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‘We've come a long way from gags about the Irish lad who was so hungover he put the rashers in the toaster'

‘We've come a long way from gags about the Irish lad who was so hungover he put the rashers in the toaster'

Irish Independent17 hours ago
Naming Tommy Tiernan and D'Unbelievables as some of the country's finest funnymen ever, Peter said mindless gags about the 'gas Irish' and the 'locked Paddy' have mostly been wiped from the comedy stage.
Wicklow-born Peter says: 'The Irishness of Tommy Tiernan is brilliant but in a really good way, like it's from the earth.
'I think people learned the wrong lessons from Jon Kenny and Pat Shortt.
'Like you know the jokes, 'do you remember this used to happen in school?' And everyone's like, ha-ha. Or 'remember fizzy seven up, ha-ha', that's not funny.
'I think that even Tommy railed against the Irish aren't we gas.
'Or the, 'I came home, I was so drunk, I put the rashers in the toaster. Tommy he was making fun of that, like kind of back slap kind of thing, he was so right.'
Peter is the latest guest on this week's episode of the culinary podcast, Under the Grill, with Kevin Dundon and Caoimhe Young.
The Dublin-based dad-of-one continues: 'I loved Tommy Tiernan in the early years.
'To this day I'll catch myself and think 'jeez, that sounds like something Tommy would say', just in how it is phrased, not how funny it is.
'I do get inspiration from other comedians; I like the League of Gentlemen, and I've watched that a million times.
'It's stuff that I just soaked into me as a kid, and then it's kind of coming out unconsciously. There's very few of us really that comedy just comes to us completely, naturally.'
Peter picked a delicious seafood chowder – served in a bowl made from sourdough – for chef Kevin Dundon to cook up in the podcast kitchen.
Peter says: 'I haven't had it in years, but I feasted on seafood chowder every second day on what I now remember it as the best summer of my life.
'I was in college in Galway that summer, I was chasing a girl who is now my wife, and there used to be a stall in Galway selling seafood chowder in a bread bowl. I love fish, any kind of fish and a good chowder is heaven.'
Peter has had a string of acting roles, with his latest being in Sky's Small Town, Big Story with Mad Men star Christina Hendricks, and created and directed by Chris O'Dowd.
Peter, who plays a schoolteacher who is having an affair, says: 'It was a beautifully shot series, and I loved working on it. I can only hope there will be another series.
'I feel like TV shows these days there can be like five years between a season on all the big ones. So, who knows?.'
In Small Town, Big Story a Hollywood production rolls into a small Irish town and throws the spotlight on a secret that's been kept hidden since the eve of the millennium.
'Chris O'Dowd was bang on. I got to know him on the shoot, and he was just gentle, and like such a good leader as well. He got everyone's blood pumping to make something good.
'It was a passion project for him, and I think it came off on the screen. He had a vision, and it works.'
Watch Under the Grill on YouTube or listen wherever you get your podcasts.
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Are you an ABBA fan? Advertisement M: Yeah, of course. S: Amongst the pop bangers, they had some amazingly raw songs. G: Yeah, oh, that's very kind. M: They do what Glen was just mentioning now. They draw on their own personal close experiences – and in that sense, they become universal. There's a great strength to that. G: And when the lyric is true, it lands. S: The punters can tell, can't they? G: Listeners are very intelligent. Advertisement S: Another lovely thing you do is have up-and-coming acts support you. How did you discover Leah Moran, who's playing tonight, and Dylan Harcourt, who's on tomorrow? M: Leah is somebody I saw busking on Grafton Street in December when I came over. She was there with her gloves on, playing the guitar. She has this kind of Billie Eilish vibe, and I thought she was very talented. I was also impressed by how committed she was because it was freezing, you know? I was doing a bit of Christmas shopping and kept walking back and forth. 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You've written a song that is a little bit out of my normal kind of safety space. It was in the Czech Republic that Markéta played piano on it. I remember going in to your parents and playing it to them after we recorded it. Mar sang this note on the chorus – 'Take this sinking boat and point it home / We still have time.' She went 'time' and I went 'time'. I went up for that falsetto and there was just something in the moment… John Carney heard us play it in Whelan's and was like, 'I've got a whole scene for that song' which was the Walton's piano shop one. You get a sense sometimes with a song or an idea where you go, 'This doesn't feel like it's coming from me.' I don't know what I'm trying to say, but it feels like it's kind of from a different place. M: It was like a gift, really, because it arrived so quickly. All of a sudden, it was just there, and we were really excited by it. It was like, 'Wow!' Especially for me, it was one of the first songs we'd written together. The really telling thing was to hear people's responses to it. We'd played it at the concerts in Czechia that summer and people always mentioned 'Falling Slowly'. It really touched them in some way. I've come to sort of know and spot the songs that really resonate. G: There's a touch of 'lightning in a bottle'. It's just another simple song you've come up with, but it has a little something that sparks, it lands. S: What were your initial reactions when John Carney came to you and said, 'I've got this idea for a film called Once'? G: John's a brilliant mind and has loads of ideas. So when he comes and says, 'I have an idea for a film', you're like, 'Yeah, of course you do. Because you always have an idea for a film.' Anyway, he says, 'I have this idea, it's called Busker.' That's what Once was originally called. 