Robin Ince, Soho Theatre review - fun among the chaos

★★★ ROBIN INCE, SOHO THEATRE Celebration of the complexities of the human mind

Celebration of the complexities of the human mind

How to describe a show that by Robin Ince’s own admission doesn’t have a narrative strand, and for which he has written several pages of notes that he gets through only a small section of? Well here goes: he calls the show a mash-up of the two cultures of art and science in a celebration of the human mind, and Chaos of Delight is very well named.

Jerry Seinfeld, Eventim Apollo review - slick and smart but curiously soulless

★★★ JERRY SEINFELD, EVENTIM APOLLO US star makes rare UK appearance

US star makes rare UK appearance

A Jerry Seinfeld appearance in the UK is an event. For one thing it's rare (he was last here in 2011) and for another he's a comic hero to many for his eponymous sitcom, which he co-created with Larry David.

Arthur Smith, Soho Theatre review - charming tribute to his father

★★★★ ARTHUR SMITH, SOHO THEATRE Charming tribute to his father

Nostalgia, songs and old jokes

There has been a trend in stand-up comedy in recent years for intensely personal shows, confessional even, but it’s the comic’s life that is usually the one being examined for comedic effect. With Arthur Smith’s latest show at Soho Theatre, however, it is his dad’s life being described here, and what a life.

Frank Skinner, Leicester Square Theatre - mixing some acid with the charm

★★★ FRANK SKINNER, LEICESTER SQUARE THEATRE Mixing some acid with the charm

Preamble to autumn tour works a treat

Frank Skinner walks onstage without introduction and a man in the audience gives him a friendly heckle by way of greeting. Skinner is straight on it, engaging him in a brief conversation; his responses are amiable enough but have a few barbs too.

Al Murray as the Pub Landlord, Embassy Theatre Skegness review - comic pulls his punches

★★★ AL MURRAY AS THE PUB LANDLORD Ageing character offers little new on Brexit

Ageing character has little new to say on Brexit

Al Murray's Pub Landlord character has been around since the mid-1990s. As such, it's a wonder that Murray has managed to reinvent the embittered, xenophobic loudmouth so many times, but he has – and the EU referendum in 2016 should have, you may have thought, given the character new life or killed him off altogether.