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Q&A with Swenglish comedy star Ben Kersley

Sweden’s only 'Swenglish' comedian, Ben Kersley, talks to The Local about his latest comedic venture, The Tuesday Chinwag, starring ‘three bespectacled English guys’ and music by Swedish Idol’s Nicholas Perry.

Q&A with Swenglish comedy star Ben Kersley

The Local: How did this show come about?

Ben Kersley: Me, and fellow comedians James McKie and Ben Richards wanted a regular English comedy night in Stockholm. We agreed that the most important thing would be to make it fun and laid back for both the audience and the performers – a chat show format, which would be mostly improvised but that contained a few pre-written ‘stand up’ sections.

We thought some live music would also add to the night, so I asked the Idol 2011 dropout and fellow Linköping resident, Nicholas Perry to be a part of it too. Not only does he have a raw talent for writing and performing gritty observational songs about life in Sweden, but also he is also an English guy with glasses, so he was in.

TL: Why do people want to see 3 Englishmen talking about the weather?

BK: What possible reason could there be to NOT want to see three English blokes talking about the weather!?

The thinking was that there couldn’t be a more ridiculously banal and predictable subject for three Englishmen to have a nice sit down and chat about than the weather. Hopefully the audience will find this idea as stupid as we did…it had the three of us in fits of giggles for ages!

TL: You’re the self-titled only comedian in Sweden who performs in Swenglish. In terms of the Swedish language itself…any pet hates?

BK: The worst crimes against Swedish are committed by Swedes who pepper their sentences with English. It sounds ridiculous and pretentious and they should stop. I don’t want to hear the words – “yesbox”, “shit”, “sorry”, or “smorgasbord” unless they are part of a proper English sentence.

TL: The Local wrote a list recently about how lose your Swedish friends in ten days. What would you say can irritate Swedes?

BK: It’s in the language. The debate about rebranding Östergötland as ‘East Sweden’, for example, has really got people’s backs up. All the language Nazis have come out in force and are bemoaning the use of English in Sweden. It just makes me wonder: When will these people learn that Swedish is essentially a linguistically impoverished and moribund language with a limited vocabulary unsuited for the international arena?

TL: What’s the best way to make a Swede laugh?

BK: A funny hat. Everyone likes a funny hat.

TL: Is it true that Swede’s don’t have a sense of humour or is that just another Swedish myth?

BK: Swedes do have a great sense of humour but they have different comedy. There is a great comic pedigree too, look at people like Tage Danielsson, Povel Ramel, Magnus Härenstam and they are just as good as funny as British names from the same period. Their downfall is that they are known for <i<allsång, revy and the god-awful genre of buskis.

TL: Do you have any comedy idols or influences?

BK: I love Larry David – I have a similar trigger that makes me pick arguments with people – I get a real buzz from it, that I’m quite ashamed of sometimes. In Sweden, being a bit belligerent is often mistaken for being a dangerous psychopath…but I’m actually quite a nice guy.

TL: You’ve been in Sweden since 2006, has the novelty of the country worn off? If so, where do you find your material?

BK: My first material in Sweden was all about snus and fika – Now I write about more individual experiences in Sweden – but still fall back on the old favourites as I don’t think Sweden ever allows you to feel unforeign.

Part of the idea of having themes for The Tuesday Chinwag was to force us to write about subjects that we wouldn’t normally write about. So, at the moment, I’m desperately scribbling on my notebook and trying to get some laughs out of the weather. My mind is in a thick fog (badaboom!)

TL: Ha ha ha…Any tips for aspiring comedians out there?

BK: Get a grip!

The Tuesday Chinwag takes place on the first Tuesday of each month starting on February 7th, with ‘The Weather’. Following ‘profoundly important subjects’ include: ‘Love’ (6th March), ‘Pets’ (3rd April), and ‘Pot Luck’ (1st May).

All shows will be at the Kafe Klaver in Södermalm, and tickets cost 50 kronor.

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COMEDY

Bill Bailey: ‘Why can’t I find a decent coffee in Spain?’

