Lou Sanders, Soho Theatre review - feminism and dodgy massages

★★★ LOU SANDERS, SOHO THEATRE 'Taskmaster' winner keeps it real

'Taskmaster' winner keeps it real

Lou Sanders has named her latest show (which debuted at the Edinburgh Fringe) Say Hello to Your New Step-Mummy. But, as she tells us in her opening comments, she's not a mother or stepmother, and hasn't yet met a father she likes, but “by the end of the year, God willing…”

Lenny Henry, Watford Colosseum review - enjoyable evening with genial host

★★★★ LENNY HENRY, WATFORD COLOSSEUM Enjoyable evening with genial host

Sir Lenny takes his autobiography on tour

It’s a long time since Lenny Henry performed live comedy, and a lot has happened in that interval. He has reinvented himself as a serious actor on stage and screen, become a spokesman for the black British experience, was knighted in 2015 and is now a national treasure.

Hannah Gadsby, Royal Festival Hall review - simply magnificent

★★★★★ HANNAH GADSBY, ROYAL FESTIVAL HALL Follow-up to breakthrough show shines a light on autism

Follow-up to breakthrough show shines a light on autism

It's a wonderful thing when a talented comic goes from niche performer to international star almost overnight, and that's what happened to Australian stand-up Hannah Gadsby. In 2017, she announced that her award-winning Edinburgh Fringe show, Nanette, was to be her last as she felt ground down after a decade in a misogynistic and homophobic industry.

Elf Lyons, Komedia, Brighton review - bonkers, brilliant and a bit of bare bum

★★★ ELF LYONS, KOMEDIA, BRIGHTON Bonkers, brilliant and a bit of bare bum

An endearing personal journey into why guinea pigs hate their loving, attentive owners

Elf Lyons’ new show, Love Songs To Guinea Pigs, has moved away from her usual slapstick and absurdist mimicry into new realms of traditional stand up. She cites the reason as being unable to do mime on the radio, but there’s a more serious reason for the switch.

After ChifChaff, her Edinburgh show last year, and a string of shows involving ballet, hula hooping and ice skating, the comic found herself in bed, paralysed from the waist down. What came next was corrective spinal surgery, adoption of two guinea pigs, a bout of depression, a break up, and a return to the stage.

Rob Beckett, St David's Hall, Cardiff review - a mixed bag of observations

★★★ ROB BECKETT, ST DAVID'S HALL, CARDIFF Killer lines and tame misses

Scattergun approach yields both killer lines and tame misses

There’s been no avoiding Rob Beckett in recent years. His high beam smile and infectious personality have made him a mainstay of comedy shows. Now he’s back on the road with what he calls the best job in the world, stand up. You can tell he means it, with a show that thrives on enthusiasm if not consistency.

Eddie Izzard, Brighton Dome review - splendidly surreal storytelling

★★★★ EDDIE IZZARD, BRIGHTON DOME Splendidly surreal storytelling in farewell tour

Farewell tour hits the heights

Eddie Izzard is dressed in a killer outfit of black leather jacket, tartan mini-kilt, thigh-length stiletto boots – and false boobs. “I got them at IKEA,” he deadpans. He’s in jovial form for Wunderbar, his farewell tour before he hopes to enter politics.

Russell Howard, Cardiff Motorpoint Arena review - a return with bite

★★★★ RUSSELL HOWARD, CARDIFF MOTORPOINT ARENA A return with bite

Testing times call for some big targets and bigger laughs

It’s been two years since Russell Howard last performed stand-up. That’s a long gap for such an established fixture of British comedy. As he points out, the world has changed, something reflected in his new show Respite. There are still the whimsical anecdotes that made him a star, but he now has bigger foils than his own family.

Ed Byrne, Berry Theatre, Hedge End review - musing on middle-age angst

★★★★ ED BYRNE, TOURING Cheery physicality in an entertaining hour

Cheery physicality in an entertaining hour

Ed Byrne's new show takes a philosophical bent as he muses on middle age and fatherhood. But don't worry, he's not getting soft at the age of 47 – he's as sarcastic, caustic and self-deprecating as ever in If I'm Honest...