From time machines to threesomes: 12 of the funniest jokes from the Edinburgh fringe

With the fabled comedy showcase running until the end of August, we whittled down gags galore from this year’s standups to pick a dozen of our favouritesMichael Spicer: Why did the chicken cross the road? Because it saw someone from work on a Saturday….

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Feeling Afraid As If Something Terrible Is Going to Happen review – seriously funny

Roundabout @ Summerhall, EdinburghSamuel Barnett is remarkable in Marcelo Dos Santos’s one-man play which analyses joke-craft and a comedian’s compulsionsTowards the end of this enthralling monologue by Marcelo Dos Santos, the unnamed character played …

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‘I want to do things I’ve never done’: The History Boys’ Samuel Barnett on his new one-man show

Making his fringe debut with a show about a troubled standup, the actor explains why he loves solo performance, his issues with The History Boys, and why this government’s days are numbered“It scares me,” laughs Samuel Barnett about doing the Edinburgh…

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‘It’s where I learned how to be a comedian’: Nish Kumar on why the Edinburgh fringe still matters

The festival stands at a crossroads, with costs for performers soaring and many younger acts staying away. But it still offers comics a boot camp like no otherAt the last Edinburgh fringe BC (before Covid), more than 3m tickets were sold for 3,841 show…

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Jerry Sadowitz hits back after show cancelled: ‘My act is being cheapened’

Comedian says his show ‘is what it is, for those who enjoy it,’ after complaints at Edinburgh fringeThe comedian Jerry Sadowitz has hit back at Edinburgh fringe promoters who cancelled one of his shows, accusing them of “cheapening and simplifying” his…

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‘You have to be 100 times funnier in Danish’: the pitfalls and pleasures of taking comedy across borders

Just because a joke works in one country or language doesn’t mean it will in another. Globetrotting standups talk about acts that have bombed – and the changes that saved themWhen Yuriko Kotani moved to the UK, she was confounded by our railway service…

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‘Sketch will never die!’: Edinburgh fringe super troupes Tarot, Sheeps and Britney

It’s a form of comedy that has fallen out of favour with TV, but a trio of fun acts are keeping the sketch flame aliveOne of the pleasures of the fringe is checking in with standups as they first emerge, then break through, then revisit as household na…

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Snort review – Rose Matafeo mucks in with merry improv team

Pleasance Courtyard, EdinburghA gang of New Zealand comics and their very special guests become Elvis impersonators, hobbits and chimney sweeps in a fun fringe nightGreat was the excitement on the festival’s opening weekend when Phoebe Waller-Bridge – …

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We Were Promised Honey! review – glimpses into uncertain futures

Roundabout at Summerhall, Edinburgh Sam Ward takes hints from his audience to imagine how their lives could go from here, in a bittersweet contemplation of fateThere is a joke in Waiting for Godot that comes after a rare moment of action. “That passed …

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Yippee Ki Yay review – Die Hard, starring a knackered dad in a vest

Gilded Balloon, Edinburgh The Bruce Willis action film has had a big impact on superfan Richard Marsh. He retells the story in rhyme, with his finger for a gunRichard Marsh has clearly seen Die Hard more times than he’s had Christmas dinners. He’s here…

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