Worms from the Wise
Sunday, September 07, 2008
My interview with Bill Bailey, in preparation for the Australian leg of his Tinselworm tour. We covered a lot of ground, but I failed to ask about the current showâs title or content, and how they relate. I read elsewhere Baileyâs response regarding the title, that a âtinselwormâ was a cheap type of silkworm â which hasnât revealed much more about the show than my interview does. But then, Bill Bailey isnât the sort of comedian you go to see after finding out what his topics are this time round. You go to see him because he is Bill Bailey and he will be funny, with a lot of brilliant musical material, to boot!
This is the second time Iâve had a long chat with Bill Bailey. The first time was on the eve of the first ever Sydney Comedy Festival, in 1998. This was a time when both the Comedy Store and the Harold Park Hotel â later briefly known as the Comedy Hotel, before being sold to finance the Comedy Cellar and the inaugural Sydney Comedy Festival - were two massive and important venues for the development of local comedy. Ten years later, neither venue currently exists. Oh, but in a good year, Sydney has two comedy festivals: the Big Laugh and Cracker. Pity they have to compete with each other⦠None of this has anything to do with Bill Baileyâs tour, howeverâ¦.
That first time weâd chatted, all the interviews prior to mine ran over time, and I was being forced to keep it short â so I snuck Bill into a pub in order to talk for as long as possible without getting interrupted. This time, I told Bill up front that I wanted to cover a lot of ground â the main thrust would be for GQ â for the âWords for the Wiseâ back page section â but I was also going to get half a page in FilmInk and I wanted ask a bunch of âcomics on comedyâ questions, as usual. Bill told me that he was home from work and had nothing else to do. I insisted that he tell me when it was time for last question. An hour later, I wound myself up. All in all, a good job, I thought, until the following day, when the publicist informed me that Iâd prevented the Daily Telegraph from securing their interview. Oops. Sorry. Iâll try to be less selfish when I speak to Bill again in 2018.
What was brilliant this time around was that, when I reminded Bill of the last interview, in the pub, interrupted mid-explanation on the differences between beers in England, he was able, ten years later, to pick up the interview where he left off. I remember being impressed when Wil Anderson was able to do callbacks to earlier gigs at the Falls Festival one year. Callbacks across separate gigs over four nights is pretty cool. But Bill Bailey has called back a decade. Thatâs a pretty high bar for any other comedian to come and jump.
Dom Romeo: Hi Bill, itâs Dom Romeo here. How are you?
BILL BAILEY: Iâm very well, thanks.
Dom Romeo: You may not remember this, but nearly a decade ago I spoke to you in Sydney. I smuggled you into a pub so that we wouldnât get interrupted before time. Do you remember that interview?
BILL BAILEY: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Dom Romeo: We were interrupted while you were in the middle of explaining the differences between beer in England â youâd gotten to the point where âreal aleâ was something that you have with a ploughmanâs lunch â which consists of cheese, pickles and bigotry.
BILL BAILEY: And a sense of rural despair!
Dom Romeo: And a sense of rural despair, of course. So I think we should just pick it up from there, more-or-less.
BILL BAILEY: Well, nothing much has changed in the ploughmanâs lunch. Itâs still there, but itâs probably on a bill of fare with a bit of couscous, and some Thai sea bass. Maybe our palette has moved on a little bit and the standard bill of fare in a pub is a little bit more varied, but the ploughmanâs lunch is still going strong and rural despair has only increased. And a general sense of agricultural malaise is probably worse than itâs ever been. So, yeah, things are okay!
Dom Romeo: So a decade on, we have more sophisticated palates. What has changed comedically?
BILL BAILEY: Comedically? I think that televised comedy has certainly changed in that time inasmuch as that naturalistic performances are the norm now and the kind of subject matter is very much about embarrassment and a sense of cringe-making and âI canât bear to look at this⦠Oh god, what are they doing nowâ¦? Oh, Jesus!â¦â Itâs actually just a mirror to what we feel about our own society. Thatâs what it is. Very much a self-reflexive, very personal comedy thatâs the norm now.
Dom Romeo: How does that work with what you do? A decade ago, you had a lot of musical parody in your show. How has the change in televised comedy affected you as a live comedian?
