logo
Kathy Maniura: ‘I've played a paper straw, a nervous smoke alarm and now a middle-aged cycling man'

Kathy Maniura: ‘I've played a paper straw, a nervous smoke alarm and now a middle-aged cycling man'

The Guardian4 days ago
Why did you get into comedy?I've always loved making people laugh. I was raised on a diet of sketch shows (French and Saunders, Mitchell and Webb, Monty Python) and took any opportunity I could to be silly for an audience. I have a vivid memory of a very elaborate performance of We Three Kings for the Year 5 talent show ('sorrowing, sighing, bleeding, DYING!') – I won. I'm drawn to big, playful characters – wigs, costumes, silly voices. At uni I started doing sketch comedy and never really stopped.
How would you describe what you do?Gentle absurdity. It's a silly good-natured sending up of recognisable things. In my last show, I brought to life a series of inanimate objects – including an annoying Californian paper straw, a pathetic electric scooter desperate to be unlocked, and an incredibly anxious, sensitive smoke alarm. My new hour merges this kind of absurd character comedy with drag. I'm pretending to be a middle-aged cycling man, complete with Lycra bulges, devastating divorce, outrageous income and zero emotional intelligence.
What inspired the show?I used to cycle to work through central London, wearing jeans like a normal person, and I'd be overtaken by these guys all kitted out in the gear and I would just think to myself … surely, surely they cannot be cycling much further than me. Where are they going? From their central London flat to their slightly more central London office? Why won't they put their feet down at the traffic lights? Are they OK?
Around a similar time, I became aware of drag kings as an art form (like drag queens, but performing heightened masculinity instead). I was so energised, inspired and amazed watching the iconic drag king collective Pecs and the Man Up! competition. It's such an exciting, varied, DIY, punky art form and I started to wonder if I had a drag king character in me. The two ideas combined, and The Cycling Man was born …
What's been one of your all-time favourite gigs?Sometimes the weird gigs are the most unexpectedly fun. Last summer I did a spot at a small festival. I was with some brilliant comedians (Rosalie Minnitt, Lorna Rose Treen and Emily Bampton). We turned up and the person on the stage before us was giving a very earnest presentation about his research into arctic foxes. Getting into drag in the cold backstage area of the tent listening to the lecture I thought, ah – they may not be in the mood for absurd character comedy after this. How wrong I was! The audience were wonderful, and all the more wonderful for defying our expectations. That's a pro and con of the job – you never know quite what you're going to get until you turn up for a show.
Can you recall a gig so bad, it's now funny?When I was doing a show with my comedy partner Derek Mitchell, we booked a spot at one of the stages on the Royal Mile in Edinburgh. It's the main flyering thoroughfare during the fringe and there's an open-air stage for acts to perform a snippet of their show. Lovely, in theory. Except what does well on that stage is juggling and a cappella singing, not alternative sketch comedy. I performed a solo piece – a wordy parody song. It was raining. The small crowd quickly dispersed. Derek laughed his head off as the light left my eyes while I continued to perform. There were two other people watching under an umbrella – my parents.
Any bugbears from the world of comedy?There's still a lot of unpaid and poorly paid gigs, many of which you travel for and, while the Edinburgh fringe itself is still seen as a rite of passage, it's becoming prohibitively expensive. Many working-class comedians can't do it. A lot of comedy spaces are inaccessible in other ways – male dominated, all white, in basements or upstairs in old pubs. It puts comedians in marginalised groups at a huge disadvantage in an industry that's already hard work.
Worst advice you've ever been given?A prospective agent once said to me that if you have a day job you like, you're a 'hobbyist'. Actually, creative work doesn't have to be torture, and I think the idea that creative brilliance is born of hardship and that you have to give up everything to pursue your dreams is actually pretty toxic. That person did not become my agent!
What's an important lesson you've learned from being a standup?To try and fail! The only way you get better at comedy is by saying a joke out loud, in front of people, and seeing what happens. Once you've bombed a decent number of times, you learn that dying doesn't actually mean dying.
Kathy Maniura: The Cycling Man is at Pleasance Courtyard, Edinburgh, 30 July-24 August
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Billie Eilish surprises fans by teaming up with Oscar-winning director for upcoming 3D tour movie
Billie Eilish surprises fans by teaming up with Oscar-winning director for upcoming 3D tour movie

