After Hours Comedy

Assembly Roxy (Venue 133)

15, 22 & 29 August

11pm

£14 (conc £12.50)

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Late night comedy showcases can be hit or miss in the Fringe.  Poor line-ups and boozed up audiences can ruin what should be a chance for fringe comedians to put on an excellent mini-set and entice you to go and see their full length show in all its glory. I am relieved to say that they quality of both the comics and audience was of a very high standard and certainly enticed me to go to see the artists solo shows. This night was ably compered by Gordon Southern, a likable cheeky chappy with a quick witted mind.  He first introduced Tamar Broadbent whose comedy song routine about the Walk of Shame kicks us off nicely.

We are then treated to Edinburgh’s own ex-GP turned comic, Paul Sinha, his use of the element in surprise in his set won him many laughs as he sprayed gags out quickfire stylee. The self-described Huggy Bear of Asians really got the crowd going.  Great jokes and a cracker about how the British aren’t racist and we treat everyone as equals “When it’s your round it’s your fucking round whether you are black, white, gay straight.”  True dat.

3rd up was Patrick Monahan, who cuddled his way through the audience before starting his material.  He continued the mirth with a good sketch about post club female urination which seemed to strike a chord with the ladies.  His use of the audience was great as well and added much to his set.  Who knew Aphex Twin was watching?!

A fine night was rounded off by the hilarious Marcus Birdman.  I had had an eye on his show, Grimm Realities in the Free Fringe and this has further encouraged me to go.  Marcus set tonight paints with a broad brush covering strokes (he’s had one), his job as a teacher, and forgetting there’s a cock in your arse.  Effortlessly watchable, homeward bound we went, full of the giggles.

Reviewer David McCaramba

Morgan Berry – Watership Down

The Banshee Labyrinth

Aug 9 – 30 (all except Monday’s)

18:00

FREE

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So outlandish you have to laugh. You can try and stop yourself and wonder how something so bizarre can be funny, or, even more weirdly, how his advice can be right, but it just is. Its so absurd and so unexpected it’s hilarious.

Morgan Berry is Bafrican – born in Barnsley, raised in Africa. And if it couldn’t get any more random he is a pet bereavement counsellor specialising in Rabbit deaths! Prepare for impressions, farcical stories, obituaries, nonsensical metaphors and a fabulously comical re-meet and greet. How Joe Rowntree keeps a straight face with this unconventional character I do not know.

The shows success relies on audience participation. After all what can a counsellor do without having people to counsel? Tambourine in hand Morgan Berry uses the most ludicrous examples and methods for his counselling but the final messages are spot on. There is a method to the madness. You may start out unconvinced but you will leave with some valuable counselling lessons – remember at the end of the day “it’s just prawns”!

Smart and strangely helpful, the whole show keeps you guessing, bemused and most importantly laughing. This is what the Edinburgh Fringe is all about. Genius free comedy. FOUR STARS

four-stars

Reviewer : Louise Mason 

ADRIENNE TRUSCOTT’S A ONE TRICK PONY

Gilded Balloon – Wine Bar

Aug 9 -17 

20:15

£10 – £14 

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Having not seen Adrienne Truscott’s award winning show “Asking for It,” I found that I was on the back foot. Going in to a comedy show blind but with a previous successful show being mentioned at several points, I spent much of the time thinking, I wonder what her first show was like? And can I see that please?

Sadly, this wasn’t Adrienne’s night. There was an air of impatience as an entire Snow Patrol song was played to open the show. Was that a technical glitch? Oh no, sorry it was irony, but at the beginning of a show? Such a start meant I was waiting to be impressed even more and the anti climax to a turbulent show was disappointing.

I could see the potential by the end but with technical glitches, fumbled jokes and forgotten material it was confusing, lacked flow and even a purpose. It seemed as though Adrienne was out to verify the show title and it wasn’t until the second half of the show that she really got into the swing of things. And even then she openly worried about whether she had time for the best bit. I understood and admired her thoughtfulness for the next act but I wanted to shout “we’ve come to see your show, give us the show”. Thankfully she did and it was worth it – who doesn’t want to see some female on male wrestling whilst singing to Alanis Morissette?

