it's two weeks away, she's written surprisingly little material!) and then her current show. There was a lot of promising material in the preview stuff - bits about George Galloway (or as she calls him Ayatollah Galloway) and the current protests - we had some good protest singing and the description of all the different types of people that go on protests.
She talked/apologised for the glut of her ethnicity material. She talked about how she would go to the BBC with all sorts of ideas (I was particularly excited by the Guerrilla Gardening programme she mentioned!) and they would say "ah, how lovely. A programme about your ethnicity!" "No, a programme about me disguising myself as a tree in Regents Park watching for Guerrilla gardeners". "That sounds brilliant. You can talk about Iran. And religion." She talked a bit about radio 4 and how PC they want to be and their Afternoon Plays with the "generic foreign accent". After telling a particularly dirty joke, she giggled and said "you don't hear that on radio 4! I'm so sorry - you probably all thought I was the embodiment of radio 4. I'm not!"
I thought she was tonnes better live than on the TV - she was just very conversational and chatty and slipped jokes in. The bits I've seen of her on the TV, she does come off a bit smug throwing the punchline out, but live she seemed a lot more natural. There were some bits I've heard - which she apologised for first - like a story about her sister with a nice Lily Allen song. Although she expanded on it and went on to sing some hymns at a rudeboy on the bus and told us that her younger sister doesn't really exist, but her cousin would kill her if she knew it was about her.
There were some good noisy French women in the audience, so she tried to show off her GCSE French at them - Je m'appelle Shappi. Je suis perdu. "Wahey! I never thought I would come to Maidenhead and not tell jokes, but stand on stage and talk French!"
She also made a glib remark about "the last time I was in Maidenhead..." and went on to talk about how they had to go into hiding in Windsor when her father had death threats and assassins after him in the 80s.
Overall, I really enjoyed it. She finished with a lovely joke about taking a taxi from one gig to another and the cabbie thinking she was a stripper. It was really good.