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[Misc] The Lenny Henry Show



Questions

Habitual User
Oct 18, 2006
24,896
Worthing
Just watching a few minutes of it….. Did we laugh at it ?
Even Rick Mayall couldn’t save him.
 




GT49er

Well-known member
Feb 1, 2009
46,779
Gloucester
Just watching a few minutes of it….. Did we laugh at it ?
Even Rick Mayall couldn’t save him.
That's the problem with looking at the past through the filter of the beliefs and values of the present time - it can make people look incredibly intolerant.
 


Questions

Habitual User
Oct 18, 2006
24,896
Worthing
It’s not just that GT, it just wasn’t funny. I can still laugh at comedy that isn’t PC but most of it made me cringe…. He should have come second on Mew Faces and we would have been spared….. He does do a lot for charities though I guess.
 


Binney on acid

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Nov 30, 2003
2,501
Shoreham
I had the misfortune to see him live at The Dome once. I guessed the weak punchlines before he'd had a chance to utter them. He actually sang to a backing track of a 70's rock song by 'free'. I think it was 'Little bit of love'. He's no Paul Rodgers ! It really was a crap evening.
 


Pickles

Well-known member
May 5, 2014
1,315
The truth is that he wasn't funny then, he isn't funny now, and he never will be.

We all know why he was found to be absolutely hilarious and has become a national treasure, even though the vast majority find him a dreadful performer and would rather stick a marmalade sandwich up their own backside rather than watch him do his crap and oft repeated act of the last 40 years, but to say so would be deemed to be racist.
 




astralavi

Active member
Apr 6, 2017
455
The truth is that he wasn't funny then, he isn't funny now, and he never will be.

We all know why he was found to be absolutely hilarious and has become a national treasure, even though the vast majority find him a dreadful performer and would rather stick a marmalade sandwich up their own backside rather than watch him do his crap and oft repeated act of the last 40 years, but to say so would be deemed to be racist.
 




Simster

"the man's an arse"
Jul 7, 2003
54,224
Surrey
It’s not just that GT, it just wasn’t funny. I can still laugh at comedy that isn’t PC but most of it made me cringe…. He should have come second on Mew Faces and we would have been spared….. He does do a lot for charities though I guess.
I think the issue is that Lenny Henry is about as funny as herpes, or even Mrs Brown's Boys. Even back in the day, being black and shouting wasn't great comedy.

Look at him now though; he has morphed into an absolutely outstanding serious actor. Shakespeare plays and quality drama - he is usually excellent. Why oh why wasn't he acting back then instead of doing his shit "comedy"?
 




GT49er

Well-known member
Feb 1, 2009
46,779
Gloucester
It’s not just that GT, it just wasn’t funny. I can still laugh at comedy that isn’t PC but most of it made me cringe…. He should have come second on Mew Faces and we would have been spared….. He does do a lot for charities though I guess.
Fair enough in that case. Comedy is always going to fall flat on its face sometimes (and not in a funny slapstick way). Did love Tiswas though - but that was largey due to a strong animal attraction to Sally James!
 
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Questions

Habitual User
Oct 18, 2006
24,896
Worthing
I think the issue is that Lenny Henry is about as funny as herpes, or even Mrs Brown's Boys. Even back in the day, being black and shouting wasn't great comedy.
Look at him now though; he has morphed into an absolutely outstanding serious actor. Shakespeare plays and quality drama - he is usually excellent. Why oh why wasn't he acting back then instead of doing his shit "comedy"?
I think the issue is that Lenny Henry is about as funny as herpes, or even Mrs Brown's Boys. Even back in the day, being black and shouting wasn't great comedy.

Look at him now though; he has morphed into an absolutely outstanding serious actor. Shakespeare plays and quality drama - he is usually excellent. Why oh why wasn't he acting back then instead of doing his shit "comedy"?
I think herpes used to be funny…. Like AIDS. I joked about it back in the day.
I’ve never seen him play it straight though.
 






BadFish

Huge Member
Oct 19, 2003
17,132
He was funny until I hit my mid to late teens. I do remember being in fits of laughter around 12/13 at the Lenny Henry show but a little maturity soon saw that off.
 


Stato

Well-known member
Dec 21, 2011
6,590
Nothing wrong with Len as a performer. He has natural warmth, was great in Tiswas, was always dangerously fun on live TV and has been funny when in good stuff (and sometimes had the charisma to carry stuff that wasn't so good). He wasn't blessed with the best writers for his sketch shows. Most who wrote that series were mainstream light entertainment writers who ended up doing stuff like 'My Family'.