I was completely lost with some of the material but found some of it brilliant. Her observations on feminism, ironic racism and argument for abortion to be allowed beyond birth are funny and some of her stories, including once stealing pancakes from children, are great. She clearly feels comfortable with such material. That and her body which she exposes confidently. And why the hell not? But if you don’t want to see Adrienne’s “pussy” as she kicks her legs in a tiny minnie mouse esc dress, perhaps don’t sit on the front row. Equally if you don’t want to feel her boobs, the front row isn’t for you either.

Swigging on a can of Fosters with vigour, I wondered whether it would serve a purpose but it never transpired. It seemed like a prop to distract from awkward moments.

A negative about the venue for Adrienne’s performance, and it’s not just the pole in the centre of the room which she jokes has always been something she has aspired to in a venue(!), is that not everyone can see her properly. Particularly as at one point she goes into the splits; I found myself standing up to see what was going on.

Adrienne is incredibly likeable and the oversized gloves and plastic lips together with strategically placed hair pieces and unapologetic nudity are novel and original. She seems great fun and is clearly a talented woman. But sadly this was puzzling and lacked the edge that must have been present in her previous show. Perhaps as the nights go on it will improve to a degree and it won’t just be the mad ending that saves the show.   TWO STARS

two-stars

Reviewer : Louise Mason

Juliet Meyers – Through the Pigeonhole

Laughing Horse @ the Counting House – the Loft

Aug 8th – 30th (except 18th)

13:15

Free

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In a dark, packed out and rather sweaty loft, Juliet Meyers ran through the corridor shouting and “welcome to the stage….Juliet Meyers”. The anticipation was immediately taken up a notch and her energy continued to flow throughout. Her baggy black t-shirt with stars, galaxies and orange writing reminded me of Back to the Future and immediately made me think this woman is quirky, where will she take us? Her jokes were no different and we were constantly kept wondering how far she would push the next topic in her gag driven show about being an outsider.

What would a show about being an outsider be without jokes about religion, race, politics and feminism? Juliet uses her Jewish heritage and Iraqi Jew father to her advantage here and laughs at peoples narrow-mindedness. Relatable and original. She tackles pigeon holing and touchy subjects like the Scottish referendum with wit and good intentions. Even when she shocks you can’t help but smile and understand where she is coming from. Her chatty and expressive nature makes the audience feel at ease and fully involved. The audience are certainly not just there to watch this one, she wants to know us too.

Juliet’s observations about life and people who want to appear different or obscure are spot on. Laughs were in abundance. Her playful acting a joy to watch. Energy was certainly not lacking.  My only criticism would be her invisible child, a creation (the reason for which becomes clear) that is understandable. However, a couple of times the sudden use of the invisible child was lost on me slightly and seemingly the audience too. I am not sure she needed it. Otherwise, Juliet had a charm and jolly nature about her that made me want to go for a drink with her afterwards. A fun and entertaining way to spend an hour.

Juliet may even have the answer for how men have (apparently) become better at foreplay in the past 10 years! Let’s just say I will never look at a man and a computer the same way again. A pun that you repeat to everyone – now that’s worth seeing.

three-stars

Reviewer : Louise Mason

Gideon & Hubcap

Udderbelly, George Square

5th – 23rd Aug 2015,

10.55pm

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Gideon and Hubcap, life-long friends and self proclaimed “modern-day troubadours” lead their lives from one living-room to the next, literally – travelling between the homes of strangers, moving across states, and now continents, on the strength of recommendation and suggestion, on waves of goodwill, to play to gatherings of friends, and friends of friends, to anyone willing to open up their home for the night.  This is all wonderfully bohemian, and wildly romantic of course, but would the intimacy at the heart of it all translate amid the gray plastic seating and MDF walls of the Udderbelly’s “wee coo?”

Well, yes. Absolutely, yes. The atmosphere, by the time the hour was up, buzzed with camaraderie, the opportunities for audience interaction are charming, non-invasive, genuinely magical. No one is going to be picked on here, everyone is going to leave feeling -at least a bit- better about the world and their place in it.

