Our Interview with Shaun: Part 1

To celebrate one year of this very website being in existence, we plucked up the courage to ask Mr Shaun Micallef Esq if he would answer some questions from his fans. Delightfully, he agreed – and the rest, as they say, is a blog post…

Thank you Shaun for taking the time to answer some questions from your fans.

Thanks Stuart. And thanks for running the site.

First – the serious questions

You’ve been successful at TV, radio, film, stage, writing (books and screenplays) – what have you enjoyed doing the most or are most keen to do in the future?

I think I’m a TV comedian first and foremost; I’m most at home there because it uses all the things I can do comedy-wise (writing, producing, acting, presenting – even a little directing).

Radio I found difficult because of the commercial expectations – not in terms of results so much, because TV is also ratings driven, but in terms of the structure and conventions of on-air presentation. But it gave me a chance to do some interesting writing and voice work as well is loosening me up a bit and adlibbing more – this, in turn, helped me with Thank God You’re Here and, ultimately, the show I’m doing now.

Stage is important because it’s a connection with a real audience (studio audiences are not quite the same as they’ve been primed – with a stage audience, you have to truly earn the response you get). Any comic timing I have is because I did University Revue and cabaret. I try and make sure I do something on stage every now and then so that whatever skills I have don’t get flabby.

Film I haven’t done a lot of – and when I have, it’s been only as an actor. I’m still learning and haven’t quite got the hang of it yet.

Writing is a hard slog (well, it is for me) but I find it that because I enjoy performing my own stuff most of all, I must do it. There’s also a special satisfaction that I get when I get a laugh for a joke that I have not only performed, but written.

I also enjoy collaborating (usually as a performer) in other people’s projects.

Good Evening was such a brilliant show. Would you consider returning to the stage, and would you want to do your own material? (Asked by Sia and Beth)

Yes, definitely. I few years ago I returned to the stage (with Glynn Nicholas) and did some shows in Perth and Adelaide. It was my own stuff (and a mime piece co-developed with Glynn) and it worked very well. The pieces I did were old pieces from The Micallef Program, Full Frontal and a couple of pieces back from my days in University revue. Only the mime piece was new. Then I tried a show called Boeing Boeing, an old French farce. I enjoyed doing it but it wasn’t quite right, so I made sure the next show I did would be sketch comedy – which is what I think I do best. Cook and Moore’s material is the best sketch material you can get, in my view. The next stage show I do will be my own material.

Recently, plans were revealed for you to pilot a variety show for Channel 10. Can you share any of your hopes or plans for this show?

I spoke too soon. Unfortunately this show is now not going to happen.

Have you considered writing with Gary McCaffrie and Michael Ward again – potentially for your new show? (Asked by PicklePepperPiper)

Gary and Michael both write for TAYG. They were going to write on the variety show. If they’re keen, they will be working on whatever it is I do after TAYG.

We’ve delighted in seeing more of the absurd on TAYG – has this been a conscious move by yourself?

Not conscious, but inevitable. As I got more and more involved in the creation of the games, I think it has got more absurd. When the show started, my creative contribution was the transitional stuff. There was a sense that I was having to ‘cope’ with the conventions of a celebrity panel show. We played on that; I was a reluctant émigré from ABC/SBS to the world of commercial frippery. But we tired of that pretty quickly – and I think the audience would have too if we’d kept it up.  As time has gone by, the show has become more and more ‘my own’. The game producers are thinking up odd things and I’ve learned more about how a celebrity panel show works.

What’s been your weirdest fan experience? (Asked by Julie)

I was once approached by a Scandanavian couple who said they enjoyed watching Welcher and Welcher back home in Finland.

What are your thoughts on your non-commercially available work (such as Newstopia, Vega broadcasts) being shared by fans, in the same spirit as the old comedy albums? (Asked by Jennifer)

I don’t think Newstopia will ever be released on DVD, which is a pity because I think it’s my best work. I’m more than happy for people to share what they’ve got.

Do you have any current plans for more DVD releases, such as Newstopia? (Asked by Robert)

Fremantle Media (who own the rights to Newstopia) have told me they don’t want to release it on DVD. I don’t think it’s financially worth their while. If they changed their mind, I’d be a little reluctant to let it go out in an unedited form; I think a lot of it wouldn’t make any sense now (because so much of the material was topical) so I’d want to do a job on it as I did with Micallef Tonight. But that costs money (edit suites, etc) and that makes it unappealing business-wise. That’s why Welcher and Welcher doesn’t have a commentary track.

