Reviews & features: Sam Healy
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James Dowdeswell
23 Aug 2010Mediocre material and rather uneasy delivery
You want to like him, you really do. And in another context maybe this gentle show about Dowdeswell’s discovery that his great-grandfather worked with Charlie Chaplin would pass muster. Alas, his mediocre material and rather uneasy delivery are roundly…
WitTank
20 Aug 2010High-octane/high-brow character comedy
Now whittled down to a lean and confident trio, WitTank’s evolution into a formidable sketch troupe is arguably complete. Performances are accomplished without being distant or over-rehearsed. Pacing is fluid yet relentless. Material is frequently…
Ian D Montfort
16 Aug 2010Some great shambolics and ad-libbing
This promising new character from Tom Binns (creator of hospital DJ Ivan Brackenbury) is a Sunderland ‘actual psychic’ who can talk to dead celebrities as well as deceased aunties. Some great shambolics and ad-libbing are let down a bit by occasionally…
The Boy With Tape On His Face
12 Aug 2010A masterclass of mime
The blunt, artless title sets the tone. Kiwi comedian Sam Wills is indeed gagged by gaffer tape, for the whole hour. Not a word is spoken. And what might have fallen flat, as the indulgent experiment of lopping a supposedly essential element off an…
Matt Green
24 Aug 2009Hard to fault any specific aspect of his act
Green's material is fine. His delivery is fine. It's hard to fault any specific aspect of his act. Yet the fine whole flatly refuses to be more than its parts' sum. Eagerness to please moves him to defang his more interesting, darker stuff with giggles…
Ross Lee
24 Aug 2009Sometimes entertaining but mostly depressing
A fame junkie since his gauche childhood in Leeds, Lee presents a video documentary of his own obsessive attempts to be on TV, culminating in a stint as a Nickelodeon UK host. His evident monomaniacal lust for the merest crust of renown is sometimes…
Danielle Ward
23 Aug 2009Self-aware yet distinctive act
Danielle Ward is not, it emerges quickly, your common or garden aide-mémoire comic, reheating pre-cooked observations and serving them on a Styrofoam plate of uninvested playing-at-caring. Her thematic inventiveness is evident from the first skit, a…
Tom Deacon
20 Aug 2009Fairly ordinary romp through an indecisive mind
The choice of Kasabian’s ‘Fire’ as the walk-on music for Tom Deacon’s show is telling. It establishes a checklist of expectations which go utterly unchallenged during the subsequent hour of serviceable, unremarkable, rut-deepening comedy. Young Deacon…
Unsupervised Detention
19 Aug 2009Tight sketch comedy by gifted young players
Tight sketch comedy by gifted young players and, though some scenes suffer from a too-actorly approach, there are more hits than misses and evidence of a genuine facility with the surreal. The introductory premise of bored schoolkids in detention…
Wil Hodgson
18 Aug 2009The nicest pink-haired ex-punk on earth
In his sixth visit to the Fringe, the nicest pink-haired ex-punk on earth entertains with tales from his chiaroscuro existence in Chippenham. Stories of his characterful drinking buddies, encounters with stripling bigots and bittersweet nostalgia are…
The Bodega Brothers
18 Aug 2009Laconic, self-deprecating and funny
Comparisons with a certain Kiwi folk-parody duo are inevitable. Rob Castell and Tom Sadler play acoustic guitars and sing comedy songs. They do so very well. Their stage banter is laconic, self-deprecating and funny. Bret and Jemaine might not be…
Rudi Lickwood
18 Aug 2009Old-fashioned delivery and desperately prosaic observations
It’s not a good sign when a wilfully confrontational show comes off as bland and pedestrian. Lickwood has some funny lines and makes a few good points, but his fatally old-fashioned delivery and desperately prosaic observations on Britain’s ethnic…
Glenn Wool
18 Aug 2009Has never been funnier or more lustily discombobulated
This disreputable Canadian soapboxer is truly in the ascendant. A perfectly realised tragicomic stage persona (or maybe Glenn is just being Glenn), great lines, heartfelt rage and a skewed but intimate audience rapport make for a rousing, boisterous…
Mould & Arrowsmith
18 Aug 2009Playful and ingeniously funny
Beyond nerdy, yet playful and ingeniously funny, Steve Mould and Gemma Arrowsmith’s mock-highbrow revue is like a Centre Georges Pompidou of comedy: all exposed plumbing, postmodern form-as-content and paradox fetishism. Hauling a wide load of…
Abracadabra: German Humour Goes Global
18 Aug 2009Enjoyable, non-ironically zany knees-up
Germany’s best and, by a remarkable coincidence, only international English-language stand-up duo delivers another enjoyable, non-ironically zany knees-up for us Tommies. Henning Wehn is a born comedian even in his second tongue; Otto Kuhnle provides…
The Dark Party
16 Aug 2009Gothic sideshow for the Top Gear set
Unsure of whether it wants to be physical comedy, gross-out sideshow or gothic visual poetry, this unique hour just about delivers on all three fronts. Shep Huntly, Patrick Bath and Gordo Gamsby (collectively The Dirty Brothers) are dressed in…
Aindrias de Staic - The Summer I Did The Leaving
14 Aug 2009For fiddle-fanciers and Hibernophiles only
The Summer I Did The Leaving recalls a seminal season in the youth of fiddler, raconteur and all-round rudderless hippie Aindrias de Staic (the Leaving Certificate is the Irish equivalent of the Scottish Highers). Through song and story he revisits…
Keith Farnan
11 Aug 2009A natural comedic talent
Freshly bearded and with a polished hour of new material on racism, intolerance and the literal luck of the Irish, Farnan is in firm control of his pacy, compassionate show. His natural charm bridges the occasional dry spell, and the overall impression…
Jojo Sutherland
11 Aug 2009An autobiographical tale of a not very interesting life
Sutherland is a frank middle-aged woman who has led a more interesting life than most. Sadly she seems to think that this plus a few threadbare jokes are enough to carry her autobiographical show. They’re not. Unless your thing is sitting in on a group…
Sarah Millican
8 Aug 2009Facing up to gender politics and the elements
The unflappable Geordie lass looks a bit intimidating on the Mr Muscle-themed poster for her new show, but a minute in her company reassures us that the butch press campaign is just skylarking. Last year’s if.comedy Best Newcomer is in flying form, with…
Fool Koller
Wet feral fun from Dutch pratfaller
The ambit of what has not yet been done shrinks ever smaller. Pity the poor alternative comedians, clutching at auxiliary originalities as the pool of unprecedented material ebbs to nothing: slicker, quicker jokes, more postmodernism, cynicism…
Goodbye Goodbye
21 Aug 2008Strappingly acted, cleverly written and innovatively staged, this intriguing narrative sketch show is let down by its indecision. At times it's content with its many funny lines and characters, at others it seems to lust vainly after an earnest…
Newsrevue
Satire that fails to hit the target
Consisting entirely of up-to-the-minute topical satire skits, this all-singing, all-dancing soapbox couldn't be more contemporary. Yet there's something desperately antiquated about it, something broad and music hall. In theory this is no bad thing.
David O'Doherty
Finding gold in the everyday dirt
By the end of his self-introduction, before he's even reached the stage, David O'Doherty has his audience braying like donkeys. The Dublin comic has done so many consistently enjoyable Fringe shows that getting laughs must be like shooting fish in a…
Johnny Candon
14 Aug 2008A lean, likeable and sporadically funny show that rises to the challenge set by its timeslot. Dubliner Candon riffs on themes of his adoption, fatherhood and arachnophobia with wit and easy charm. He's one of those sweet-talkers who can say 'fuck' to a…




