Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Entertainment
Brian Logan

Sam Nicoresti: Baby Doomer review – an ebullient hour with a sky-high joke count

Sam Nicoresti, comedian
Choice images … Sam Nicoresti. Photograph: Talie Rose Eigeland

‘Sir, are you aware those are women’s clothes?” Even the most basic interactions can be fraught when you’re transgender, and Sam Nicoresti builds their show around one such happening. Misgendered by a shop assistant, we find Sam in a department store changing room, squeezing into a dress from which they’re then unable to extricate themselves. How to escape this with some shred of dignity intact? It’s a big-hitting and farcical standup sketch, delivered with such self-deprecating joyfulness by Nicoresti that you almost forget the sensitivity of its subject matter.

That’s of a piece with the rest of Baby Doomer, a set that addresses with grace and buoyant humour our host’s wrestle with their gender and mental health. No tub-thumping here, just a high-joke-count hour from an act still learning how to be a woman (and quick to caricature how imperfectly they’re doing so) but cocky about their credentials as trans. It’s a step forward, and towards a more mainstream brand of standup, too, after Cancel Anti Wokeflake Snow Culture, the quirky multimedia offering that established Nicoresti three years ago.

The show takes that pressure-cooker changing room experience as a prompt to explore Nicoresti’s life in a Britain not always accommodating to a natal male walking down the street in a skirt suit. To whom might they look for a role model? Nicoresti proposes Sméagol/Gollum, greatly to the amusement of fellow nerds in the front row. Are they aunt Sam to their nephew, or uncle Sam? Should marriage be preferred to a polycule, or would it merely endorse the cis-normative status quo?

As if to emphasise Nicoresti’s repositioning as a standup who wouldn’t look out of place on Live at the Apollo, there’s a home-banker routine about having sperm frozen (mirroring Tim Key’s and Ian Smith’s set pieces elsewhere in town), and another about receiving a walking tour-style induction at the local gym – “as if I’m the king”, says Nicoresti, in a choice image. It’s quite the trick Nicoresti pulls off here, never soft-soaping the challenges of life as a trans woman while making of it an ebullient hour of comedy.

• At Pleasance Courtyard, Edinburgh, until 24 August

• All our Edinburgh festival reviews

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.