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Billie Eilish surprises fans by teaming up with Oscar-winning director for upcoming 3D tour movie

Billie Eilish revealed she is teaming up with James Cameron for her upcoming 3D tour movie. The 23-year-old singer shared the exciting news of her collaboration with the Oscar-winning director during her sold-out show in Manchester over the weekend. At her concert on Saturday, she revealed to her audience that she was working on the 3D movie with the Avatar filmmaker, 70, to bring her concert experience to more of her fans. 'So you may have noticed that there are more cameras than usual in here,' she said in between songs at her show, per The Hollywood Reporter. 'Basically, I can't say much about it, but what I can say is that I'm working on something very, very special with somebody named James Cameron, and it's going to be in 3D,' she continued. Her announcement comes shortly after she enforced a completely vegan food policy at her London concerts — with her ' woke decision' leaving attendees feeling 'less than impressed.' 'So, take that as you will, and these four shows here in Manchester, you and me are part of a thing that I am making with him,' the Birds of a Feather hitmaker added. 'He's in this audience somewhere, just saying. So don't mind that, and also I'll probably be wearing this exact outfit for, like, four days in a row.' Cameron is renowned for directing big budget and large scale films such as Aliens, Titanic, Avatar and The Terminator. His films have grossed over $8 billion worldwide, making him the second highest-grossing director in film history. Eilish previously made one documentary — Billie Eilish: The World's a Little Blurry in 2021 — as well as another concert movie that same year — Happier Than Ever: A Love Letter to Los Angeles. She is currently on tour in support of her third studio album, Hit Me Hard and Soft. At one of her recent shows in London, she sparked mixed reactions from her fans when she enforced a completely vegan food policy for her show held at the O2 Arena, making it the venue's first-ever fully plant-based event. The singer is performing at the venue for six nights during her Hit Me Hard And Soft Tour. And every food vendor has been required to offer 100 percent plant-based options, removing all animal products from the arena for the evening. The menu included a peri-peri haloumi wrap, a corn naan, chipotle tacos, pizzas, and pancakes. While some of Eilish vegan fans praised her decision, others were left disappointed with the food options after paying upwards of £70 for their tickets. One attendee told MailOnline: 'Punters were less than impressed with the vegan options — a mixture of pizzas, cauliflower bits and loaded fries — with more than one asking, "Did they run out of meat or something?" Before the show started, Eilish narrated a short film about veganism, the environment, and all of the steps they have taken on the tour to do their bit. The crew all eat plant-based food on tour, while her merch is made using sustainable practices. They also had an Eco Village at the O2 arena to raise awareness of climate change. She's not the only star to take action — as Paul McCartney famously refuses to perform at venues that don't offer vegetarian options. Despite not all fans being impressed with the food choices, her performance made up for it as the award-winning artist belted out hits including Ocean Eyes, No Time To Die, and What Was I Made For? She was raised as a vegetarian and has been a consistent advocate for animal rights and veganism, frequently discussing her beliefs when it comes to animals.

Chris Hemsworth's sweet message to his wife Elsa Pataky on her birthday as the couple reunite after weeks apart
Chris Hemsworth's sweet message to his wife Elsa Pataky on her birthday as the couple reunite after weeks apart

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Chris Hemsworth's sweet message to his wife Elsa Pataky on her birthday as the couple reunite after weeks apart

Chris Hemsworth has shared a sweet post dedicated to his wife Elsa Pataky on her 49th birthday. The Aussie star, 41, took to Instagram on Saturday to wish the Spanish actress a happy birthday as they celebrated her special day together. 'Happy birthday @elsapataky! Thank you for being an incredible human and each year continuing to allow me to eat the vast majority of the cake,' he captioned the post, which has received over one million likes. One snap showed the actress wearing a giant smile on her face as she sat alongside her husband with a giant chocolate cake in front of them. Another featured Chris leaning in as Elsa excitedly blew out her candles, surrounded by pastries, cakes and her loved ones. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. Rumours have recently circulated about the couple after they spent several weeks apart due to work commitments. Elsa had been in her native Spain, filming her new TV series Matices, while Chris had been travelling, even attending the final day of Wimbledon without his wife. However, on Thursday, they reunited in London at the premiere of Chris' new National Geographic series, Limitless: Live Better Now, with their twin sons, Tristan and Sasha, 11. Sporting summer tans, the genetically-blessed duo glowed as they cuddled up, clearly happy to be back in each other's arms. The event was a family affair, with all of Chris' family in attendance. His father Craig and mother Leonie were present, as well as his brother Liam and his girlfriend Gabriella Brooks. For the glitzy evening, Chris, who stars in the show exploring how humans 'can live better for longer', looked handsome in a navy two-piece suit. He layered his tailored two-piece over a crisp white T-shirt and an unbuttoned dark blue shirt. Meanwhile, Elsa put on a leggy display as she slipped into a sparkly sheer dress which was layered over a strappy white dress. She added inches to her toned physique as she wore a pair of strappy silver heels and slicked her blonde tresses back into an up-do. Chris and Elsa tied the knot during the Christmas holidays in 2010. The Hemsworths have made Byron Bay their home in recent years, after relocating from Los Angeles to Australia nine years ago.