BILL BAILEY: I think that the two have actually diverged quite a lot. Thereâs an appetite for performance of live comedy that has increased hugely in the last ten years, because the TV stuff is very different. The TV stuff is quite small and itâs quite studied. Thereâs no audience laughter. Itâs quite theatrical. Itâs moved away from what stand-up is. Iâve noticed the numbers of live comedy audiences have gone up. More people want to go see it and itâs taken on the role that used to be filled by musical audiences and festival-going crowds â people who want a different kind of performance. They like to see comedy in a different environment.
Itâs quite claustrophobic, the comedy that you see on TV. Itâs become very self-reflexive and very dark, and certainly there are elements of that in stand-up, but itâs become almost a sort of celebration, live comedy. And people like to see performance â they like the fact that my kind of stuff and other peopleâs stuff is almost a hybrid of a lot of different strands of comedy â a lot of music and parody and personal recollection and anecdote and observation â all that stuff you pick up on the way when youâre learning a trade, and itâs all fed into this performance which is live and spontaneous and happening right there, and itâs â hopefully â always a joyful occasion. You hope people are going to laugh.
That element of it is the key â people want a sense of community when they go out. TV is very much people sitting watching it at home, or watching it on YouTube, or watching it on the Internet, or sharing files at home⦠People not going out, people staying in and having their own personal connection with TV and the programs that they like and sharing them around. The live stuff is a different kind of need â people wanting to be part of something: a larger crowd, be it a sporting event, a rock gig, or in this case, a comedy gig.
Dom Romeo: So hit comedies are the acute studies of humanity at its most discomforting â versus a room full of people sharing the experience.
BILL BAILEY: Itâs almost as though the two can co-exist quite happily, but theyâre very different â they feed on different parts of peopleâs comedy appetite.
Dom Romeo: Youâve mentioned in the past â and youâve done comedy about â coming from the West Country. But you donât seem to have a West Country accent. Why is that?
BILL BAILEY: Well the thing is that â I suppose â my parents didnât really have the West Country accent. My father was from the north of Britain, so he had a slight northern twang to his accent, and my mother was Welsh, so she spoke with a slight welsh accent. So I suppose, really, it was so hard to do; Iâd be really hard-pressed to do a combination of Welsh/northern/West Country.
I was trying to adopt a very simple, very straightforward non-inflected accent that would do where ever I went â particularly when I went to London. When I left school, I went and lived in London and I was at college there for a bit and people make assumptions as soon as you open your mouth in Britain. Weâre still riddled with class. And riddled with preconception. You open your mouth and you talk with a certain accent, people immediately â almost within the first sentence â theyâve already pegged you for background, social standing, tried to figure out how much money youâve got, what kind of place you live inâ¦
All these things come out in the accent, and it used to really bug me. And so I suppose I tried not to have an accent when I first went up to London. Inevitably, I did. Thereâs no way around it. You think you donât; you think youâre talking without any accent. But people recognise various lilts and phrases. So I thought I was talking like this: âHello, Iâm from the West Country and itâs an awful pleasure to be here in London,â whereas what I sounded like was ââEllo mate, alroight?â like some blithering yokel. I resented that. I resented that preconception. I resented people thinking, âyouâre some idiot yokel from the west countryâ. So I kind of tried on the idea of not having an accent and people have no preconception then. People have to take you as you are. Itâs a simple thing, but if you donât have an accent, people canât quite figure you out.
Dom Romeo: Itâs true. Traditionally, English comedians came from Liverpool because they were naturally funny, but to get work in London, had to lose the Liverpudlian accent. Your choice to âloseâ the accent is significant.
BILL BAILEY: Yeah. Now, of course, regionalism is encouraged and celebrated. People are encouraged to keep their accents and celebrate where they come from. For me, it was about the whole package â what I looked like; my appearance as well. If you look like a hippie, people assume youâre going to be like this, or they assume youâre gonna be like that. Most of the time, itâs not that. And I suppose thereâs a bit of devilment, where I quite like that. I quite like people thinking itâs going to be one thing when itâs going to be something else. Already youâve got a bit of an angle.
Dom Romeo: Isnât a lot of comedy and show business like that, though? The professional misdirection. You think itâs going to be happening here, but itâs actually happening there, and part of the joke turns on the fact that it takes you by surprise.