Personally, I never really wanted anything to come out on DVD (except maybe the Micallef Program). Full Frontal was not, in my view, good enough and Newstopia and Micallef Tonight were, as I said, too of the moment. Welcher and Welcher I was never sure about.

My involvement with some of the DVD releases has been more to do with ‘damage control than anything else’. I hate the idea of being the keeper of my own flame. Better to forget the past and get excited about the next thing.

What are your thoughts on comedy/variety TV in the UK compared to Australia? (Asked by Luke)

I think the UK audience is so big that a cult act can do quite well over there. Over here it’s a bit harder.

I must admit I don’t watch a lot of comedy anymore. I’m too threatened by it if it’s funny and annoyed by it if it isn’t.

Stay tuned for the exciting conclusion, or part 2 as it’s also called!

Interviews with Shaun

Just a reminder – you only have until Thursday to submit your questions for our interview with Shaun. The best questions will then be submitted, so we can get some answers! (Unless we can’t handle the truth?)

Speaking of which, we are very excited to see Tony Martin’s show A Quiet Word With… will be featuring Shaun on 28th of May. With the show format resembling an informal chat, this should prove to be a must see!

Shaun at the 2011 Logies

Well, unfortunately, Shaun or Your Gen didn’t win in any of their nominated categories.

But we did get a few great moments from Mr Micallef. During a ‘Logie Minute’, he and Stephen Curry had fun at each other’s expense (with some comment made about Shaun’s loud shirt) and at Richard Wilkins. Shaun was introduced as a ‘national treasure’ before he presented the Silver Logies for Most Popular Male and Female Actress. He relished the opportunity to relate these Logies to be like Andre Reiu – not necessarily the best, but the most loved.

Ask Shaun Your Questions

Exciting news! To celebrate this website being online for one year in May, Shaun has agreed to answer your questions!

So, time to start scratching your noggin’ and think of what questions you would most like to Shaun. Try to think outside of what has already been asked. Add your question as a comment or email me, so we can compile them and send them to him. You have one week to send in your questions – it’s for all of us to find out what we want to know!

Silver nomination for Shaun

This year Shaun has a nomination for the Silver Logie for Most Popular Presenter. I have no idea how he missed out on the Gold Logie nomination (especially given some of the other nominees! – oooh, bitchy!)

Anyway, let’s hope he can made it 2 years in a row!

Talkin’ ‘Bout Your Generation is up for Most Popular and Most Outstanding Light Entertainment Program.

The awards are on Sunday, May 1st.

Recap: Your Gen, April 12th 2011

This week we certainly weren’t in Kansas anymore! It was a Wizard of Oz Special, and Shaun was dressed as Dorothy. That alone was worth the price of admission!

Everyone was dressed – Amanda as the Tin Man, Charlie as the Lion and Josh as the Scarecrow. The guests were announcer John Blackman (BB), dressed as the Munchkin Mayor, “comedian” Kate Langbroek (Gen X) as Toto and actress Sophie Monk as Glenda the Good Witch (Gen Y). There was some confusion over if it was Kate or Stuart the Meerkat who was playing the role of Toto.

The first game was Chicken or Egg, followed by Spoilers Ahoy. Shaun used a picture of Harpo Marx to indicate the viewer should mute to avoid hearing the answer and wreaking the end of the movie. However the round decended into the teams just shouting names of movies until Sophie used the magic word – ‘the’. She then got a special question: What wasn’t Rome built in? Answer: Paris. (or Day, if that’s how you prefer to think)

The four buttons celebrated the children of Judy Garland: Liza Minelli, Lorna Luft and Michelle Gratton (actually a political reporter). Plus of course Trust Me!

  • Charlie’s soft spot for Michelle meant they played ‘Watch Your Mouth’. Shaun made some vague cracks at his failed tonight show before Kate put her face in the styrrup and impersonated people for Charlie.
  • Josh liked Liza, which was Name That Tune – all show tunes.
  • John pushed the team into Trust Me which was Human Fairy Bread, and nominated Amanda as the ‘manacle-ee’, which she wasn’t pleased about. John failed on the first two questions, leading Amanda to be covered in flour and butter. The last question Shaun initially gave as wrong, causing Amanda to get the sprinkles too – but then he realised his mistake and gave her two bits for fairy bread to make up for it.

The Your Gen topic was something we all live in – Cities! (Not a Yurt Yert) Bert Newton (disguised as a Winged Monkey) delivered the envelope describing the challenge as Which Generation is Best at Winning. The teams had to complete a number of ‘fair-ground’ challenges such as assembling the yellow brick road, shooting a target and dunking a witch.

Gen X won the trophy – a 2003 Typing Award donated by Mindy Wilmhurst of Brisbane.