Edinburgh Fringe: Sarah Kendall/Christian O'Connell

FIRST REVIEWS FROM EDINBURGH FRINGE Sarah Kendall, Christian O'Connell

First reviews from the Fringe of 2014

Comics rarely start a show by referencing the ending of a previous one, but Sarah Kendall has first to do a bit of housekeeping to explain the genesis of Touchdown. The payoff for her last show was her dropping the c-bomb on her high-school gym teacher, Coach Harris, but when her mother attended a gig she said to her daughter: “It didn’t quite happen like that, though, did it?”

Aisling Bea, Soho Theatre

AISLING BEA, SOHO THEATRE Young Irish comic with a delightfully daft show

Young Irish comic with a delightfully daft show

Young Irish actress and comic Aisling Bea made a tremendous debut with C'est la Bea at last year's Edinburgh Fringe, where she was deservedly nominated for best newcomer in the Foster's Edinburgh Comedy Awards. Now she is performing a short run at the Soho Theatre and, on second view, it's still a joyously funny show.

Bo Burnham, Touring

BO BURNHAM, TOURING Immensely talented former teen sensation back in the UK. Catch him

Former teenage sensation makes a thrilling return to UK

Massachusetts-born Bo Burnham first performed in the UK at the 2010 Edinburgh Fringe. The then teenage prodigy, who had come to fame as a YouTube sensation, took the festival by storm and was given the Edinburgh Comedy Awards' panel prize. He hasn't performed here again until this year's Fringe, when his second stage show, What, sold out in a matter of minutes and was again garlanded with rave reviews.

Edinburgh 2013: Tig Notaro/Joe Lycett

EDINBURGH FRINGE ALMOST OVER Catch laidback American humour and feelgood British camp while you can

Laidback American humour and feelgood British camp

Tig Notaro, Gilded Balloon ****


I've been busy. I've been growing my hair out.” Not the the most animated start to an hour of comedy, but that's how American Tig Notaro begins Boyish-Girl Interrupted, one of the most original 60 minutes I've seen at the Fringe, and certainly the most laidback.

Edinburgh 2013: Glenn Wool/ Gary Delaney/ Carl Donnelly

EDINBURGH 2013: GLENN WOOL / GARY DELANEY / CARL DONNELLY Surreal showboating, an old-fashioned one-liner specialist, and comedy as therapy

Surreal showboating, an old-fashioned one-liner specialist, and comedy as therapy

Glenn Wool, Assembly George Square ****

There are some comics who can always be relied upon to create engaging and funny shows, and the Canadian Glenn Wool is one of them. His comedy appears to be straightforward stand-up – anecdotes are interspersed with one-liners and puns, with occasional interaction with the audience, to create a small world of his own, with more than a touch of the surreal about it.

Edinburgh 2013: Carey Marx/ Sam Lloyd: Fully Committed/ Baconface

EDINBURGH 2013: CAREY MARX/ SAM LLOYD: FULLY COMMITTED/ BACONFACE Making a heart attack funny, a masterclass in comic acting and Stewart Lee having fun

Making a heart attack funny, a masterclass in comic acting and Stewart Lee having fun

Carey Marx, Gilded Balloon ****

 

Carey Marx couldn't come to the Fringe last year, because of the small matter of having a heart attack. But, looking on the bright side, the experience has given him his new show, Intensive Carey, in which the comic tells his story without a trace of self-pity and with a keen sense of the absurd.

Edinburgh 2013: Gyles Brandreth/ Airnadette/ Benny Boot

Anecdotes with aplomb, a French view of rock'n'roll and how to start a pizza war

Gyles Brandreth, Pleasance Courtyard ***


This is an agreeable hour of theatre and political anecdotes that former MP and now BBC presenter Gyles Brandreth tells with great aplomb. He drops a lot of names, but he's very good mimic – John Gielgud, Frank Sinatra, Prince Charles and others make an appearance – and the stories (whether wholly true or not) are very funny.

Edinburgh 2013: Ban This Filth!

EDINBURGH 2013: BAN THIS FILTH! The story of one man's feminist awakening, with help from a controversial source

The story of one man's feminist awakening, with help from a controversial source

If the past week or so has proven anything, it’s that feminism in 2013 has lost none of its power to inspire, anger and enthrall. Given the nature of the abuse meted out to those who raise their voices above the chorus, for Alan Bissett to turn his own feminist awakening into an hour-long show is brave, foolish or some combination of the two. But it’s not as if the author and playwright wasn’t prepared: long before Ban This Filth! was ready for an audience its central thread faced the toughest audience of all - Twitter.