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After
a premier at the Edinburgh Festival, Ross is taking his Unrealtime
show on the road off the back of appearances on TV and especially
Radio 4 where his Ross Noble Goes Global series has been one the
network's biggest recent comedy hits.
He's been performing since he was smuggled into his local comedy
club at the age of 15. Ross
admitted: "I was a bit of a weird kid - I'd bring in giant
sponge heads into school. Some people would find it really funny,
and others just thought I was an idiot."
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Ross
Noble |
Since
then he hasn't looked back, seeing his exciting and spontaneous
humour win him huge accolade in the comedy world - including a Time
Out Award for best stand-up.
"My
parents wanted me to be a chimney sweep - we didn't even have a
chimney, the middle class equivalent was licking the radiators or
descaling the kettle ... with my hair."
This
ability to turn life round and see the funny side in just about
anything has got him into trouble: "It's easy to make people
laugh when they're expecting it, it's when they're not expecting
it when you have problems!
"I was in a fancy restaurant - I'm normally mistrustful of
restaurants without numbers beside the menu, and this one didn't
even have the prices. Someone said have the lobster so I though,
yeah, why not, I've never had lobster before.
"There is this thing where if you break the end of it, you
can control the pincer independently. So I put this lobster up my
sleeve so I had a pincer hand ... I thought it was really funny,
but I looked round and only one person was laughing, everyone else
is thinking, 'he's become a lobster boy'.
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Ross'
Unrealtime tour |
My
mother always said there's a time and a place but I've never been
very good at telling the time or knowing where I am!"
Ross' stand-up show is two hours of his side-on look at everyday
events - constantly evolving with what's going on in his head and
in the world: "No matter how you're feeling, you get an injection
of adrenaline just before you go on stage.
"I saw a family who had broken down on the side of the motorway
the other day and they had moved their toddler in his pushchair
up onto the bank out of harms way, but all I could think of is that
they were on a grandstand on a day out, watching the cars on a filthy
layby. I started laughing and I was at it for about an hour before
I had to pull over, I was laughing so much!
"You've got to make sure you're not one of these people who
starts laughing at things in the street - otherwise someone will
give you a smack in the mouth cos they think you're laughing at
them!"
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