‘Standup was a weapon to him’: Ian Cognito, the comedian who died on stage – literally

Three years ago, the caustic comic had a fatal aortic dissection mid-show. Now a new documentary about the self-proclaimed ‘most banned act in Britain’ reveals a saga of booze and outrageWhen Ian Cognito walked on stage in Bicester, Oxfordshire, on 11 …

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Paul Verhoeven: the 10 funniest things I have ever seen (on the internet)

The podcaster and author reveals his favourite online things, including Ben Affleck’s Armageddon commentary, a song about the Wii shopping channel music and Jinkx MonsoonGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailMalcolm Gladwell said that it takes 10,…

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Sara Barron: ‘My show has something for everyone – it’s properly good or extremely mediocre’

The standup on changing her role models, her pre-performance rituals, and the frustration of being asked to audition for ‘mom’ rolesHow did you get into comedy?I saw the film A Chorus Line and decided I should be an actor. But when I finally tried it p…

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‘There’s never been a time when you could just say anything’: Frank Skinner on free speech, his bullying shame – and knob jokes

Poetry-loving, religious and with deep regrets about some of his comedy: either the standup comic has grown up, or he was never as laddish as his image suggestedIt was while he was writing his latest Edinburgh show that Frank Skinner noticed a problem …

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Jon Culshaw on Les Dawson: ‘even his most savage mother-in-law lines were written with love’

In his Edinburgh fringe show Flying High the impressionist wants to convey the warmth and affection of the comic and Blankety Blank hostWho knew, growing up in the 70s and 80s, that we weren’t watching mere comedians, but the dramatis personae in plays…

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‘It’s a feeling I’ve been chasing ever since’: Edinburgh festival debuts

Alan Cumming did a gig for a cat, Tiff Stevenson was drowned out by samba and some performers even made a profit … fringe veterans discuss their first time and how the festival has changedIt was when I still had a fringe of my own: 1974 seems like yest…

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‘I walked into the comedy desert and a part of me died’ – the standup who became a therapist

Oscar Jenkyn-Jones was one of the wildest new talents in comedy. But he suddenly disappeared – and reinvented himself as a therapist instead. He explains the joys of swapping the fringe for Freud‘I thought you might have come to kill me,” says Oscar Je…

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Sarah Keyworth on grief and doing comedy ‘when you’re not feeling particularly funny’

The standup’s new Edinburgh fringe show, Lost Boy, is about rediscovering silliness after difficult life events“When bad things happen, there is a lot of comedy if you look in the right places,” says standup Sarah Keyworth. We’re in a bar in central Lo…

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Standing up for asylum seekers: refugees learn the art of comedy

A Greek project is teaching participants the art of standup in order to shine a new light on stories about migrationIn Athens, a handful of novice standups are at the mic after taking part in a series of comedy workshops. One of the organisers, Vasilei…

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Yummy: Iconic review – drag burlesque gets a bit too cheeky

Underbelly festival, LondonThe acrobatic feats of Jarred Dewey go some way to redeem a show that’s way too high on cliches and exposed buttocksEnough buttock already! It’s not a sentiment one is often moved to express, but there you go: well before Aus…

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