Interview: Richard Herring
Posted by CeefaxOfLife from Cardiff - Published on 07/03/2012 at 21:42
Richard Herring
TheSprout was lucky enough to get a few minutes on the phone with comedy don Richard Herring ahead of his show What Is Love, Anyway at St.David's Hall on Thursday 12th April 2012.
What is your show What Is Love, Anyway about?
Its about love and other about big things as its interesting to investigate big concepts. In my last show I suggested that religion and love were closely related, that they were unprovable and faith based and the audience bristled at the thought that love is unreal. I thought it was an interesting thing to explore. The show is quite autobiographical, looking back at odd things that happened to me because of love from 6 years old to 44 and at changing attitudes to it. It's a way of exploring the subject that resonantes with people.
Hows the tour going?
Great! Its hard work but tiring with the driving and hotels, but the shows are really good fun. Ive been touring for 10-11 years, with audiences gradually building up, most places now are 200-300 seater venues and this show seems to resonates the most. Im getting better at what Im doing.
How do you prepare for such long tours?
I dont think about it too much, only think a few gigs ahead. If someone asks where Im playing tomorrow I might not know, I check the Sat Nav on the way there. Its a 75 date tour, if you think theres 70 odd shows to go youll get depressed. I try to stay healthy but end up eating junk to stay awake, I dont have a training course or do Buddhist chanting, I just get on with it and hope for the best, and youll get bursts of energy. Dont prepare is my advice
How was the gig in Bridgend last week?
Lovely yeah, its a wee one and a long way to drive so I wasnt really looking forward to it but it was a cracking gig. On this tour Im playing places like St Davids Hall, which is huge and then an 80 person venue like Hobos, but I like the variety and it was one of my favourite gigs of the tour. I turned up grumpy and tired after the drive, but it was great fun and you meet people afterwards and theyre really grateful that you made the effort before they wonder what youre doing in Bridgend! Saying that Im really excited to play the main room at St. Davids Hall, its always been a little bit of an ambition of mine to move up to it.
Why did you start doing comedy?
Ive always been interested in comedy from a really young age and when I was a teenager I was more interested in listening to comedy records than music records. I knew I wanted to do this, I didnt know whether it was possible, but I was always writing. I went to university and met Stewart Lee, we did some stuff together and that went pretty well, so we moved to London.
Were you the funny kid in school?
I was annoying in school because I was intelligent and good exams but me and my friends could be quite disruptive in classes, trying to crack jokes or whatever, which probably made me doubly annoying. Also my dad was the headmaster of my secondary school, which added another level to it. It was a bit of an odd experience; its hard for me to work out if the people who didnt like me did so because of my dad or because I was a bit of a d***. But we started very early, we were writing sketch shows when we were 15 and even when I went to uni I had 3-4 years expericene of writing my own stuff, and when there I spent most of my time doing comedy rather than any work. I did what I could to make it a job, gave myself five years to see how it was going, it went well and Ive carried on.
Is that the advice then to young people, write and keep on writing?
The advice is to just do it and dont expect success too quickly. Ive been doing this for 20-odd years and you just keep learning. You really want about five, ten years of apprenticship before you really think about getting in but its not always how it works. In the last 8-9 years Ive learned so much about performing and your confidence grows and you learn by doing it. You need the talent to do it, the energy, the amibition, the thick skin to carry on through the early gigs, but you need to keep doing it. You also need to write, theres lots of stuff you can do online now - blogs, podcasts, filming sketches - to try stuff out and find your voice but dont expect to play the Apollo in six months.
Quick-fire Round
Did you move to Harpenden to be closer to Craig Charles?
No, is he here?
According to Wikipedia
No, thats not why I moved here.
Would you ever write a children's book?
Yeah I wouldnt mind it, I got a few ideas, its something I might think about next year.
Will you podcast on your wedding day?
No, I dont think my fiancé will not allow me but I would if I could. I want to record the speeches as a DVD extras.
Earth Hour is at the end of the month, who would most like to have a candlelight dinner with?
Apart from my fiancé? Amy Pond from Doctor Who, not the actress who plays her but the character, shed have to stay in character for the length of the dinner.
Video games or board games?
I play a lot of both but probably board games, although I do like playing against fictional opponents rather than real ones
both.
Beatles or Stones?
Beatles but I prefer The Kinks
Vinyl, CD or MP3?
MP3, Im not into hanging on to old technology and I listen to much more stuff now..
North or South?
Hard question, I was born in the North, I grew up and live in the South
The Midlands
Finally - Lion, Tiger or Bear?
Tiger
Richard Herring plays St Davids Hall on Thursday 12th April 2012.
http://www.thesprout.co.uk/en/news/interview-richard-herring/07717.html