Edinburgh Fringe 2023 review: Ahir Shah

Deserved winner of prestigious award

Ahir Shah, Monkey Barrel

Ahir Shah is a fast talker, but then in Ends – which deservedly won best show in the Edinburgh Comedy Awards – he has a lot to say. It's a show about multiculturalism, family, identity, fitting in, and encompasses modern history on two continents, so he has a lot to pack in.

He starts, more prosaically, by talking about how he got into this comedy lark because, as three generations of his family sat down together to watch Goodness Gracious Me in 1998, it was the first time he had heard his grandparents properly laugh out loud.

Shah's family – specifically his late maternal grandfather – loom large in this show, as he recounts his nanaji's progress from India in 1964, leaving his wife and three children back home until he could afford to send for them, to Bradford and then later to Wembley in London.

So Shah ponders the “generational sacrifice” made by his grandfather and how he might view the UK today. And, as ever, the comic melds the political and personal to shine a light on how society changes – even if we have a lot further to go on race and migration. So while his grandfather faced poverty and discrimination, Shah went to Cambridge and is successful in a job he loves.

Not as successful as the current UK Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak, though – another person of Indian Hindu descent whose parents came to the UK from East Africa at about the same time as Shah's grandparents migrated. (“Politically, I’m furious,” he says of the Tory PM. “Racially, thrilled.”) Shah cleverly interweaves details of the two family's stories to illuminate how our colonial history is embedded in our everyday lives.

Some of the subject matter may make Ends sound a little serious. It is when it needs to be – making the Amritsar massacre funny would, should, be beyond most comics – but Shah drops in joke bombs to lighten the mood and link some otherwise disparate passages. So we learn what his name means in Arabic – leading to a neat callback later – how Latin saved him from a beating and of his impending marriage to a civil servant. “I'm in it for the pension,” he deadpans.

It is a meticulously crafted show, with linguistic leitmotifs throughout, building to a tender finale.

Add comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
As ever, the comic melds the political and personal

rating

4

share this article

more comedy

Support our GoFundMe appeal
Nick Mohammed gives his creation's origin story
Warm and witty take on finding contentment
Taskmaster's first tour in seven years is a joy
Observations on what it is to be a bloke today
The personal and political collide
Utterly daft mix of new material and favourite old characters
The ventriloquist-comedian's improvised hour-long outing is skilful and fabulously entertaining