John Kearns review – a toothy, tragicomic delight

Soho theatre, LondonKearns delivers a day-in-the-drab-life of a man with dreams, toting suburban existentialism in a style all his ownTime was, I’d have bet my house against Count Arthur Strong finding a mainstream audience. He seemed so niche – which …

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I saw Jonathan Miller in Beyond the Fringe – and I’m still dazzled

The Guardian’s theatre critic was at the sketch group’s first show in 1960. It was the beginning of a friendship … and a satire boom that changed the worldMy first sighting of Jonathan Miller was at the Lyceum theatre in Edinburgh in August 1960. I was…

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‘There’s always a spot for the next weirdo’: inside Second City’s comedy HQ

Chicago’s pioneering club – where comics from John Belushi to Tina Fey learned their craft – is 60 years old. We crash an improv class in search of its secretsIn the fashionable Old Town district of Chicago, I am making mooing noises and performing dee…

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Ardal O’Hanlon review – shrugging off the ghost of Father Dougal

Brighton DomeIn an endearing but gentle show, the comedian tries to leave his Father Ted alter ego behindFather Dougal casts a long shadow, Ardal O’Hanlon laments at the start of his touring show. But it’s clear that the dopey sitcom alter ego is more …

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Jack Whitehall review – puerile, inauthentic and by-numbers jokes

O2 Arena, LondonThe comic, who doesn’t seem to have any interest in people or the world, puts on a weak show with anecdotes that ring untrueIt’s not an auspicious start to Jack Whitehall’s show when he opens with a crude mime about hard, soft and “thum…

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Gary Delaney: ‘The Beach Boys were driving around Solihull in tanks trying to kill me’

The standup and writer on the things that make him laugh the mostVictoria Wood and Julie Walters: The Waitress sketch. The simplicity of it is amazing. One great idea, one great performer and the rest sorts itself out. Perfect. Continue reading…

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Congratulations, you played yourself: comics who fictionalise their lives

Larry David took the role of “Larry David” onscreen. But how close are such characters to real life? Three comics starring as versions of themselves reveal where they draw the lineFans of the Canadian standup Mae Martin could probably tell you a lot ab…

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Rob Beckett review – class-based laughs from a cheeky chappie

Fairfield Halls, LondonThe perky comic provides plenty of material and eye-rolling at how the other half live but some of the jokes flatlineSome marry for love, some for money, and some – you would be forgiven for thinking – for reliable standup materi…

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I am haunted by the woman who piped up: ‘Can’t you just do your old stuff?’ | Romesh Ranganathan

Starting a new tour is difficult, and this time my pre-show anxiety has been the worst everI am on tour right now, and I have been looking forward to being on the road for the longest time. The decision to tour was made a year and a half ago, and I hav…

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Fern Brady: Power and Chaos review – a scattergun blast of cynicism

Soho theatre, LondonThe Scottish comic hits some acerbic highs with an oddly episodic set that hops from politics to porn to parenthood ‘Scary. Brutal. Forthright.” That’s how Fern Brady finds herself described, much to her surprise. She can certainly …

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