Dave Gorman, Royal Festival Hall review - PowerPoint king is back with bite

★★★★ DAVE GORMAN, RFH PowerPoint king is back with bite

Fake news, domestic harmony and daytime TV

Anyone who has seen a previous Dave Gorman show or his television series Modern Life Is Goodish knows what to expect: a show that's part lecture, part conversation, all pedantry, done with the aid of a PowerPoint presentation – clicker, laptop and onstage big screen as important as the patter, the text on screen often providing an addendum gag to the one he has already told, or increasing our anticipation of a payoff yet to come.

Ayesha Hazarika, Soho Theatre review - feminism examined

★★★ AYESHA HAZARIKA, SOHO THEATRE Fascinating and often funny take on feminism

Fascinating and often funny take on the subject

As a former adviser to Harriet Harman and Ed Miliband – and a woman who has put her name forward to be a Labour Party candidate at a Westminster election – Ayesha Hazarika certainly knows her politics from the inside. So a show with the title Girl on Girl: The Fight For Feminism promises to be avowedly political.

Ivo Graham, Soho Theatre review - the perils of growing up

Going deep into personal material unearths lots of laughs

Considering where Motion Sickness ends up, Ivo Graham's new show begins a million miles away, as he talks about his love of trains and his favourite train company, Chiltern – or “The Chilt”. But don't be fooled by this quotidian fare; what begins as a seemingly aimless wander down a path of nothing very much packs an emotional punch by the end of the hour.

Nish Kumar, Soho Theatre review - the state we're in

He's angry – but he has a lot to be angry about

Blimey, Nish Kumar is angry. Angry about Donald Trump, angry about misogyny, angry about racism, angry about Brexit – angry about a lot of things. But before anyone could dismiss It's In Your Nature to Destroy Yourselves as a checklist of woke priorities for the liberal metropolitan elite, he turns the joke against himself – it shows how upside down the world is, he says, that a 33-year-old comic whose favourite food is dips has become a spokesman for the politically engaged.

Edinburgh Fringe 2018: Rose Matafeo review

★★★★ EDINBURGH FRINGE 2018: ROSE MATAFEO Comedy winner has a wonderfully daft show

Edinburgh Comedy Award winner has a wonderfully daft show

As we enter the venue, Rose Matafeo is playing a game of mini table tennis with a member of the audience. Nothing that follows seems to relate to this “just a bit of fun to start the show” – but, trust me, it's one of the cleverest bits of misdirection you will ever see. The penny drops only at the end of Horndog, for which the New Zealander deservedly won the prestigious Edinburgh Comedy Award for best show at the Fringe at the weekend.

Edinburgh Fringe 2018 reviews: Rosie Jones/ Marcus Brigstocke/ Alice Snedden

EDINBURGH FRINGE 2018 Rosie Jones / Marcus Brigstocke / Alice Snedden

More from the world's biggest and best arts festival

Rosie Jones ★★★

There are two versions of Rosie Jones, she tells us; one nice, one not so nice. And who knows which of those would have won the battle of psyches if the comic had not been deprived of oxygen for a quarter of an hour during birth, she asks in Fifteen Minutes. It's a terrific device – subtle but pointed, witty but poignant – as she muses about what kind of person she might have been without cerebral palsy.

End of the Pier, Park Theatre review - thought-provoking play about comedy and race

★★★★ END OF THE PIER, PARK THEATRE Les Dennis is superb as a washed-up comic

Les Dennis is superb as a washed-up comic

Les Dennis was once a marquee name on Saturday night television as host of Family Fortunes, but since giving up the light entertainment lark he now plies his trade as an actor, and a very good one at that. If you've not seen it, give yourself a treat and watch his bang-on-the-nose performance as “Les Dennis”, a delusional, whinging has-been, in Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant's Extras.

Bridget Christie, Brighton Festival review - politics through a domestic lens

★★★★ BRIDGET CHRISTIE, BRIGHTON FESTIVAL Politics through a domestic lens

Brexit and its fallout still an obsession

Bridget Christie tells us at the top of the show that she is a heterosexual, able-bodied, privileged white female – so why is she feeling so discontented? As she explains with great verbal dexterity in What Now?, it is living in a post-EU referendum world that has made her feel so discombobulated; left and right have no meaning any more, and – like so many British voters – she doesn’t know where her political home is.