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OFFERINGS Former London Dungeon actor Matt Berry has seen enough failure to build the perfect luvvie monster in Toast of London. Brian Donaldson talks to him about sex faces and Clem Fandango

O ne thing might strike Toast of London fans on witnessing the opening episode of series two: Steven Toast’s sex face has really upped its game. Creator and star Matt Berry has ploughed his own comedic furrow when it comes to expressing sexual ecstasy / depravity in The IT Crowd and the i rst serving of Toast with eyes rolling back into his skull and face-cheeks contorting like billy-o. But now it’s been taken to a whole new orgiastic level: think a cuddly St Bernard shaking itself dry after a soaking in a public park or private quarters.

‘We used slow motion,’ reveals Berry. ‘When we were editing the i rst series, we’d often pause during the sex scenes, and the faces were the funny things, so we thought we should try to capture that. And the best way to do that would be to slow it all down and get the same effect. I’m i ne with seeing myself like that I don’t give a hoot. You’re not meant to be cool; you’re supposed to be a clown and a gargoyle.’ Matt Berry has become somewhat ubiquitous in recent times, popping up in Vic ’n’ Bob’s House of Fools after his successful stint as the hapless sexual predator and ill-i tting corporate magnate Douglas Reynholm in The IT Crowd. Further back, he excelled as zoo proprietor Dixon Bainbridge for The Mighty Boosh and weirded us out with the bleakly dark sketch show Snuff Box. But the work that has perhaps best informed Toast of London are the voiceover duties he’s been performing of late: an amusingly profane spoof nature documentary as part of the BBC iPlayer Original Comedy Shorts selection for one, while listeners

of Absolute Radio will be familiar with his sonorous tones roughly every 12 or 13 minutes on their 80s and 90s retro shows. In Toast of London, Berry’s tragic actor (well, ac-tor) is frustrated by the lack of recognition for his talents but in order to earn a crust, he occasionally undertakes some soulless voiceover work at a painfully hip Soho ad agency. There, he is ritually humiliated at the hands of young media types such as Clem Fandango. ‘You’d think that those characters are caricatures, but they’re not,’ insists Berry. ‘They really do exist. I’ve been doing voiceovers for nearly ten years and I’ve come across a fair few Clem Fandangos, so those bits are not difi cult to write.’

As pompous and daft as he can be, Steven Toast would be a difi cult character to play or watch without i nding something in him to like. But where, and what, is it? ‘He’s a pain in the arse, because he’s so full of himself, which is always irritating,’ coni rms Berry. ‘Obviously, we look and sound the same but he is very bitter with his lot; he thinks he should be a lot more famous and successful than he is, whereas I think I’m lucky to still be getting away with it. The pathos comes from the fact that he keeps getting fucked over in these pretty extreme ways and you do think, “Why can’t something nice happen to this guy?” He gets away with behaving so badly because you know that he’s just had enough. Hopefully because of that, you don’t hate the character.’

Toast of London series two starts on Channel 4 in early November.

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