BILL BAILEY: Well, for me, yeah, I think so. I quite like that. I quite like to be surprised by someone. Youâve worked out who this person is and what theyâre gonna talk about â okay, this kind of thing⦠this is why, yeah, yeah, yeah, I see where weâre going with this â and then itâll be somewhere different. Itâll be taken in another direction. or itâll be confounding, or itâll be surprising or enchanting⦠That I like. Itâs a healthy exchange that youâve had. Generally, in life, itâs a good thing: not to get drawn into pegging people, or things, or ways of thinking; not getting into a rut about things.
A great compliment was paid to me in a very downbeat, off-hand, almost-not-a -compliment-at-all way, in Los Angeles. I was doing a show there, and this head of a studio came to a show. He came backstage afterwards with his entourage and he couldnât think of any sort of compliment like a normal person would say, like âwell doneâ or âI enjoyed itâ â that wasnât in his vocabulary. He said, âI stayed to the endâ. That was the greatest compliment he could think up. Heâd obviously been trying to think: âWhat am I gonna say to this guy? âI liked it?â No. âI loved it?â No. âI thought it was funnyâ¦?â No, I know: âI stayed to the end!ââ And that was it. âI stayed to the end,â he said, âbecause every time I thought it was going one way, you went another way.â
And so an hour and twenty minutes went by. Maybe this guy watched the first five minutes going, âYeah, yeah, yeah⦠Okay, your girlfriend, something happened, you came out, she told you, you spun it round, blah blah blah blah blah⦠Right, letâs goâ¦â It took him an hour and twenty-five minutes and he just couldnât figure me out. âI canât believe it, Iâm still here!â Thatâs what Iâm aiming at.
Dom Romeo: That is a compliment in the end, though, from that sort of guy.
BILL BAILEY: Yeah, I suppose. I take it wherever I can get it.
Dom Romeo: You take the mickey out of a lot of music and you do it very well. It's said that at the heart of every parody is a kernel of tribute. So considering Chris de Burgh and Kraftwerk just for a moment â is there a part of you that likes these people that you claim to dislike?
BILL BAILEY: Well, certainly, itâs the truth of Kraftwerk. I saw a live show. It was terrific. It was a brilliant kind of weird art installation-like gig. It was unlike any other gig youâve ever seen. Four guys who looked like bank managers, operating machinery, were hardly moving for two hours, and people would go nuts. Of course, you never see that â itâs so different and itâs so studied and it seems so incredibly modern and futuristic, the fact that theyâre not moving or seeming to enjoy it in any way or imparting any emotion into it at all. In two hours, they just operated machinery. Who knows what they were doing? Was it a tape? Were they checking their emails? No-one knows. At the end they were just, âthank you!â and that was it. Fantastic.
I was kind of getting slightly hysterical watching them. A kind of hilarity washed over everyone because you couldnât figure out whether they knew how funny it was, or whether they didnât know how funny it was, or thought they were really taking themselves seriously, or they were sending themselves up⦠There were all sorts of layers going on and you couldnât figure out⦠whichever one you picked was great. They know theyâre in on it⦠theyâre playing it⦠they donât know theyâre in on it⦠Ah! Iâve got a big glob of affection for them. Iâve been a fan of their stuff over the years.
I donât know about Chris De Burgh. Itâs very hard for me to say. That is a serious accusation saying that I secretly like him. I donât know if I can go that far. Thatâd be too far. Thatâs insane. Iâd be rambling or raging, like some lunatic.
Dom Romeo: Of course. I apologise for that one. Take a step back then â consider other musical entities youâve made fun of like Peter Gabriel and Genesis.
BILL BAILEY: Yes, okay.
Dom Romeo: A bit of admiration or none whatsoever?
BILL BAILEY: A bit. I do have a prog rock sensibility that I caught the tail end of in my early teens. That was my first experience of big rock gigs: people in cloaks and make-up and people playing trilogies with masses of keyboards with gongs and smoke and dry ice. Theyâre very powerful images, steeled into my teenage brain. Better get âem out. I was also blown away by punk, when I was older.
