Advertisement

Jon Richardson on worrying, being a dad, and OCD

Like any new father, comedian Jon Richardson has found having a child has given him lots of new things to worry about.

But when worrying, or being funny about worrying, is how you make a living, at least the stress can hopefully provide some good material for his next tour.

"It's shifted my worrying, which is a main part of my act, on to now worrying for my daughter and her generation," he tells Sky News.

"I'm hoping the next tour will have a bit more of a global view in the sense of worrying about what life's going to be like for her generation because my view has been very narrow up until this point."

"You're allowed to be selfish up to your 30s. It's probably time now to diversify a little bit," the 36-year-old added.

Richardson, star of 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown - "I don't think I'm a comedian on that show, I'm a nerd living out his teenage fantasies" - and Ultimate Worrier on Dave, is married to fellow comedian Lucy Beaumont, but jokes that the laughter levels have dropped somewhat now they have added a baby to the mix.

"With a two-year-old at home the level of comedy around the house has dipped," he says. "There's a lot more testy arguments over the balcony at 3am than there is witty banter over the dinner table."

The pair are working on something together at the minute - which will either end in a TV project or divorce, he says.

:: Romesh Ranganathan: 'Instagramming food should be illegal'

:: Julia Davis on awful characters and awkward sex scenes

One of comedy's most famous pessimists, Richardson felt for a long time that domestic bliss was perhaps out of his reach.

He says work on a documentary about obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) - and being told that he didn't actually have it himself (he has obsessive compulsive personality disorder, which is about personality rather than anxiety) - was "life-changing".

"It sort of empowered me almost to control a lot of the things that were stressing me out at the time, and to see the severity of a disease that certainly in comedy is used far too much as a cover-all for people who like things neat and tidy or don't like to be late, which are perfectly normal, sensible character traits," he says.

"That's the time I started to calm down a little bit and probably led to me being able to hold down a relationship and have a child and all the things that have made my life better now.

"It started then by realising that what I did have was more quirks of personality that I could exploit without feeling like I was mocking people with a serious disorder."

In his last tour, Old Man Live, Richardson tackled everything from haircuts and social media, to weddings and pregnancy, as well as the age old problem of the correct way to load a dishwasher. These are issues that trouble him.

Does he ever worry that he'll run out of things to worry about?

"I think in the current climate that's unlikely," he says. "I think with a two-year-old daughter in the current political climate I'm safe for a good while yet of worrying."

Politics itself, however, is something Richardson tends to steer clear of.

"You can't move for people giving their opinions, on street corners and on the news on TV, so I think to say to people, 'If you come and see me I'll just try and make you laugh for two hours and you won't be judged on any of your opinions.'

"Also, I'm starting to think I'm probably not the one who's going to sort any of this stuff out. In my twenties I did a lot more ranting and a lot more judgement of the political scenario. Now I think I probably don't know what I'm talking about, and if there is a solution, I'm probably not it.

"Even in the current climate where things are awful, most people's day-to-day is driven by the sort of stuff I'm talking about," he says.

"Whether your partner's loaded the dishwasher properly, whether the people next to you on the train have behaved in a way you deem appropriate - those are actually the things that send you to bed in a bad mood... so I'm gonna leave my two penneth out."

:: Jon Richardson: Old Man Live is out on DVD and available on digital download now.