The Gideon and Hubcap show is a soul-warming slice of what the pair call “stove-top folk.” They’re supremely talented, both instrumentally, lyrically, musically, vocally and were these songs just beautifully sung and played it would be enough, the harmonies are rich and drip like honey, they move smoothly from banjo to squeezebox to musical saw, keyboard, and more, each piece is engaging in an entirely different way. But there is so much more happening here. There are many laughs, of many kinds, visual puns, slapstick, observational humour, the sweet shock of genuine vulnerability, a song about BDSM so sweet you’d happily have them sing it to your granny. There is much that is self deferential, and a mirror is held gently but firmly to the audience too, with much needed pokes at first world “problems” we will all flinch to recognise having complained of. There is life-affirming stuff here, stuff that reminds you of the beauty of friendship, the pain and brilliance of love and perhaps most of the importance of kindness, all in a way that is a lot more genuinely moving and less cliché than that all sounds. If you want to make someone fall in love, take them to this show… it’ll happen. It might not be you they fall in love with though. FIVE STARS- would give it more if I could. Cannot recommend this show enough.

five-stars

Reviewer : Katie Craig

Dane Baptiste : Reasonable Doubts

Pleasance Courtyard – Beside

5th – 30th August

7.15pm

£10 – £13

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Settling in a darkened room as hip hop blares though the loudspeaker, we wait in anticipation of tonight’s preview act. In what seems like an instant, the spotlight is on, and Dane floods onto the stage, straight into a cascade of fast-paced punchy jokes, taking the audience along on a charismatic river of laughter.  His colourful, intelligent and quick witted humour addresses race stereotypes and cultural ignorance, as we are taken along on an interesting exploration of the concepts of faith-based systems.

Perhaps preview nerves succumb to a few weaker jokes at start but Dane very quickly warms up and relaxes effortlessly into the rest of his set. Attitudes, discrimination and the concept of penis poachers are addressed using some razor sharp wit, clever metaphors and discerning use of music to add energy and colour to his hilarious set.

Finishing off with his political observations on capitalism and war he makes clever and very poignant points which he mixes up with splashes of comic genius. It is without surprise this gentleman was Foster’s Edinburgh Comedy Award Best Newcomer nominee 2014 and The Independent’s Face To Watch 2015. Indeed, a provocative over thinker and charismatic social activist, Dane Baptiste is first-rate exceptional! FOUR STARS

four-stars

Reviewer : Teri Welsh

Chris Stokes : Altruism in Birds

Pleasance Courtyard – Attic

8th – 30th August

10.45pm

£7.50 – £9.50

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***

The room starts to fill up with apologetic latecomers, shuffling awkwardly past the incredibly cute, geeky guy standing before us in a rather fetching cardigan. This particular geek is Chris Stokes – a self-confessed introvert whose unfortunate circumstances have had him endure a failed marriage and a nervous breakdown in his all but 30 years. For an introvert, he certainly has a lot to say, and with effortless charm and laid back charisma he fires fast, punchy one-liners and amusing observations whilst destroying a whole host of social misconceptions along the way. Armed with a cheeky grin and endearing concerns – this is someone who considers a haircut as a conversation at knife point – he takes his audience on a poignant, poetic journey through a day in his life as he copes with his broken heart.

Priceless and offbeat, Chris is very easy to connect with and his audience engages with warmth and humour. It is clear though his intelligently constructed observations that he is very much taking his material from personal experience, which makes it all the more engaging. Having supported both Milton Jones and Pete Firman on tour, Chris’ is relaxed, warm and at ease. This highly gifted and talented young man will certainly smash the festival this year. FOUR STARS

****

four-stars

Reviewer : Teri Welsh

Yianni: Why Did the Chicken Cross the Line

Stand 2

5-30 August

15.40

£8

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I saw London-based Aussie Yianni Agisilaou near the end 2014 Fringe, with his excellent show Think Big – a comedic exercise in positive thinking and ambition.  Yianni was on the Free Fringe then and playing in a small venue with the aim of convincing the audience to return for his final show for which he had booked Edinburgh’s largest Fringe venue, The EICC (capacity 1200).  I never did find out how this went but his show was intelligent, funny and full of clever observation on human motivation and verve.  I wanted to see if his new material delivered that promising introduction.

His new show is in the rotunda room in Stand 2, capacity around 50 and today’s audience for this, his first preview show is 13. The show examines where the line is in comedy, how it got there and they dynamics of the line is influenced by myriad factors. The well written material guides us through this and laughs abound as we are sent up by the comedian who sucks us in and illustrates the nature of the beast that is context.  He postulates that any subject can be funny in the right context. Yianni adeptly walks the line with the balance of a Libran mountain goat as he elucidates the mantra “Don’t be a dick” in relation to where we draw the line of acceptable comedy and how we got to the censorial situation in the first place (another mantra: DIOR – Dickhead, Incident, Outrage, Rule).

