(Jewish Group) David Baddiel: 'People think Jews are powerful. I think the opposite'
If David Baddiel hadnt been satisfied with a 30-year run as one of the countrys leading comedians, he would have made an excellent professional interrogator.
Were all familiar with the boyish, wide-eyed curiosity that comes through in Baddiels stand-up. His early TV comedy was built on double acts: constructively awkward with Rob Newman, his first BBC partner in sketch shows like The Mary Whitehouse Experience; warm and affectionate with Frank Skinner, with whom a weekly chat about football became the comedy juggernaut Football Fantasy League.
In his solo stand-up, however, Baddiel is still the amiable loner. I caught Trolls: Not the Dolls in March 2019, days before lockdown hit the tour. For a gig about social media conflict, it was disarmingly gentle, Baddiel a charming goofball simply trying to understand the madness. When he makes documentaries previous subjects include the far right and his own fathers dementia that charm is what makes even the hardest nuts open-up.
He is nothing if not prolific. Last month, he published his latest novel for children, Virtually Christmas. A new book on atheism is in the works. On Monday, Channel 4 will air Jews Dont Count, a documentary based on his bestselling book about antisemitism and its prevalence even among progressives. Baddiel interviews a galaxy of celebrity names about their experience of antisemitism: among them David Schwimmer, Sarah Silverman, Neil Gaiman and, erm, me. He has the interviewers knack of easing his subjects into a lull of trust, then landing a surprise question at just the most fertile moment.
more...