If John Kearns is worried the new audience Taskmaster has brought will make of him, Ivo Graham has no such fears. What you saw on Taskmaster is very much what you get. Before the show even begins, there’s already two bits of evidence for that. One is the highlight reel of his Taskmaster failures, and before that is Ivo patrolling the queue with a QR code for people to fill in a survey. The first half of the show, aside from a brief opening game of leaving his stage outfit up to the audience, is some classic Graham gear, on why Taskmaster was the perfect thing for him, being the epitome of organised fun, how else that appears in his life, and anecdotes accordingly. But the second half shifts, in such a ramshackle way that, actually, it fits the brand perfectly. Soon two audience members are up on stage playing a game of Top Trumps using cards generated from the audience data captured in the queue, as one of a pentathlon of events. A brief finale that ties that all together in a number of ways is, in hindsight, much more structurally clever than you’d give it superficial credit for. Another fine entry into the canon from a performer having more fun at this in some time.