But you have to get to the nub of what it is that youâre making fun of, and in order for it to work, you have to really understand it and know what it is. Same with de Burgh: youâd have to know the kind of chords he would play and the turns of phrases and the mentality behind it. I think they become more affectionate tributes, in a way, like the Billy Bragg one and the Bryan Adams one. In the new show Iâve got a modern folk song and a tribute to emo â you know, the kind of overwrought sort of black fringed, goth, hand-ringing: âWhy me? Everythingâs gone wrong.â
Dom Romeo: So the danger is there: for you to make fun of it as well as you do, you have to know it very well, and itâs only a small step then â you might slip over and start to like aspects of it.
BILL BAILEY: Very true. Itâs a risk, thereâs no doubt about it. You have to be very, very disciplined. If you find yourself downloading the whole album of Evanescence âfor referenceâ â âOh yeah, thatâs âfor referenceâ, is it, Billâ¦?â â then you have to get a grip on yourself. And if you wear black too often⦠You need someone keeping an eye on you, some sort of âparody buddyâ watching you, checking your moves.
Dom Romeo: Earlier on you used to wear black, way before emo. But it had a different meaning then â when you had the Bastard Bunny t-shirt⦠you did come from a purely musical background. How did you make the transition?
BILL BAILEY: I was in this band in the West Country. We were gigging around the area in little clubs and pubs. These guys I was in the band with, they were wanting to take it more seriously. I was just a young kid, really. I was in my teens and I didnât want to take it too seriously; I was only really in it for a laugh. And then I realised that these guys really, really wanted this thing to work. It was like a big deal for them. One of them was a hairdresser and another one worked in a garage and the band was a big thing.
I just wanted to have a laugh â turn up for a gig in a pub somewhere and then fall asleep on the pool table â which is what I did. The seriousness of the muso element was really starting to bug me â people arguing about who wrote what riff in what song. I thought, âoh god, this isnât what I wanted to join a band for â arguing over chordsâ. So I started doodling around with a mate. One night we did a comedy sketch and it was so liberating. I realised that you get locked into a kind of a routine in a band, if youâre not careful. It was like, âyou are the keyboard player, this is what you doâ. It was too limiting as a form of expression. I remember thinking, âIs this what I'm gonna do? Dance around behind a keyboard to try and make it look interesting, and not say anything?â I wasn't the singer⦠I realised quite luckily, very early on, Iâd get bored and frustrated just doing that, and chucked it in very early. I made a conscious decision and I very clearly remember it. I was really young, 19 or 20, and I remember thinking, âDo I really want to struggle on with a band for years and years and years, or should I try my own thing?â It was very much a gut instinct that I had, and it turned out to be right. Although I would have loved to be the keyboard player in Talking Heads, I must admit.
Dom Romeo: Is there a form of music so base and so beneath you, so abhorrent to you, that you wouldnât even download a version in order to send it up?
BILL BAILEY: Yeah, certain kidsâ TV themes. Most music I can listen to, I can absorb and go, âyep, I can see what you're doing there but itâs not for meâ. But if I hear âBarney the Dinosaurâ, or any one of them, itâs like nails down a blackboard. I suppose itâs because I've got a four-year-old and heard them that many times now that I start to get a Herbert Lom-style twitch when I hear them. Just the eye â like when he says, âClouseau? Clouseau? Heâs here?!â
Dom Romeo: What about in comedy? Is there anything that makes you feel the same way?
BILL BAILEY: Itâs probably an occupational hazard of all comics. Itâs hard to enjoy it as a punter because itâs a bit of a busmanâs holiday: âI like the structure of that; nice joke; ooh, thatâs a nice joke, wish Iâd thought of thatâ¦â If you start to analyse it, rather than just enjoy it, it stops being fun. Thatâs why Iâve always enjoyed American comics â theyâre coming from a different cultural background, you can switch off that analysing button a little bit and enjoy it as part of the audience because of the âothernessâ⦠the âdifferentnessâ. Can you say that? The âdifferenceâ⦠The âothernessâ of it.
But I suppose any comedy thatâs just old retreads that Iâve heard for years that isnât really moving it on at all, or the lack of ambition of it all â the leaden âhere comes the punchline, clip clopping over the hill like a big, shy horse. Here it comes, clip, clopping, BONG!â Thatâs whatâs depressing. You think, âbut I heard this joke when I was 12â¦â. Thatâs what bugs me, I suppose.
