Reviews & features: Brian Donaldson
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John Conway - The New Conway Dimension
Small and daft is the order of the day in Conway's semi-anarchic routines
If you find yourself tiring of the slick, professional, often identikit comedians in town, you should cop a load of Australia’s John Conway. With laptop-wielding sidekick Michael Burke trying his utmost to keep proceedings reasonably on track, Conway…
Gareth Morinan
19 Aug 2012Slim pickings amid a frenzy of facts
Quite a busy boy is Gareth Morinan given that he has seven different shows at the Fringe including political debates, a bit of improv and spoken word events in which he speaks out about his opinions on David Cameron and Ricky Gervais (he’s not a fan of…
Trevor Noah: The Racist
Identity crisis makes for hilarious comedy
It takes a particular kind of individual to get up on stage and open their soul to a room of strangers in order to achieve ratification for their existence. Part of that drive might come from the oft-cited routes about having learned to use humour to…
Nish Kumar - Who Is Nish Kumar?
An astute and positive debut from a comic with an infectious love of words
Nish Kumar has been kicking around the Fringe for a few years on various projects (most notably alongside Tom Neenan in Gentlemen of Leisure), but this superb hour marks an astute solo debut. Biding time before launching himself as an Edinburgh stand-up…
Daniel Simonsen: Champions
11 Aug 2012Warm comedic chat about dentistry and weather
He may claim to have learned English from Ali G, but Daniel Simonsen’s grasp on his new language and its comedic possibilities are solid. The young Norwegian kicks off this warm, serviceable show behind the curtain, building up a low-fi sense of…
Beard
11 Aug 2012Promising debut from ‘young upstarts’ Rosa Robson and Matilda Wnek
Cambridge just keeps on churning the comedy talent out. Rosa Robson is a Pembroke Player (former participants include messrs Idle, Oddie and Cook) while Matilda Wnek is a Footlights ‘general member’. Together they are Beard, a fuzzy, comforting…
Jack Jerome's Journey of Life
11 Aug 2012Energetic but ill-fated character
Some comedy creations are just too successful for anyone to even attempt a retread. There will never be another Pub Landlord thanks to Al Murray’s world domination of that character type. In Edinburgh Fringe terms, anyone who comes along with a…
Mark Thomas: Bravo Figaro!
An operatic voyage around his father
The very least you would expect from a show about a son arranging for an opera to be performed in his dying father’s living room is to be moved. And in Bravo Figaro!, Mark Thomas achieves that on at least two occasions, but in surprising ways and at…
Q&A: Kirsty Gunn speaks about new book before 2012 Edinburgh Book Festival
The New Zealand born author talks about her new novel The Big Music
In her latest novel, Kirsty Gunn writes of a dying man trying to define his life through a new musical composition. Here she takes on our Q&A Give us five words to describe The Big Music? Family. Landscape. Secrets. A world. Which author…
Irvine Welsh comes to 2012 Edinburgh Book Festival with Trainspotting prequel Skagboys
The Scottish author jogs back into the past with Begbie and co
While us Scots haven’t got the best reputation for putting fitness and health at the top of our to-do lists, Irvine Welsh is doing his bit for the image of his nation in further-off climes. Now mainly based in the US, he has had to knock…
Diane Spencer: Exquisite Bad Taste
Rude and crude, but is it that good?