Roger Norrington: a maverick, an irresistible firebrand and a musical visionary
Roger Norrington: a maverick, an irresistible firebrand and a musical visionary

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Roger Norrington: a maverick, an irresistible firebrand and a musical visionary

The conductor Sir Roger Norrington, whose death was announced yesterday at the age of 91, remains still the maverick presence that classical music needs. His mission wasn't only to make us hear the repertoire we thought it knew through the prism of the techniques and playing styles of its time, rather than the ossifications of later traditions. He was also an irresistible firebrand in performance, whose energy wasn't only about inspiring his performers to get closer to the music they were playing, it was also an invitation to his audiences that their listening should be involved too. Norrington wanted everyone to feel the urgency of Beethoven's rhetorical power and rudeness, from the radiance of one of his favourite pieces, the Missa Solemnis, to the emetic contrabassoon in the finale of the Ninth Symphony, which was always the richest of raspberries in his performances and recordings. The Guardian's journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more. Haydn's symphonies, particularly, were pieces of participative performance art in Norrington's hands, in which his delight in sharing the radical humour and jaw-dropping discontinuities of the music was so evident. The conductor would turn round to his listeners - especially in the Prommers in the arena of the Royal Albert Hall in one of his 42 appearances at the Proms - to make sure we all realised just how weird and wonderful this music really was. The revelations of hearing Norrington's historically informed musical mission in action defined an era, along with his fellow iconoclasts, such as Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Christopher Hogwood and John Eliot Gardiner, all of whom founded ensembles of period instruments, like Norrington's London Classical Players, and took the lessons they had learnt therein to transform the sound world of modern instrument orchestras. Norrington's work with the Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra is the sound of his later legacy in action, in Brahms, Berlioz, Tchaikovsky, and Elgar, as well as Beethoven and Mozart. But Norrington's distinctiveness was his unshakeable belief that there was a right way to play Beethoven – and a wrong one. He was also completely committed to his idea that the curse of vibrato was an aberration in performances of all music composed before the early 20th century, whether Bach to Mahler. While his vibrato-free performances brought astonishing moments – listen to the opening of the slow movement of Bruckner's sixth symphony, and connected music from across the centuries, it was an experiment that didn't catch on. Or at least it hasn't yet. Norrington's many crusades for the right tempo and textures in Beethoven's symphonies, for the clarity and directness of drama in Bach's Passions, for the transparency of sound world in Wagner and Debussy, have had repercussions across the whole of classical music, even with conductors and orchestras who might not think they're working under his influence. Norrington's decades-long mission to wean musical culture off the drug of vibrato may yet have its day. And his work remains fresh and thrilling. His Beethoven recordings with the London Classical Players - all the symphonies, and the piano concertos with Melvyn Tan, from the 1980s - are as impishly radical as ever. The paradox of Norrington's performances is that what seemed like austerity and ideology was in fact a generous invitation to re-hear the incendiary meanings and power of music that had been taken for granted for too long. Norrington was associated with what used to be called 'authenticity' in the performance of 17th, 18th, and 19th century repertoires. But he was too intelligent to believe that what he was doing was a mere restoration job or a return to a sound world of Mozart's or Beethoven's time - something that can never truly be recaptured. He wasn't a musician trying to return to the past. Instead he was going back to find a musical future. The sound of his recordings is the sound of the indelible imagination of all those composers he loved being released in all their rapier wit, sublimity and delirium into our time.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store