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LESS IS MORE Sketch team Delete the Banjax was the word-of- mouth hit of 2009. Jay Richardson finds a quartet with a very different set of worries this August

‘W e came up with a bit of a reputation and it just went off!’ recalls Sam Champion, in a pub similar to the Free Fringe Royal Mile watering hole where Delete the Banjax established themselves last year. ‘We loved doing the Free Fringe and agreed with everything about it. It was fun but really cramped with four of us. So this year we’ve got more space, we can use lights, we can use tech, we can really go to town. There’s a lot more pressure too, definitely.’ Dan Cook grimaces: ‘People will be coming to see us with their arms crossed, muttering, “Go on then, apparently you’re well good, let’s have a look. Boooolshit!”’

Amidst the current crop of sketch troupes, Banjax stand out for being ‘more chaotic than most’, according to Cook. Champion prefers the description ‘ramshackle’, while Caroline May-Jones is keen to stress that theirs is an ‘organised chaos’. Gareth Cooper adds: ‘I think people find it difficult to know if we’re performing a sketch or improvising. We like that people assume a lot of it is improvised. Sometimes it is.’

Having met at the University of Birmingham, where their contemporaries included Idiots of Ants, Pippa Evans and Jessica Ransom ‘it’s the new Oxbridge,’ snorts Cook they decamped to the 2008 Fringe a mere two months after forming. With a bona fide female on board, they’ve never, as some sketch troupes are wont, needed to drag up for laughs. Though as May-Jones acknowledges, that won’t necessarily stop them. ‘It’s good because we don’t have to be as camp, slapstick or wink wink,’ says Champion. Cook interjects: ‘I never approach writing a sketch with the thought, “Ah, I can write a girl into this.” I have an idea in my head, and if a girl happens to be in it, fair enough. But it doesn’t mean Caroline’s going to play it.’

Indeed, if Banjax have a core dynamic, it’s perhaps three of the group channelling the fourth’s melodrama onstage and tempering it when they’re off. ‘Our show’s later in the day this year, which is nice,’ Cook says. ‘The last two years it’s been at lunchtime, which meant at the back of your mind you were always thinking, “Shit, I’ve got to get up at 10am,” which I’ve never liked, ever. It’s so miserable. It’s usually raining, I eat rubbish food, I drink too much. It’s stressful doing the show. And I have to share a room with Gareth, who’s a horrible cunt.’

Cooper: ‘We love it. A lot of beer floating around, a lot of parties. Everyone’s there to have fun, there’s a lot of creativity and everyone’s an actor or a performer.’ Cook: ‘Which is why I hate it!’ May-Jones: ‘What’s funny is you love it at the time, then we get to the last day and you say, “Christ, that was shit!”’ Cooper: ‘You’re a miserable human being.’ Cook: ‘He doesn’t exaggerate even.’ After the Fringe, they’d like to take Banjax on tour. But their ambitions are, for the most part, modest. ‘Dan would complain all the time, but I’d bloody love it,’ says Cooper. ‘We’ve not really thought much beyond Edinburgh, we haven’t got 18 TV scripts fired off.’ Cook leans in: ‘If I don’t have a six-part television series by September 1st, I’m literally going to kill myself after killing everyone else here.’

Delete the Banjax, Pleasance Courtyard, 556 6550, 7–30 Aug (not 17), 5.45pm, £8.50–£9.50 (£7-£8). Previews until 6 Aug, £5.

‘IF WE DON’T HAVE A SIX-

PART TV SERIES BY SEPTEMBER I’M GOING TO KILL MYSELF’

What’s the chat?

Neither humble servants of the people or blabbering egomaniacs, talk show team Ronna and Beverly are a different kind of sofa beast altogether. Here they recall their most embarrassing moments in chat

After situating herself firmly on his lap, Beverly pronounced to the audience that Mad Men’s Don Draper (Jon Hamm) smells like ‘scotch and testicles’. Bombing at the International Jewish

Men’s Softball tournament banquet in St. Louis. They wanted strippers. They got their mothers-in-law. Beverly grilling Friends star Matthew Perry about his involvement in the September 11th

attacks, then admitting she missed the whole event because she took too many sleeping pills. Jeff Garlin from Curb Your Enthusiasm refusing to continue his interview until Ronna

marched up and down the stage in her leather pants so he could get a ‘better view’. Beverly suggesting to The IT Crowd’s Chris O’Dowd that the only way he’ll make it in Hollywood is by playing priests

or leprechauns. (Interview by Brian Donaldson) Ronna and Beverly, Pleasance Courtyard, 556 6550, 7–29 Aug (not 16), 5.45pm, £8.50–£9.50 (£7–£8). Previews until 6 Aug, £5.

30 THE LIST 5–12 Aug 2010