Bill Bailey, musician extraordinaire and stand-up comedy is bringing his live show Larks In Transit to Spain.

Bill Bailey: 'Why can't I find a decent coffee in Spain?'
Photos by Andy Hollingworth

Ahead of gigs planned in Madrid, Barcelona and Torremolinos, the comic made famous for his role in sitcom Black Books spoke exclusively to The Local about the Spanish leg of his European tour.

His Spanish dates come in the wake of a tour first around Britain and then other parts of Europe

“The show I’m bringing to Spain , Larks in Transit, is particularly well travelled, and has just been well received all round Norway, Iceland, Sweden , Denmark and Belgium so it’s perhaps my most international show yet,” explains Bailey. 

British comedy can draw big crowds in Spain, with Eddie Izzard performing sell out dates in Madrid recently, even learning Spanish for the occasion. Fellow Black Books star Dylan Moran also toured Spain last year.

“I’ve found that in the last few years there’s been huge amount of interest in English-speaking comedy around Europe and indeed around the world. I’ve performed my show in places I would never have imagined ..like former Soviet bloc countries, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia as well as those further afield like Shanghai and Kuala Lumpur. 

“I think YouTube has had a large part to play in this, as anyone can now see all kinds of comedy online,” adds Bailey. 

So can his Spanish audience expect to hear him tackling the local lingo?

“I like to learn some of each language for a few greetings, and I do a few checks to find out if a few cultural references will work, but other than that I tend not to change or adapt, I find that the show is well worked out, and balanced.”

He knows both Madrid and Barcelona having visited the cities on holiday but has also added a gig in Torremolinos. Why Torremolinos?

“Come on it’s sunny! It’s freezing in London, pouring with rain, we’re in the grip of Storm Beyonce or whatever, and I need some sun. Plus, it’s the holiday destination of my youth, and I’ve not been back in a long while,” he explains.

He is also hoping to find in a bit of mountain biking in breaks between shows… and eating. 

“I love the food, and the biking.. so I’m looking forward to tapas, and taking to the mountain bike trails.”

But he admits he is baffled as to why he can’t find a decent coffee in Spain.

“I was just in Baqueira Beret for half term skiing with my son, and couldn’t get decent coffee,” he revealed.  “So I’m bringing my own hand press!”

Anyone familiar with Bailey’s humour will know he is a master of all musical instruments and this latest show also includes musical interludes. So can we expect any Spanish influences to appear? 

“Perhaps some opera, some flamenco,” he hinted.

And, in his first tour to Europe since 31st January when the UK left the European Union, will he be mentioning the ‘B’ word?

“You can’t not mention it. It’s the elephant in the room. But I won’t dwell on it .. I might mention it in passing,” he says. Asked if there was anything ‘funny’ about Brexit? He replied with an emphatic: “Not really”.

I ask Bailey who is an avid birdwatcher – he is author Bill Bailey’s Remarkable Guide to British Birds –  if he has a favourite bird, and he recalls one he recently saw in Spain.

“I watched a Gryphon vulture soaring in the Pyrenees recently at nearly 3000 metres up, and apparently they go much higher, cruising at altitude looking for leftovers, that’s my kind of life.”

So what plans does Bailey have for the future? Is there a Black Books sequel on the cards? And would he like to play Doctor Who?

“Yes, I think I’d be an excellent Doctor.. perhaps one who also has an interest in owls, and owl conservation, uses his powers to stop the destruction of habitat.

“As to a Black Books sequel, I wouldn’t have thought so.. maybe a musical , or branded swimwear maybe?”

And finally, does he have a favourite ‘knock knock’ joke? 

“It’s actually a backwards one that happened by accident,” he recounts. “My wife opened a cracker at Christmas, there was a knock knock joke in it, she read it out as “Who’s there? Then someone replied Knock Knock ….. .. mysterious, brilliant.”

Bill Bailey is performing in Madrid on March 2nd, Barcelona, March 3rd and Torremolinos on March 5th. For more information about tour dates and tickets click HERE

READ ALSO: Where, when and how to drink coffee like a Spaniard

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