When I hear jokes I grew up with, I think, âhas someone gone over everyone with a neuraliser?â Maybe theyâve forgotten whole swathes of their childhood. Perhaps itâs endearing to be reminded of jokes. They like familiarity and something they can relate to. You canât deny that and itâs no less valid if people are laughing â thatâs the ultimate stamp of approval.
And the trouble is, naturally, I want to move it on and reflect more about where I am. You get older and think about things in a different way than you thought about them twenty years ago, and there are other things that you want to talk about and you want to keep things fresh so that youâre not getting bored with it, and you want to stay interested and stay challenged by it and at the same time youâre thinking about the audienceâ¦
âAvoidance of clichesâ is the mantra I try to adhere to. You think of a joke, you think,âHas this been done before? Who might have done it? Is it new? have I heard it before?â You think âMaybe not,â so you move it along and try to mould subject matter into something thatâs succinct or in a funny way or subject matter that isnât really spoken about. Stuff like that is what keeps me going.
Dom Romeo: Do you consciously think of that when youâre coming up with material, or do you just find that if it makes you laugh, then itâs pretty much safe that itâs going to make your audience laugh? I mean, do you ever look at your material and think, âgee, all Iâm really doing here is âthe difference between cats and dogsââ?
BILL BAILEY: Am I now just doing the similarities? Thatâs the way! Let me just find the commonalities between all thingsâ¦
Itâs really just whatâs going through your head at the time â whatâs bothering you or whatâs going through your head, and Iâm hoping and trusting that my audience will be going with me on that. Theyâll be the ones Iâve grown up with over the years, and theyâll know that this is the kind of subject matter that theyâll be talking about. You have to trust a little bit and take a risk, thatâs the real trick of it.
If youâre not enjoying it, the audience will cop onto that pretty quickly. Itâs in the eyes â if theres nothing in the eyes [they know youâre over it].
Dom Romeo: So what is the secret to longevity in comedy?
BILL BAILEY: I think you have to really want to do it. Youâve got to have the will, the appetite for it. Certainly with stand-up, you do. Because it only gets harder. It gets harder and harder as the years go on. Expectation gets higher, sitting down to write and focus on what is essentially a reckless, foolhardy occupation⦠your time gets squeezed.
There are other things to think about. Thereâs a family and responsibilities and reflection and all kinds of other things that crowd in the time you used to spend â the months youâd luxuriate in the time that there was to fashion an act and hone it to this beautiful, polished gem that could keep you going for a few years, and then youâd fashion another one, to be a show. The timeâs just not there anymore. You kind of have to be very focused on it and know what you want to get out of it, but be sure that thatâs what you want to do. Thatâs the key.
And donât get distracted. If you really want to keep doing comedy, you have to keep working at it. You canât let it go for a second. You donât want to get distracted doing too much for TV or other things.
All of thatâs fine, itâs all part and parcel of it. If youâre a comic and if youâre reasonably successful, TV offers come battering through the door and you canât stop them. Eventually you give in and you say, âalright, Iâll do some of thisâ and âthatâs goodâ or âthat might be goodâ. Undoubtedly, it can be a blessed relief after being on tour for years and years, working a solitary profession. Suddenly youâre on a team of people and itâs like turning up for work. You can kid on that youâve actually got a job, you know: âI check in and get a special pass and then I go to my dressing room and people bring me pudding. Yeah, I get pudding, and thereâs free fruit I can take â itâs free, have that â and there are biscuits and little sandwiches and a microphone and lots of lightsâ¦â Itâs like having a holiday from your life.
It never felt real to me. I felt that stand-up was the real job; itâs the real graft. Thatâs you! Your thoughts. Your life processed into your â your reputation, whatever you want to call it. It's mentally stable as well. Donât get carried away with it. That's the other thing.
Dom Romeo: Right. Given that, what do you do to relax? How do you maintain your mental stability? How you know when itâs time to take a step back from something?
BILL BAILEY: Itâs good having a family. I think thatâs great. I have a wife and a child and great friends and we have a great life. We travel a lot and go to great places. I think you have to go and get out of your little world youâre in. It can get a bit too claustrophobic sometimes. You have to get out of it and do something else â something thatâs totally different from writing comedy. Something simple, physical⦠rafting or climbing⦠you find a lot of comics are into real âadrenalineâ kind of things. You need to get a hit from somewhere.