He was inspired to write the show after being emailed by a venue informing him his performance couldn’t contain any references to rape, Lady Diana, or paedophilia. Cue jokes on all these subjects in a clever way giving credence to the idea that in comedy context is all.  His performance is littered with relevant tales of previous audience reaction, particularly funny is the fat man on his coffin-dodging cruise ship assignment – offering a member of the audience some education on geography with hilarious results – and losing his job in the process.

Yianni is slightly hindered by the fact that the venue hasn’t been set up fully yet and he is without the projections and slides which he used to great effect in 2014’s show (I’m assured this will be sorted by the venue forthwith).  This minor problem aside it was a very funny show.  He offers a coherent gag-laden examination of the relationship between comedian and the audience.  The spoof of the Fresh Prince theme at the end, if taken out of context would be the most offensive song you’ll here on The Fringe! If you like your comedians cerebral and full of wit then get down to The Stand pronto. FOUR STARS

four-stars

Reviewer David McCaramba

Brett Goldstein – Burning Man

Pleasance Courtyard – Underneath
8th – 31st August (except 17th)
21.30
£9.50 / £10 / £11
*
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 *

Brett is an true raconteur with a well-written, sharp, witty hour that topped off an excellent first day at The Fringe. The hour passed all too rapidly – Brett has had the audience in stitches for a solid hour. 

 Dave Macaramba

*

How could you explain Brett Goldstein to someone who doesn’t know who Brett Goldstien is?  Well, bearing in mind there are two sides to every story, I would go with; he has the comedic persona of all four Inbetweeners characters combined, but to look at, well, he’s hot. (Not that that is relevant or anything, but he is!). Regardless of whether festivals, drugs or wa*king is your thing, or not, Brett is refreshingly enlightening, modestly romantic and one of the golden comics whom can pull of self deprecation without making you cringe and pity him.
*
Brett is clearly an intelligent fellow, there is no doubt about that, but he speaks with superbly humble simplicity.  He connects with every member of the audience and by half way in, you can’t help but feel that you have enjoyed funny story’s told by him, for years, while sitting around with a pint and some hearty grub down at your local, with a few other close friends.  He is not familiar in a ‘Oh I’ve seen him on the TV!’ kind of way; he is more like a pair of old comfy socks that you find at the back of drawer and get rather excited about putting on again!
 *
*
His material touches upon socially and sexually controversial escapades, but in a way that you could totally take your Mum along to, despite Brett being terrified to invite his own dearest.  Maybe I am showing too much of my social background when I say this, but to be honest, I think even my granny would have been ending herself at this show! He balances the ridiculous and silly with the deep and profound and at one very significant and perhaps rather unexpected point, may even force you to swallow hard the lump in your throat and refrain from jumping all over him like a hippy to celebrate his personal ‘win’!
 *
Disarmingly honest, an endearing imagination and apparently, a massive… sense of humour.  This guy is brilliant even if you are sober. FOUR STARS
*
four-stars
*
Reviewer : Bobbi Mckenzie 

Richard Soames Does the Right Thing

The Wee Coo, Underbelly
Aug 6th – 18th, 20th – 31st
18:50 – 19:50
£8 – £10
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A funny, honest and heartfelt performance. Soames provides us with an enthusiastic and funny view of his life mishaps and moral compass. Through sharing his confessions, inner mind workings and youthful experiences of love his question to the audience throughout is “am I nice”? His acting and facial expressions are wonderful. Along with the laughs, the audience empathised with Soames. The “awwwws” from the audience at some of his less successful moments in life seemingly came as a surprise to Soames but added to how relatable and endearing his sketches are.

Soames uses music, cleverly pre recorded audio and mime to keep the show varied and interesting. His acting deserves to be mentioned as much as his comedy which kept the audience smiling. There were numerous and sometimes unexpected changes in tempo and style which made the show delightfully entertaining. At times the laugh was at Soames expense but then that is the point here. He scrutinises himself and his almost cringe worthy moral issues and life errors. He plays the nice guy so well, struggling to be cool and capable of dealing with awkward situations. Endearing, light hearted and fun.

One thing is for sure, he can try all he wants to be otherwise but Soames is a nice guy. Enjoyable entertainment with a cup of tea to start – now that at least is doing the right thing. FOUR STARS

four-stars

Reviewer : Louise Mason