He was decent when he picked up on the influence of his alternative peers, moved away from the punchline driven and tried to make things more personal to his own life and background, but he was already prime time when he tried to make this move and was always being pulled back to the family entertainment stuff. He was on telly at 16, he grew up in public and didn't get to learn his craft as a writer out of the limelight.
 




BadFish

Huge Member
Oct 19, 2003
17,132
Nothing wrong with Len as a performer. He has natural warmth, was great in Tiswas, was always dangerously fun on live TV and has been funny when in good stuff (and sometimes had the charisma to carry stuff that wasn't so good). He wasn't blessed with the best writers for his sketch shows. Most who wrote that series were mainstream light entertainment writers who ended up doing stuff like 'My Family'.

He was decent when he picked up on the influence of his alternative peers, moved away from the punchline driven and tried to make things more personal to his own life and background, but he was already prime time when he tried to make this move and was always being pulled back to the family entertainment stuff. He was on telly at 16, he grew up in public and didn't get to learn his craft as a writer out of the limelight.
Yes, the stand up stuff about his family like is pretty funny

'Crucial'
 


The Clamp

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jan 11, 2016
24,544
West is BEST
I never found him particularly funny but I gather he’s rather a good stage actor these days. Although I haven’t seen him in anything so who knows?

It’s more what he stood for isn’t it? A black man on Prime Time telly. While some people were still rolling in the aisles to racist morons like Davidson and Manning.

And it wasn’t just the times. Nobody I knew found racist humour funny in the 70’s and 80’s.
 
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jcdenton08

Enemy of the People
NSC Patron
Oct 17, 2008
10,722
I think the issue is that Lenny Henry is about as funny as herpes, or even Mrs Brown's Boys. Even back in the day, being black and shouting wasn't great comedy.

Look at him now though; he has morphed into an absolutely outstanding serious actor. Shakespeare plays and quality drama - he is usually excellent. Why oh why wasn't he acting back then instead of doing his shit "comedy"?
I saw his Othello and was deeply unimpressed, even for a Northern Broadsides production. His diction was shocking, regardless of the exaggerated native accent. (Broadsides productions are non-traditional in style, which is fine if done well, and actors use their natural accents). I also thought he was appalling in The Rings of Power, with his strange Irish accent and, again, scenery chewing performance.

He’s a big ham when he acts - which is fine - but I’ve not actually seen him act well in any straight drama personally. I seem to remember liking “Chef” and Comic Relief when I was young though.

I certainly wouldn’t call him an “absolutely outstanding serious actor”. That calls to mind the likes of Derek Jacobi, Daniel Day-Lewis, Kevin Spacey, Jack Nicholson and actors of their status and phenomenal catalogue of acting credits behind them.

He isn’t offensively bad at acting, but he’s the worst Othello I’ve seen, and was the worst thing in the The Rings of Power - neither of which had any extraordinarily strong acting to compete against.
 


BadFish

Huge Member
Oct 19, 2003
17,132
I never found him particularly funny but I gather he’s rather a good stage actor these days. Although I haven’t seen him in anything so who knows?

It’s more what he stood for isn’t it? A black man on Prime Time telly. While some people were still rolling in the aisles to racist morons like Davidson and Manning.

And it wasn’t just the times. Nobody I knew found racist humour funny in the 70’s and 80’s.
I always wonder about the 70s and 80s thing. I was always much more into the 'alternative' comedy thing. My age also meant that this was in full swing before I really had much concept of what they were the alternative to. I also came from good lefty guardian reading woke stock so wouldn't have been exposed to much of it.

It seems to me that most young people had moved on from the racism etc for most of the 80s.

One mate of mine is always banging on about the unpc good old days when you could tell proper jokes. Usually with a nod to Rik Mayall who was absolutely rallying against the punching down racism of the comedians they were the alternatives to. Watching a old do about the alternates recently made me wonder if they were the first PC/Woke comedians. If history saw this differently, perhaps they would be the god father's of woke.

Another aspect of the doco was a discussion a out how much harder alternative comedy was than the mother in law merchants. Well until every other joke was about Margret Thatcher 🤣.
 




DavidinSouthampton

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jan 3, 2012
16,601
Fair enough in that case. Comedy is always going to fall flat on its face sometimes (and not in a funny slapstick way). Did love Tiswas though - but that was largey due to a strong animal attraction to Sally James!
But he was good on Tiswas too!
 




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