Dom Romeo: So what do you do?
BILL BAILEY: What we do is we go trekking in the jungle and white-water rafting and volcano climbing. That tends to knock the shit out of your head.
Dom Romeo: Are you serious? Is that really what you do to relax?
BILL BAILEY: Yeah.
Dom Romeo: If thatâs the case, that you need a burst of adrenaline from those kinds of activities before you can relax, what sort of things actually scare you? What do you fear most?
BILL BAILEY: Losing my wits. Literally and figuratively. Not being able to be funny and actually starting to lose my mental facility terrifies me.
Dom Romeo: What or who inspires you most?
BILL BAILEY: Iâm a bit of magpie â I pick up different bits of inspiration from different sources, sometimes from places I wouldn't imagine I would. From political leaders or writers and/or other comics, or even sometimes sporting figures who go through great strife and find some sort of mental strength to get them through it. And even people I know who have actually had to do that. Your friends and family who have gone through some strife and shown some sort of tenacity and not given up, who make you think, âgod, thatâs what I want to be likeâ. I don't know how that appliesâ¦
Anything like that I draw strength from because sometimes you do think about giving up â youâve had a bad gig or your canât think of anything new â and you think of someone whoâs been in that situation in their own walk of life, and that gives you a bit of a sense of tremendous achievement that people have gone through.
Dom Romeo: When you have those moments of doubt, who do you think of? Is it a close friend who has been through those things, or is it a hero from history?
BILL BAILEY: You just think about some footballer who had an injury and was out for half a season and then he gets his chance in a game and itâs a big cup game, and suddenly heâs taking a penalty that could mean the difference between them being relegated or promoted. Thereâs a great honesty about sport where you can see the emotion. Itâs right there on the face. Sometimes I vicariously enjoy that, that twirl of acting out and thinking through the mental process of that.
Dom Romeo: Are you a follower of sport? Do you barrack for a football team?
BILL BAILEY: Not really, no. I enjoy it in a more general sense of what it does, how it can elevate people. I love the fact that thereâs a sense of community about people going to see sport and how it draws people together. Thereâs a tremendous sense of belonging that people crave. As humans, we need that. We need some sort of spiritual catharsis that sport can give us.
Dom Romeo: But if you donât actually engage in that activity, what do you do for that spiritual catharsis, that sense of community, when you feel the need? [Duh! He does stand-up comedy! - Autocritic]
BILL BAILEY: I suppose huge events â huge, mass gatherings of people. You can draw on that. It could be a sporting event or a big gig⦠I suppose the big anti-war march in London is a good example. There was an incredible sense of shared feeling. That, I find, is inspiring. You get out there and see what people can achieve and you feel part of it. You think, this is great! There is hope! You can effect change! You feel helpless as an individual â what can you do? But thousands of people, millions, together â you feel empowered by it. You feel part of something. I always feel that thatâs a very primal, human need. Weâre very community-based animals, we like to be in a group. Modern life prevents that.
Dom Romeo: Can we talk about your television and film career? When you were first here ten years ago, you had just made a television breakthrough with the previous yearâs Is It Bill Bailey? which involved sketch and stand-up. Weâve never seen it out here. Is there any chance itâll be released on DVD?
BILL BAILEY: We were just thinking about that fairly recently. The director of that was Edgar Wright, whoâs gone on to direct a few films like Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz. And Simon Pegg was in it, whoâs gone on to do these films. I was talking to Edgar when we were doing Hot Fuzz and he said heâd like to get everyone together to do cast interviews and gather together deleted scenes and really spend a bit of time on it⦠making it into a proper thing, rather than just banging it out as just another BBC bit of merchandise. So thatâs hopefully what weâll do.
Dom Romeo: Iâm really glad to hear that, and now youâve also put everything into perspective, including the Simon Pegg relationship which I thought had begun with Spaced.
BILL BAILEY: Simon and Edgar and Jessica [Hynes, nee Stevenson] who wrote that thing, thought up this character and wrote it with me in mind â this kind of comic book purveyor. Itâs great when somethingâs written for you. You just have to turn up and speak.
Dom Romeo: How much is that character like you in real life? Are you into comic books? I know youâre into Bastard Bunny to some extent.
