FOR Reginald D Hunter nothing beats the buzz of stand-up.

The American comedian says: “It’s the only time of day that everyone I’m talking to is smiling. It’s the only time of day that people are very happy to see me – I can’t even count on that from my own family.”

So it’s good news all round that Reginald is returning to the stand-up arena with his new show ‘Facing the Beast’, which includes a date in Dorset.

This spring he is embarking on a comprehensive 40-date tour of the UK and Ireland with this hugely anticipated new show that celebrates his 20th anniversary as a comedian living and performing in the UK.

Over those two decades, Reginald has established himself as one of the most electrifying performers at work in this country. He lights up venues up and down the land with his searingly honest, sometimes provocative material.

The critics agree. Awarding him five stars, The Times raves that “Reginald D Hunter joins the top rank of stand-up comedians working today... A comedian going for broke flying in the face of received opinion in a way that is simply exhilarating… This is comedy of a rare scope”.

I’m here to tell you that Reginald is just as magnetic in person. Over a bowl of soup in a North London café, he makes for compulsive company.

Reginald, who has gained a devoted television audience in such popular panel shows as Have I Got News for You, QI, 8 out of 10 Cats Does Countdown and Never Mind the Buzzcocks, begins by underscoring just what he loves about live comedy. “I adore the interaction with the audience. What I live for is those moments where something comes out of my mouth or an audience member’s mouth that completely surprises all of us. You can’t orchestrate that. That’s when you laugh till there are tears in your eyes.”

The comedian, who has presented the enormously popular BBC2 documentary, Reginald D Hunter’s Songs of The South, and its equally successful follow up, Reginald D Hunter’s Songs of The Border, both of which charted the growth of American popular song, goes on to give an example of the sort of off-the-cuff line that fires up his stand-up shows. “There was one moment where I came on stage when I was lean and pretty. A woman in the audience shouted out, ‘Show us your c***!’ I immediately replied, I decline to do that, mam, because it ain’t that kind of party. Let me ask you, do you go to strip clubs and shout out, ‘Tell us a joke?’.”

On another occasion, Reginald recalls “I walked onstage at a club and asked, ‘How much were the tickets?’ Someone shouted out, ‘£14’. ‘Relax,’ I replied, ‘here comes £9.74!’” It is this sort of hilarious, spontaneous humour that makes him one of the most thrilling live comedians around.

The stand-up, who hails originally from Albany, Georgia, particularly enjoys performing in this country. He explains why he has such a tremendous rapport with British audiences. “I love the fact that they will hear you out. I’m a black man from the South of the US. I was born in trouble, and I don’t expect no game to be 50-50. All I ask is that I know what the rules are going in.

“In the UK, the rules are simply these: you can talk about anything you want, no matter how graphic or goofy, as long as you’re funny. But if you talk about stuff that isn’t funny and isn’t going anywhere, you will be asking the Brits for your ass back.

These troubled times are provoking extremely angry debates, and in “Facing their Beast” Reginald will be addressing that. The comedian’s eminently sensible response to the prevailing air of fury is simple: civility. He reasons that, “If I wanted to question your view, I’d say, ‘Sir, you say that, but could I ask you this?’”

He adds that, “There’s no problem on earth can’t be solved between two people by 15 minutes of considered chat – that goes for marriage, Brexit, or the Middle East. These things are easily solvable, but the fact that we have talked about some of these things for 50 years tells me that the powerful prefer the issue to the solution

So what does he hope that audiences will take away from “Facing the Beast”? “I hope that sprinkled in with the jokes and the absurdities is a reminder that we do have solutions like civility and being able to admit you’re wrong.”

But ultimately, “There’s nothing new under the sun. The only new things in the world are mobile phones and the internet. Everything else is based, as it always has been, on money, power, land and sex.

“The people who read Shakespeare will recognise that!”

n Reginald D Hunter is at Lighthouse Poole on May 4.