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How he’s tapped the market — from The Simpsons to Nixon

INTERVIEW / HARRY SHEARER / An audience with the multi-faceted performer, who is starring in a London play

July 11, 2013 10:25
Harry Shearer in rehearsals for Daytona with co-star Maureen Lipman

ByJohn Nathan, John Nathan

4 min read

When actor, satirist, musician, artist, broadcaster and mock-rocker Harry Shearer joins Maureen Lipman on stage at London’s newest theatre, the experience will be a tad different from the time Shearer and the rest of spoof rock band Spinal Tap performed to tens of thousands on Glastonbury’s main stage in 2009. The Park Theatre audience is around 180. But he will still be nervous.

“I get nervous doing everything,” says Shearer, seated as languid as you like on a sofa in the post-hippy cool of Julie’s restaurant in Holland Park. Dressed in linen jacket and raffish fedora, he hardly conveys anxiety. “Well you don’t have to be all fluttery,” he explains. “In my experience, and I’ve been doing this for a while, you always get nervous. That’s where the adrenaline comes from.”

Comparisons between the small-scale stage production, Daytona, and the mega gig at Glastonbury will have to end there. Except, perhaps, that after the run at the Park, Oliver Cotton’s new play — in which Lipman and Shearer play the Zimmermans, a 70-something Jewish couple bound by a common history (the camps) and a mutual interest (dancing) — goes on tour, just like a rock band. Mind you, the venues (which include Kingston and Watford) are somewhat less than rock ‘n’ roll.

The contrasts in Shearer’s working life are part of a deliberate plan. His first taste of showbiz was as a seven-year-old on The Jack Benny Show. His most successful gig — at least financially — is as the most sought after animation actor since Looney Tunes’s Mel “That’s All Folks” Blanc, who in a weirdly prescient way, Shearer met working on Benny’s show. For Shearer created the voice for a host of characters in The Simpsons, including evil industrialist Mr Burns, his assistant Waylon Smithers and the annoyingly good-hearted neighbour Ned Flanders.