BILL BAILEY: Yes, itâs one of those things that you think, âoh no, that would be too much of a cliché if thatâs what I was likeâ, and then you think, âno, Iâll resist thatâ¦â and then you realise, âno, actually, I have bought some comics and I am quite into itâ. And then people send me this stuff. I get sent all these kinds of graphic novels and stuff, and I guess I love it, really. But Iâm trying not to become these characters.
Dom Romeo: So youâre not at all like Manny from Black Books?
BILL BAILEY: Oh, no.
Dom Romeo: I think I knew that. But you must have liked the role, seeing as you were there for three seasons and each season was better than the previous one.
BILL BAILEY: Well I think it was just one of those rare moments where there was a great chemistry between the actors and there was a very good relationship with the production team. Everyone had a very sympathetic and very supportive climate going into it. It was very much a case of the broadcasters letting the production team get on with it. There was no meddling, there was no interference from broadcasting. âYou do it your way.â You were encouraged to be as individual about it. And from what Iâve experienced from television over the years, thatâs quite rare. It was a very happy time.
The rehearsal period was great fun. A lot of things happened in the rehearsals that then ended up in the show. It had quite a rough and loose feel about it. It was never quite set in stone; it wasnât rehearsed into the ground. We would rehearse it up to the shoot, then shoot it in front of a live audience and then something would go wrong so then weâd just improvise a scene then something else would go wrong with that scene â someone would put a coffee cup down in the wrong place â so weâd improvise another scene. Thereâd be four different versions. It was a very fertile environment to work in and it was great fun working with Dylan [Moran] and Tamsin [Greig].
Dom Romeo: You also appeared in Wild West, a strange little comedy vehicle for Dawn French which also featured Catherine Tate before we knew her here. It was set in the West Country, so itâs right up your alley. How was it to be a part of that?
BILL BAILEY: That was a project that Dawn French had been thinking about for a long time. It was very edgy and again very personal to her and quite different â a departure from what sheâd done before. Quite dark and slightly surreal â it was actually a lesbian couple living in this sort of rural idyll. Thatâs a classic case of where there was a bit of meddling â the BBC getting involved and the focus groups having a go at it â âno, no, no, donât do it like that, do it like thisâ¦â One of them had boyfriend and it was all a bit wacky â it didnât have the same clarity of what the thing was gonna be.
It was great fun to do it because obviously, we were filming in Cornwall, which is beautiful. And I had to try and speak with a Cornish accent, which is always a challenge.
Dom Romeo: You were in Hot Fuzz, on one level a send-up of The Wicker Man. What was it like working with Simon Pegg and Edgar Wright again, on that? Fun, Iâm sureâ¦
BILL BAILEY: Oh yes. What larks! It was terrific fun and it was a double-wigger for me, which is always a joy. Two wigs. ââWigsâ Baileyâ, I was known as. And theyâre great guys. Edgar is such a film buff. He knows so much about films and scenes and lines from films. You know that every scene he does, heâs thought about a hundred different ways â how he can reference some other film into it. And that, I think, particularly for myself and Simon who have absorbed so much popular culture into stand-up, itâs such a rich source of material, youâre almost speaking the same language as him.
Dom Romeo: Bill, I want to give you back to your family and your life â but I have one last topic to cover. Do you know what a âskulletâ is?
BILL BAILEY: I do, yes. I have knowledge of that and Iâve seen it mentioned with my name attached to it. I am delighted that somehow tonsorial laziness has actually now got a name. Itâs actually been enshrined as a kind of a hairstyle. I didnât even know it was a âstyleâ, but now apparently it is. So Iâm delighted.
Dom Romeo: Well, there are a whole lot of us, when our hair starts to go, we now have something to aspire to.
BILL BAILEY: Absolutely. Itâs no longer just a bloke going a bit bald with his hair long at the back⦠No, itâs a âskulletâ! Itâs perfect. And also itâs an instruction to people to drink.
Dom Romeo: Iâll drink to that!
Bill Bailey, thank you so much for your time. I look forward to seeing you live again.
BILL BAILEY: Youâre welcome. See you then.
For more details of the Australian leg of the Tinselworm tour, almost totally sold out before it begins, check out the website of Adrian Bohm Presents.