Mo Amer and Guz Khan, Leicester Square Theatre review - racism examined from both sides of the Atlantic

Energetic double bill feels like a hip-hop gig

Well this is a nice change from the standard stand-up fare. Not many comics have a DJ introduce them with a cracking set of his own, and even fewer tour as part of a double bill with material that moves seamlessly from one set to the other as they dig down into race and ethnicity from either side of the Atlantic.

Ed Gamble, The Stand review - amiable hour touching on personal issues

★★★ ED GAMBLE, THE STAND The opening show of the 2019 Glasgow Comedy Festival

Opening show of 2019 Glasgow Comedy Festival

Ed Gamble starts the hour by telling us why his latest show is called Blizzard; he and a bunch of comic friends we stranded in New York by bad weather and it made the news - yet, strangely, the headline wasn’t a play on his name - a gift for hacks - but on the monicker of one of his mates. Cue faux outrage.

Lou Sanders, Soho Theatre review - shame put under the spotlight

★★★★ LOU SANDERS, SOHO THEATRE Shame put under the spotlight

Raw honesty, red faces

Have you ever felt the hot shame of saying or doing the wrong thing? Not just embarrassment – that's for amateurs, says Lou Sanders in her wonderfully honest and revealing show Shame Pig, in which she essays some of her life's red-faced moments. Embarrassment is fleeting and lends itself to a good anecdote (or a fine joke in a stand-up set), she says, while shame is a much more corrosive emotion, and one that young women in particular burden themselves with unnecessarily.

Sheeps, Soho Theatre review - sketch comedy with a touch of the surreal

★★★★ SHEEPS, SOHO THEATRE Sketch comedy with a touch of the surreal

Friendship, fake gurus and fun

Sheeps, the sketch comedy threesome, had never really gone away but when they performed Live and Loud Selfie Sex Harry Potter at the Edinburgh Fringe last year after a four-year absence, it was called a comeback. More a welcome reunion, as its members – Liam Williams, Daran Johnson and Alastair Roberts – had been busy doing solo projects.

The show, which they have brought to the Soho Theatre for a short run, is in the same vein as their previous work – original and intelligent sketch comedy with a touch of edginess and the surreal.

Brighton Festival 2019 launches with Guest Director Rokia Traoré

BRIGHTON FESTIVAL LAUNCHES WITH GUEST DIRECTOR ROKIA TRAORÉ South-coast's arts extravaganza reveals its 2019 line-up

The south-coast's arts extravaganza reveals its 2019 line-up

The striking cover for the Brighton Festival 2019 programme shouts out loud who this year’s Guest Director is. Silhouetted in flowers, in stunning artwork by Simon Prades, is the unmistakeable profile of Malian musician Rokia Traoré.

Adam Riches Is The Guy Who..., Drink, Shop & Do review - super-suave Lothario on the prowl

Immersive show examines male-female engagement in the #MeToo era

The first line of this show is “I'm the guy who you meet right after you come out of a long-term relationship.” On the night I see The Guy Who..., Adam Riches has three tries with it before he meets his target, a woman who has been dumped by a long-standing boyfriend.

Lost Voice Guy, Soho Theatre review - Britain's Got Talent winner finds the funny in disability

★★★ LOST VOICE GUY, SOHO THEATRE Britain's Got Talent winner finds the funny in disability

Material moves easily between the political and the personal

Lost Voice Guy – aka Lee Ridley – won Britain’s Got Talent last year. He's a unique talent in that his cerebral palsy means he is unable to speak, and so he delivers his comedy through a synthesizer controlled via his iPad.

Daniel Sloss, Leicester Square Theatre review - toxic masculinity examined

Male attitudes in the #MeToo age

Daniel Sloss's latest show is called X, to denote his 10th show. The Scottish comic started in comedy as a teenager in 2009 when a lot of his material was knob and wank gags, but in recent years his work has had a progressively edgier feel, including shows that delved into his sister's death from cerebral palsy and the childhood grooming from which he had a lucky escape.

James Acaster, Phoenix Theatre review - a masterclass in comedy

★★★★★ JAMES ACASTER, PHOENIX CINEMA A masterclass in comedy

The stand-up's show is his most personal yet

There's a story in James Acaster's superb new show at the Phoenix Theatre which hangs on him being the first UK comic to shoot several Netflix specials. He doesn't tells us this to boast; far from it. It's to set up another long-form gag, one of several lengthy and interconnected stories he tells in Cold Lasagne Hate Myself 1999, the two-part tale of the best and worst years of his life.

Leicester Comedy Festival Gala Preview Show review - an entertaining mixed bag

★★★ LEICESTER COMEDY FESTIVAL GALA PREVIEW An entertaining mixed bag

Curtain-raiser to next month's offerings

Suited and booted, Tom Allen and Suzi Ruffell presented this gala preview to the Leicester Comedy Festival, which is now in its 26th year and starts next month. The comics, who do an occasional podcast together called Like Minded, make an engaging double act – although their solo shows couldn't be more different.