Best of 2019: Comedy
My (mostly) highs and (a few) lows
It was a year in which we welcomed some big, big names back on stage, including Ben Elton, Clive Anderson and Jack Dee.
Adam Kay, Bloomsbury Theatre review - festive tales from the NHS coalface
Medic-turned-comic reads from his waspish memoir
Medic-turned-comic Adam Kay had been performing for some years before he wrote his 2016 Edinburgh Fringe show Fingering a Minor at the Piano. It had a personal addendum – about why he left medicine – and was a call to arms to save the NHS. It hit a nerve with audiences and in 2017 he published his waspish memoir, This Is Going to Hurt, which has been on bestseller lists ever since.
Andy Parsons, Stamford Corn Exchange review - politics and the art of persuasion
Cheering antidote to Brexit blues
Andy Parsons is a comic known to like a good old rant, particularly on a political issue. But in Healing the Nation he takes a calmer, more conversational approach as he tries to do what it says on the tin in a show that he fully expected to be performing after the UK left the EU – but more of Brexit later.
Jack Whitehall, O2 Arena - a mix of posh and puerile
Smart lines amid the mundane observations
Ivo Graham: The Game of Life, Soho Theatre review - privilege and parenting
New fatherhood runs as a thread through show
Ivo Graham's latest show The Game of Life follows on from his previous hour, in which he talked about passing a milestone in life and the prospect of starting a family.
Stewart Lee: Tornado/Snowflake, Leicester Square Theatre review - snark to Sharknado
Double bill from the king of sarcasm
Stewart Lee is back on the road after three years, and he comes back wonderfully refreshed and on marvellous form with this double header, Tornado/Snowflake.
Jack Dee, Gordon Craig Theatre, Stevenage review - now he really is a grumpy old man
Observational comic has grown into his stage persona
Jack Dee has made a career out of being a grumpy old man, even though he started on the comedy circuit in 1986 when he was 25.
Tim Minchin, Eventim Apollo review - fabulous triumph of rhyme and reason
Age has not withered the ginger Ninja comic, but there is an intruiging new tone
Is there anything Tim Minchin cannot do? He sings his own songs, plays hot bar-room piano and tells jokes about the existence of God. He composes musicals, performs in Lloyd Webber and Stoppard, writes a multimillion-dollar Hollywood cartoon which he is allowed to direct – until he isn’t.
Jonathan Pie, Eventim Apollo review - spoof reporter in coruscating form
Tom Walker's creation gives a state-of-the-union lecture
Jonathan Pie is a YouTube star, a spoof television news reporter (created by actor and comic Tom Walker), who is prone to gaffes. It was one of those on-screen gaffes that led to Pie being sacked as the BBC's Westminster correspondent, footage of which we see here on the onstage big screen alongside the highlights and lowlights of Pie's career – mostly the latter.