Comedian Alan Davies says he never remembers the facts from QI do sex

Comedian Alan Davies says he never remembers the facts from QI do sex sex to

May, 02 2025 04:26 AM
Comedian Alan Davies says he never remembers the facts from QIBy George FreemanABC News BreakfastTopic:Stand-Up Comedy11m ago11 minutes agoFri 2 May 2025 at 4:14amLoading...In short:QI star Alan Davies says he never remembers any of the facts from the long-running comedy quiz show.Davies has been the only permanent panellist on the series since 2003.What's next?Davies will tour Australia in November and December with his new show, Think Ahead.abc.net.au/news/alan-davies-comedian-qi-australia-tour-jonathan-creek/105244182Link copiedShareShare articleBritish comedian and star of the popular comedy panel show QI Alan Davies says he struggles to remember any of the facts from the series.Davies has been a staple on the long-running BBC quiz show since its launch in 2003, first with original host Stephen Fry, who left in 2016, and now with Sandi Toksvig.Despite being QI's only permanent panellist for more than 20 years, Davies told ABC News Breakfast he "can't remember anything that happens" on the show."We record early in the year usually, we just recently recorded a batch, and they go out six months later and I don't remember a thing. Literally not a thing. I don't remember anything that has been said.Alan Davies with current QI host Sandi Toksvig, former host Stephen Fry, comedian Johnny Vegas and long-time series producer John Lloyd in 2010. (Supplied: BBC)"Sometimes I watch it and someone says something and I'm sitting on my sofa at home and I think what I would say, and the person on screen does say it. So that is weird."My brain is quite limited which has made it easy for them to catch me out over the years."Davies, who also starred in the BBC mystery drama series Jonathan Creek, is returning to Australia in November and December for the first time in a decade with his new stand-up comedy show, Think Ahead.He says he's looking forward to coming back, describing Australian audiences as a "little bit louder" than British audiences."I had some terrific shows on my previous tours," he says. "I am 60 in 2026 and the show is called Think Ahead because you have to do that at this moment.Alan Davies will tour his brand-new stand-up show, Think Ahead, across Australia later this year. (Supplied)"When I started in stand-up, I didn't look further than three months ahead because that was how far ahead the comedy clubs would book you."So I am thinking ahead all the time and now that's fed its way into my act. It's a chance for me to let the little middle aged man scream."COVID-19 'catastrophic' for comediansDavies, who started performing stand-up comedy in 1988, says he is still capable of feeling nervous before a show, especially if he hasn't been in front of a live audience in a while."Getting onto the stage is the thing. Then it just comes back like a muscle memory, it is the most fun for me."I have been gigging all the time, apart from during COVID which was awful for our profession, it was catastrophic, with all the live venues shut down."This is the first tour since COVID. Theatres are packed again and I love being face-to-face with the audience, it's the best thing. So I have been gigging, just not touring."Apart from COVID, having a third child really impacted on my tour time."Loading YouTube contentDavies says putting together a new stand-up show is like "panning for gold"."I just sort of jot things down, things I've heard, things I've thought of, start doing a few gigs and stuff starts to come up."I have got some funny things to say when I come."Davies's tour will mean he's in Australia for Christmas this year. He says he'll be joined by his wife, Katie, and his three children."I am looking forward to doing all the work and then putting it down and having a great Christmas in New South Wales."Think Ahead will be touring across Perth, Adelaide, Melbourne, Hobart, Newcastle, Toowoomba, Caloundra, Brisbane, Canberra, Thirroul and Sydney in November and December.Posted 11m ago11 minutes agoFri 2 May 2025 at 4:14amShare optionsCopy linkFacebookX (formerly Twitter)Top StoriesLittle-known entity comparing Dutton to Trump spends more than $400,000 on political Meta adsTopic:Australian Federal ElectionsPhoto shows A man in front of a billboard which says "the parties are the problem"Home owners far outnumber first-time buyers, so pollies ‘do the math’Topic:Property PricesPhoto shows A man outside his Qld home standing next to the fence at the front of the house'Stranded': Motorists describe chaos caused by scrap metal truck debrisTopic:Road Accidents and IncidentsPhoto shows A metal shard embedded in a tyreWhere the election will be won and lost — or left hangingTopic:Australian Federal ElectionsPhoto shows A stylised map shows Australia's 150 federal electorates as clusters of hexagons.Why Melbourne’s inner north has Labor worriedTopic:Federal GovernmentPopular now'Stranded': Motorists describe chaos caused by scrap metal truck debrisTopic:Road Accidents and IncidentsPhoto shows A metal shard embedded in a tyreLittle-known entity comparing Dutton to Trump spends $400,000 on adsTopic:Australian Federal ElectionsPhoto shows A man in front of a billboard which says "the parties are the problem"Jill Sobule, singer behind I Kissed A Girl and Supermodel, dead at 66Topic:Folk MusicPhoto shows A woman with a blonde bob sits in a black dress with a white collar holding a guitar, smiling.Related topicsStand-Up ComedyTop StoriesLittle-known entity comparing Dutton to Trump spends more than $400,000 on political Meta adsTopic:Australian Federal ElectionsPhoto shows A man in front of a billboard which says "the parties are the problem"Home owners far outnumber first-time buyers, so pollies ‘do the math’Topic:Property Prices'Stranded': Motorists describe chaos caused by scrap metal truck debrisTopic:Road Accidents and IncidentsWhere the election will be won and lost — or left hangingTopic:Australian Federal ElectionsWhy Melbourne’s inner north has Labor worriedTopic:Federal GovernmentJust InCandidate labels voters in his electorate 'dumbest on this planet' Topic:Australian Federal Elections3m ago3 minutes agoFri 2 May 2025 at 4:22amComedian Alan Davies says he never remembers the facts from QITopic:Stand-Up Comedy11m ago11 minutes agoFri 2 May 2025 at 4:14amDoes more gas supply mean cheaper power bills for Australians? 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