
'After 17 years of slogging along, the possibilities seem limitless'
Brendon Burns on winning awards, respecting the audience and cutting to the funny
Interview by Chris Wiegand
Friday May 9, 2008
guardian.co.uk[/align]
You won Edinburgh's if.comedy award last year. How has it helped?
It's a real deal-sealer; I was made all sorts of offers in the first week. It used to be that whoever won the award was on television by the time they handed the award over to the next winner the following year. I'm taking a bit longer than that to make my pilot, but we're getting there. After 17 years of slogging along, the possibilities seem limitless. It's perfect timing. If I'd have won the award when I was younger, I'd have made too much money and I would be dead.
Have you prepared this year's Edinburgh show yet?
It's pretty much written. I write early - a lot of guys leave it quite late. This is the one year that I'm going up to Edinburgh with no strict narrative thread. Last year's show was very scripted. In previous years, there was a lot of improv going on in the middle because I got bored. Then I realised that's down to petulance. It's not fair on people who are buying a ticket to see you in a show that's been reviewed - and reviewed well - for you to change it because you got bored.
You appeared in a straight play at Edinburgh last year. Did that affect your comedy?
Doing that play gave me discipline during the day to turn the stand-up at night into the pointless folly that it should be. When I approached stand-up with that mindset, to just be as funny as I can, everyone started writing about it as though it was deep philosophical thought, but I was just cutting to the funny. In previous years, I'd tried so hard to be magnanimous with the subjects I was broaching that it stopped being funny. When you stop being funny, no one cares what you're saying.
You started doing stand-up when you were living in Australia. Are Aussie audiences different to British ones?
I used to say that there was no such thing as the British sense of humour. But now I think I've got it. The British sense of humour is more complex in its language - British people understand the algebra of jokes better. Sometimes you can leave the punchline hanging and they'll write it in their heads. My favourite jokes are the ones where people are confused what the target is. The release is when they realise that the target is them.
What about the size of venues?
In a small club, you can't do Chris Rock-level performance shtick. You can't have that level of polish. You can see every face and smell every breath - there's no sense of occasion when you walk on stage. You're basically commanding a conversation. If the venue's bigger, you're working the room, which is physically taxing. You use every corner of the stage; you sell every bit like you're singing it.
Do you watch a lot of comedians?
God, yeah. It's tough if you're on the same bill, because this is the most self-absorbed art form, and also the most controlled. But I'm more laidback these days and I will enjoy other guys on the bill. I was so lucky because I moved here at an exciting time - with so many really cool voices. These days, my career is such that I don't have to work Saturday nights, so if one of my mates is on in town, then I go. And I can just sit back and enjoy it.
· Brendon Burns performs I Suppose THIS is Offensive Now at Soho theatre in London May 22-31

