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Amy Mason

Free Mason is a refreshing departure from the relentless punchline-chasing of mainstream stand-up. Mason offers something intimate here and more textured—a carefully observed patchwork of life’s smaller, stranger moments.

by Eve Wellings · Photo: the artist
Amy Mason

artist

A comedian’s choice of walk-out music often speaks volumes. Amy Mason strided onto the stage to the riot grrrl defiance of Le Tigre’s Decaptacon - a fitting prelude to her low-key angry feminist brand of comedy. The song that so many of us girls claimed as our awakening anthem in our youth.

Shortlisted for the BBC New Act of the Year, Mason has been praised as “personal but totally universal” and “charmingly poignant and funny.” Her debut hour, Free Mason, is less a conventional stand-up set and more an introspective, meandering monologue laced with self-deprecation, dry wit, and an unassuming warmth. Surprisingly, the show has little to do with Freemasonry. Instead, it roves through the tangled terrain of motherhood, post-divorce reinvention, queer awakening, and therapy.

Mason’s comedic style is neither punchline-heavy nor frenetically paced. The delivery is hushed and earnest, as though she’s confiding in us over a half-drunk cup of tea at a kitchen table. There are no grand set-ups or theatrical flourishes. It’s just pure, self-effacing storytelling that unfolds with an effortless, offbeat rhythm.

While some comics hammer out laughs with military precision, Mason’s approach is gentler, more ruminative. Her stories meander like an afternoon train ride, ambling through absurd encounters and acerbic observations before unexpectedly arriving at something profound. She weaves in playful facts (sheep, apparently, are the most common gay animals) and occasional audience interaction - not for cheap crowd work, but as a way to tether us to her world.

Among the show’s standout moments was Mason’s poetic yet unvarnished take on childbirth. For a fleeting moment, she muses, the child in my arms held a wisdom about the universe that we, in our adulthood, have long since lost. And then it’s in the babygrow and the mystery is gone. Then there’s her wry self-assessment of her own limitations. Watching Beyoncé perform last year, she thought: No, I couldn’t do that. But later, on a train, she found solace in an epiphany: I know one thing Beyoncé couldn’t do that I can - knock back a Strongbow.

Her reflections on life in Bristol and her Bournemouth upbringing, where her parents ran a café teeming with hippies, are just as self-reflective. She fondly dubs their free-spirited circle “the coven” before musing that perhaps she has now found her own with her two daughters and a sycophantic, arse-licking cat.

Free Mason is a refreshing departure from the relentless punchline-chasing of mainstream stand-up. Mason offers something intimate here and more textured - a carefully observed patchwork of life’s smaller, stranger moments. Some stories stretch a little thin, but her ability to balance sincerity with sardonic charm ensures the show never lags. 

The result is a gentle, beguiling hour of comedy. One that doesn’t demand howls of laughter but instead leaves you feeling like you’ve spent time in the company of someone wonderfully human and profoundly relatable.

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