Janey review - fitting punchline for a contentious comedian

RIP JANEY GODLEY A fitting punchline for a contentious comedian

A rounded portrait of the Scot who told Trump to go home

The Glaswegian comedian Janey Godley, the woman who put the punch in punchline, has what she would call a “mooth” on her. It delivers pith and grit and lots of short words needing asterisks. Though possibly not for much longer, as she is in the throes of ovarian cancer.

Catherine Bohart, Soho Theatre review - girlfriends, gossip and gay parenthood

★★★★ CATHERINE BOHART, SOHO THEATRE Girlfriends, gossip and gay parenthood

Full-throttle show from Irish comic

Catherine Bohart opens by telling us that we're seeing her at the beginning of a long tour – before her energy flags, she says. It's difficult to believe, however, that the Irishwoman ever performs at anything less than full throttle, and so it proves here with Again, With Feelings, a show about where her life is at the moment.

Miles Jupp, Cambridge Arts Theatre review - life's vicissitudes turned into laughs

★★★★★ MILES JUPP, CAMBRIDGE ARTS THEATRE Life's vicissitudes turned into laughs

Finding the funny in medical emergency

It takes a talented comic to turn a horrible life experience into comedy, but Miles Jupp is nothing if not talented. Add in a bit of self-depreciation, a smidgen of philosophical musing and a dollop of ruderies about bodily functions and you have On I Bang, which charts the comic's diagnosis with – and, thankfully, recovery from – a benign brain tumour.

Andy Parsons, Touring review - reasons to be cheerful...

★★★★ ANDY PARSONS, TOURING Reasons to be cheerful...

...Even if the country's falling apart

In the middle of another age of austerity, a climate crisis and seemingly intractable international conflicts, it's cheering that a comic should tour with a show called Bafflingly Optimistic. Even more so when that comedian is Andy Parsons, whose sardonic humour – much of it about the British and Britishness – could never be described as rose-tinted.

Paul Foot, Soho Theatre review - how to discover the meaning of life

★★★ PAUL FOOT, SOHO THEATRE Personal show from the absurdist comic

Personal show from the absurdist comic

It's probably fair to say that Paul Foot is an acquired taste for some; his absurdist, poetic comedy isn't for everyone but he has built a strong and loyal following without the help of television exposure. And now in Dissolve, which debuted at the 2023 Edinburgh Fringe, his comedy takes a more personal turn as he describes the mental health problems that have dogged him for decades.

Jessica Fostekew, Soho Theatre review - age is just a number

Landmark birthday prompts some musings

Jessica Fostekew is ageing fast. Actually, she's not, but having recently reached 40 she says that's how she feels. And for an hour she describes to us the signs, from despising litterbugs to gaining a political viewpoint that may not chime with her peers.

Tatty Macleod, Soho Theatre review - cross-Channel relations

★★★ TATTY MACLEOD, SOHO THEATRE Cross-Channel relations

Entertaining debut from TikTok star who grew up England and France

Tatty Macleod, whose debut show is about the differences between the French and the English, has a confession to make: she's not French. She not even half English/half French, despite having lived her life between the two countries. But she's definitely bilingual and, as befits having a foot in both cultures, is well placed to compare her dual countrymen and women.

Best of 2023: Comedy

BEST OF 2023: COMEDY Comebacks, emotional journeys and assured debuts

Comebacks, emotional journeys and assured debuts

From Covid-delayed dates (yes, that's still a thing) to emotional comebacks and assured debuts, 2023 had much to offer.