Nick Helm, Touring review - brash comic shows his vulnerable side

Matters of the heart and heavy metal

Comedy is strange old thing; it’s supposed to be funny ha-ha, but the laughs can often come from a dark place, as evidenced by Nick Helm’s latest show (which I saw at the Arts Depot in London). His mental health has been a backdrop to previous show, but No One Gets Out Alive is his most personal yet as he references the end of an important relationship some years ago, and charts how his television breakthrough proved to be a false dawn in his career.

Kerry Godliman, G-Live review - she's livid but delivers the laughs

Perimenopause provides rich seam of gags

Kerry Godliman is livid, she tells us. Spider webs catching in her hair, the state of the world, her teenage children; you name it, they – and much, much more – irritate her. But she’s hoping it’s a temporary state, as she puts her current maelstrom of emotions down to the fact that she’s going through the perimenopause. And while it may not be a barrel of laughs for her, it provides plenty in Bandwidth.

Edinburgh Fringe 2025 reviews - Cat Cohen / Lachlan Werner / KC Shornima

Defying a health scare; a surreal invention & a distinctive new voice

Cat Cohen, Pleasance Courtyard

In Broad Strokes Cat Cohen paints a fascinating picture of events leading up to the stroke that could have killed her. Thankfully three years on she is now fully recovered – and from near tragedy comes this superb show.

Edinburgh Fringe 2025 reviews - Emmanuel Sonubi / Joz Norris

A second chance at life & a fantastical tale about artistic endeavour

Emmanuel Sonubi, Pleasance Courtyard

This show – Life After Near Death – is not about dying, it is about living, Emmanuel Sonubi tells us. Well, actually it’s about both, as in his case he nearly died of heart failure but, thankfully here he is.

Edinburgh Fringe 2025 reviews - Lily Blumkin / Shamik Chakrabarti

A life in several characters & a Mumbai shaggy-dog story

Lily Blumkin, Gilded Balloon @ Patter House ★★★ 

Lily Blumkin has always planned to be a big-time comic, she tells us. So when her parents downsized and asked her to clear out her childhood bedroom, she went through her stuff – photographs, toys and other oddities – to curate the future museum dedicated to her life and work.

Edinburgh Fringe 2025 reviews - Desiree Burch / Andy Parsons

The delights of perimenopause & pertinent political comedy

Desiree Burch, Monkey Barrel ★★★★

Desiree Burch is a bundle of energy as she comes on stage and gives us a warning about the subterranean venue she’s in. It’ll get hot, the Taskmaster favourite tells us – but maybe that’s just her as she going through the perimenopause, and in The Golden Wrath she’s going to tell us all about it.

Edinburgh Fringe 2025 reviews - Lily Phillips / Ayoade Bamgboye

Giving birth laid bare & a memorable debut

Lily Phillips, Monkey Barrel ★★★★

Lily Phillips is keen to tell us at the top of her show that she’s not that Lily Phillips. There’s no OnlyFans content in Crying but, dealing as it does with her experience of having a baby, it’s graphic in a different way. So strap in.

Edinburgh Fringe 2025 reviews - Rob Auton / Saaniya Abbas

A motivational speaker's tale; one woman’s vision of Hell

Rob Auton, Assembly Roxy  

The stage is littered with 30-odd large white cards bearing words such as “love”, “believe” and “push”. Rob Auton comes on stage and tells us he’s CAN, a former motivational speaker, and in the following 60 minutes of CAN (An Hour-Long Story) we hear his tale.