
Rhod Gilbert, a comedian, has stated that he is determined to incorporating his cancer experience in his next stand-up shows, having produced 250 pages of material.
The 54-year-old Welshman announced in July that he had stage four cancer and was being treated at Cardiff’s Velindre Cancer Centre, where he had previously served as a fundraising patron.
He recently cancelled a series of January tour dates after learning that he needed more surgery for gallstones and chronic gallbladder infections.
In his first national newspaper interview after his cancer diagnosis, Rhod stated that it “does feel awkward” and that he “hasn’t really worked out what to say” about it.
However, he is ‘more than happy to talk about it’, despite saying he hasn’t had time to ‘process it all’.
Through his comedy, the comedian has spent years tackling life’s minor irritants, such as service stations and baked potatoes.

Speaking about his 2012 live show The Man With The Flaming Battenberg Tattoo, he told The Guardian: ‘I was having to look for things to be angry about, to fit what I did. And that’s diminishing returns, clearly. I felt that, and I think audiences felt that.’
After the tour concluded, Rhod left live comedy and ‘didn’t write a word’ and ‘didn’t miss it at all’.
After a seven-year hiatus from stand-up, he returned with his tour The Book Of John to make light of more serious themes he has faced, such as grief, infertility, and a mini-stroke.
‘Until this show, all my stand-up was made up. I think pretty much everything was entirely fictitious. And in this show it’s not. It’s all true stuff that happened: the stroke, my mum’s Alzheimer’s, the fertility treatment.
‘As I got older, I started to feel… that I’ve got a bit of a platform here. And I should be doing more with it than just talking about toothbrushes.’
The TV star, who has also presented documentaries on social anxiety and infertility, as well as filling in for Nick Knowles on DIY: SOS, revealed that he has ‘become somebody who wants to be really open and talk about stuff, and who sees the value in talking’ – and that extends to his cancer.
Rhod said that he gets letters and emails from ‘all over the world’ from people talking about their own experience of a stroke, parents with Alzheimer’s, or infertility.

He admitted that he ‘really likes’ this ‘totally different response’.
Talking about his new no-filter approach, the celebrity stated that during his beach walks with his dog he can now ‘end up in an hour’s talk about infertility, illness, whatever’ with a stranger, whereas before he would have ‘not engaged with anybody’.
‘When I get through this, the next show will be in a similar vein. The cancer is on my mind 24/7, but, when I’m well enough to write, I’m jotting down a few things. And there is humour in there, definitely,’ he shared.
Rhod, who used to doubt he’d ever compose another stand-up performance, now says he’s’mad keen’ to do so, despite the fact that his illness causes him to spend ‘whole weeks’ in bed.

‘I’ve got a 250-page document of stuff that’s on the go. All my work has gone. My social life has gone. Everything has gone. Everything.
‘It’s just me and this bl**dy cancer, really. I’m really aware of mental health now and I’m checking in with myself every day.’
He also said he was feeling ‘fine, weirdly’ and also ‘happy, optimistic and hopeful that next year it’ll all come good’.
The comedian also expressed excitement about the rearranged tour dates for 2023, which have been pushed out until the summer.
Over the years, he has appeared on series such as Would I Lie To You?, QI, and Mock The Week, and he also hosted Never Mind The Buzzcocks from 2014 to 2015.
Rhod and wife Sian recently both visited a ‘rammed’ A&E, where they were the only ones wearing masks, according to Sian.
‘I just don’t get it,’ she wrote on Twitter as she shared her frustration at people not taking the precaution, even when they had ‘hacking coughs’.
She did not reveal why she or Rhod needed to make the trip.