Diane Spencer is a very rude comic. We know that because she tells us she’s rude, calls her show Exquisite Bad Taste and backs it all up by launching into the most scatological opening 10 minutes seen on the Fringe since, well, probably her debut last…
Alfie Brown: Soul for Sale
Saving his soul and salvaging comedy in one fell swoop
In one thought-provoking hour, 25-year-old Alfie Brown singlehandedly reminded the Fringe that there’s more to the comedy world than profits piling up on the backs of homogenised Roadshow-rabid joke-automatons. It’s rather kneejerk and easy these days…
Des Clarke
Solid stories from mercurial comedian
Not for the first time have the words, ‘this is the weirdest gig I’ve ever done’, come out of an exasperated comedian’s mouth. But with the ever-enthusiastic and chirpy Des Clarke, you feel inclined to believe what he says. On reading that his new…
McNeil and Pamphilon
An intriguing sci-fi twist distracts from their true gift
With a show entitled Addicted to Danger!, Steve McNeil and Sam Pamphilon made a real splash at the 2010 Fringe with a series of dark and inventive sketches, interspersed with some snappy banter. Last year the pair were in consolidation mode but this…
And Now for a Nice Evening With Wallan
How to light up a room with surreal banter
Walking into the venue, one question burns deep: who, what, where and possibly when is Wallan? After 50 minutes in the company of Lou Sanders, you will leave absolutely none the wiser about Wallan, but resting assured that the young comedian is quite…
Will Marsh's Ruination
Flawed but fearless dissection of the absurd
Britain is in a right old pickle and Will Marsh’s duty is to remind us how just bad things have got. For instance, there’s the problem with men being a bit dim and wholly unfaithful, what to do with having an awful regional accent (Marsh is an…
Billy the Mime
Surprisingly tender silent comedy show from the boundary-pushing Aristocrat
Billy the Mime came to Edinburgh with a reputation for smashing barriers of taste with his clever silent work on the likes of The Aristocrats movie. The reputation he may well leave with is as an accomplished artist fully on the side of the vulnerable…
Hennessy & Friends: A History of Violence
Displeasure turns to dynamic sketch doings
For two whole sketches and a bit, this looked like being one of those long Fringe hours when only your internal battle against the heat of a small room is likely to keep you amused. After the simple displeasures of Hennessy & Friends’ opening passages…
Eddie Pepitone's Bloodbath
High-energy, self-heckling anti-comedy from New York
Allow yourself to imagine, if you dare, Ed Aczel having his levels of energy cranked up by, say, 716% and being forced to talk in an even-paced New York accent. You’re now sort-of on the way to getting a sense of a night out with Eddie Pepitone. Or to…
The Ginge, the Geordie and the Geek
Disappointing sketch comedy from the much vaunted trio
With early endorsements from Johnny Vegas and Catherine Tate ringing in their ears, the three Gs have developed a hefty following. With the sell-out signs already being slapped up for their twice-daily appearances, they clearly have it made. From where…
Mark Watson: The Information
Another top show from the pointedly non-Welsh Fringe veteran
Ever since making his breakthrough on the Fringe in the mid-Noughties, Mark Watson’s ethos has remained constant: deliver solid, frequently hilarious stand-up amid an audience environment in which things can kick off at any moment. The more offbeat a…
The best of comedy at the 2012 Edinburgh Festival Fringe
Dylan Moran, Tim Key, Russell Kane, Jimmy Carr amongst stars
Dylan Moran The first of three winners on this list of the big Edinburgh comedy award in its various guises shows that he’s no less grumpy on stage now as he was when he scooped the Perrier back in 1996. Edinburgh Playhouse, 0844 871 3014, 15, 23 Aug…
Top 5 books and their authors coming to 2012 Edinburgh International Book Festival
Michael Palin, Simon Callow, Paddy Ashdown, Gordon Brown and more
Michael Palin It’s a whole quarter of a century since the former Python took his place at the Book Festival, but you have to say he’s seen quite a lot of the world in the interim period. His next book and TV travel show is about Brazil, but he’s here…
Q&A: Geoff Dyer on new book Zona at 2012 Edinburgh International Book Festival
Dyer sets out to unlock Andrew Takovsky's Stalker in new book
Give us five words to describe Zona? My thoughts on Tarkovsky’s film Stalker [Ed: OK, that’s six, but we’ll let Geoff off]. Which author should be more famous than they are now? John Jeremiah Sullivan who wrote Pulphead. He is a great stylist and…
Barry Fantoni’s Top 5 Detectives
The crime author lists his favourite fictional crime-solvers
Philip Marlowe Marlowe is everything the genre demands.The Bay City PI is sardonic, laidback and self-deprecating. His creator, Raymond Chandler, is, in my book, not only the greatest crime writer of all, he is one of the greatest writers, period. A…