'It's about a busker who meets this Eastern European woman who's selling flowers on the street.' We were going through this thing where a huge influx of Eastern Europeans were coming into Ireland. There was a bit of poetic licence because Markéta's character was a bit more Romanian than Czech. Although Czechia could be considered Eastern Europe, it's Central Europe. M: It was okay because I wasn't playing a Czech, I was playing a girl. Her nationality wasn't really important. S: Does winning an Oscar and appearing on The Simpsons feel a bit surreal? M: Yeah, absolutely. G: 100% When someone says it to you, you're like, 'Oh, wow, that's mental!' I remember we were playing in Tucson, Arizona with Calexico and got a call from The Simpsons saying, 'Matt's written a little spoof. Do you guys want to jump on a train and come up and do it?' Do you remember that train ride? It was an overnight train to Los Angeles. When we got there, they were all just sitting around, and we did a read-through. It was fantastic. Then we went down to the recording studio, read through it again a couple of times and then got back on the train. S: I've spoken to a couple of Oscar winners who say their memory of the night is very hazy. Again, is there something in particular about it which sticks in your mind? M: Definitely the moment when our names were called out. From that point on, it was like a new mode got activated. We were already so joyful to be there and get to play that song. Standing on that stage, it was definitely the high point of our life. Advertisement G: Markéta had said to me earlier on in the day, 'Look, on the crazy off-chance that we do end up winning, you say a couple of things and I'll just go 'thank you.' When the moment came, I was like blah, blah, blah, blah. I don't know what I said. And then we were pulled off stage; Markéta didn't get to speak. Jon Stewart came over and was like, 'Come on, come with me.' And he pulled Mar away from me. Suddenly, while I was hugging janitors, she was on the other side of the stage and gave this most incredibly eloquent 'thank you' speech. You were brilliant. Fair play to Jon Stewart, it was a sweet thing to do. S: A few years ago, when I was interviewing Billie Eilish at Electric Picnic, she was uber nervous because she was meeting this guy called Glen Hansard backstage. She was quoting chunks of Once, which she'd watched a zillion times on the tour bus, to me. Billie asked,'Is he nice' and I said, 'Yeah, he's a decent skin.' How did you two get on? G: We had an absolute ball. I'd gotten a call basically asking, 'Do you want to come down?' from her mother. I was like, 'Oh man, really? That's incredible. Can I bring my niece?' Because my niece was just freaking out. By the time we got down to the Picnic, there were about eight of us. We all went in, and Finneas and Billie were just so sweet. Big hug, photos. It was a bit like meeting me and Mar during that crazy Once period. They were kind of rabbits in the headlights, but they were also quite grounded,d and their parents were with them. Billie was like, 'We just met Barbara Broccoli. She asked us to do the Bond song!' Which is funny because Barbara produced Once on Broadway. Billie said she'd grown up listening to Mar's songs, 'The Hill', 'If You Want Me' and 'Say It To Me Now'. She was like, 'You guys are the first music I heard.' And Finneas was, 'Yep, I was a huge fan and playing your music constantly in the house.' S: Guys, you collaborated last year on a Ukrainian Action fundraising single called 'Take Heart'. What's the background to that? G: Again, I was on the West Coast of America with Eddie Vedder and the Earthlings. We got news that Russia had invaded Ukraine and were all in shock. It felt like the world was about to end in a way. We didn't really know how to respond. I just sat down with my guitar… Whenever I'm confused or lost, I usually go to my instruments. It's where I find solace. At the same time, I picked up my phone and there was a post from Patti Smith on Instagram from a few days previous. She was on stage in one of her amazing, shamanic, wild modes and said, 'People, take heart, it will get better.' I remember going, 'Oh, wow, that's a great line.' So, I began to muse on that on my guitar. And then when it became a song, I reached out to Patti and asked her, 'Would it be okay?' And she said, 'Did I say that? I was probably just in a moment. You're more than welcome to it. Take it with my blessing.' I was at home one night in Dublin and there was this great documentary about Aslan. Christy had reached out to people at the Red Cross and put together a band of Ukrainian singers to sing 'Crazy World'. I asked Christy – actually, it was the last conversation we had – about putting me in touch with the Red Cross people he'd spoken to and we managed to get three young women to come in and sing the 'Return to me, return to me, return to me unharmed' verse in Ukrainian. The song is kind of a prayer to those who are going to fight from their loved ones. The Ukrainian spirit's really something. They came and sang and afterwards I asked Markéta for some pointers – where the song worked and didn't work. I remember sending it to Bono who said, 'What about this for an end?' And he sent me this beautiful melodic line. He said, 'Don't put my name on it.' So he's on the track but not named. M: I just thought it was a lovely gesture. My family were hosting a family of Ukrainian refugees at their place these past couple of years. Czech people felt a huge need to reach out and try and help because it's easy for us to imagine being the ones in that position. If it can happen in Ukraine, it can happen anywhere.

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