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Sex & drugs & Simon Amstell

The man who put Gants Hill on the map tells James Mottram about the joy of magic mushrooms - and his problem with orgies

July 29, 2021 11:26
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6 min read

Simon Amstell is sitting in his office. Behind him, on the wall, are dozens of coloured post-it notes – which, one suspects, is the backbone of his new show, Spirit Hole. This autumn, the curly-haired comic is heading back out on the road for a 39-gig nationwide stand-up tour, and the relief is palpable. After 18 months of pandemic-disrupted live events, Amstell is simply happy to be in front of an audience again.

In the early days, before he first started touring for shows like What Is This and To Be Free, he felt it a rather silly thing to do, schlepping around the country from venue to venue. But as soon as he did it, he got hooked. “Once I started touring, I got to see the joy of it,” he admits. “And then when it wasn’t possible, that was very challenging to my sense of self. And my mortgage, I suppose!”

Dubbed “a blissful, spiritual, sensational exploration of love, sex, shame, mushrooms and more”, Amstell’s Spirit Hole tour will likely pick up where his 2019 Netflix special Set Free left off. On TV, Amstell is a genial, boyish presence, as anyone who has seen him host pop quiz show Never Mind the Buzzcocks will attest. On stage, it’s different. He frequently takes audiences through surreal digressions drawing from his own often highly personal — and revealing — experiences.

This is very much Amstell’s methodology, skating over the thin ice of his own life. His BBC2 sitcom Grandma’s House, set in which he co-wrote and starred in, cast him as a former television presenter seeking out meaning — in the setting of a Jewish family home in Ilford.He again ploughed this semi-autobiographical furrow with 2018’s feature film Benjamin, which he wrote and directed. This time he got someone else — Colin Morgan — to play the lead, but the parallels were clear in this story about a rising film director.