John Kearns/ Alex Edelman/ This Is Ceilidh

WINNING SHOWS AT THE EDINBURGH FRINGE A last line-up features John Kearns, Alex Edelman and This Is Ceilidh

Winning shows at the Edinburgh Fringe

John Kearns: Shtick, Voodoo Rooms ****

London comic John Kearns made history at the weekend, when he became the first comic to win the main prize at the Edinburgh Comedy Awards after winning best newcomer gong, which he did last year That's some achievement.

Edinburgh Fringe 2014: Adam Riches/ Josie Long/ Loretta Maine/ Dane Baptiste/ Tom Allen

ADAM RICHES AT THE EDINBURGH FESTIVAL FRINGE 'Sean Bean' tops another selection from the world's biggest and best arts festival

More from the world's biggest and best arts festival

Adam of the Riches, Pleasance Dome ****

No one is safe at an Adam Riches show from being grabbed to take part in his frantic sketch comedy; each skit in this hour of anarchy involves audience participation, from using someone's mouth as a cocktail mixer (compete with half a banana shoved in his gob) to having gents of a certain age “strumming” each other's hair, as if a harp.

Edinburgh Fringe 2014: Cuckooed/ The Carousel/ Julie Burchill: Absolute Cult/ So It Goes

EDINBURGH FRINGE 2014: CUCKOOED, TRAVERSE THEATRE A faultless monologue from Mark Thomas and other delights from the festival

More from the world's biggest and best arts festival

Cuckooed, Traverse Theatre *****

Mark Thomas's new show is in the theatre section of the Fringe brochure, but this hour, full of laughs and witty lines as it is, could easily be under the heading of comedy. Indeed, Thomas once made his living as a stand-up, even if his career has long defied any pigeonholing; professional irritant, activist and satirist are just a few job titles that could apply.

Ursula Martinez: My Stories, Your Emails, Purcell Room

URSULA MARTINEZ: MY STORIES, YOUR EMAILS, PURCELL ROOM Smart show about stripping and the internet

Smart show about stripping and the internet

In her book How To Be a Woman, Times columnist Caitlin Moran explains the difference between strip clubs and burlesque shows, and why the latter are perfectly acceptable to feminism.

Chelsea Handler, London Palladium

CHELSEA HANDLER, LONDON PALLADIUM Brisk and businesslike debut for US comic

Brisk and businesslike debut for US comic

Chelsea Handler may be an unknown name for many in Britain - although some will know her from her spat with Piers Morgan on his now-cancelled US chat show -  but there were plenty of fans at the London Palladium to watch the actress, comic and chat show host making her UK stand-up debut, with a one-off show based on her travelogue of a trip to Africa with some friends, Uganda Be Kidding Me.

Dawn French, Brighton Theatre Royal

One half of comedy duo makes assured debut as solo performer

She may have been performing for more than 30 years, but it takes some cojones to do your first solo show at the age of 56. Dawn French, with neither long-time partner Jennifer Saunders nor fellow cast members on stage, makes her debut with Thirty Million Minutes, an autobiographical show about the 30 million minutes (give or take) she has spent on this earth.

10 Questions for Ventriloquist Nina Conti

10 QUESTIONS FOR NINA CONTI What makes a postmodern ventriloquist tick?

What makes a postmodern vent act tick?

Nina Conti is a postmodern visitor from a previous era. Ventriloquism, the remarkable skill of vocal misdirection, was a staple of yesteryear’s mainstream. Its practitioners were odd men pedalling flaccid Saturday-night humour. And indeed she inherited her skill from a much older man. Ken Campbell, the polymathic entertainer who for a time was her lover, introduced her as a young actress to ventriloquism and devised a play called Let Me Out!!! for her which she took to the Edinburgh Fringe in 2001. When he died in 2008, Conti inherited his collection of puppets.

Jack Whitehall, O2 Arena

JACK WHITEHALL, O2 ARENA Decent storyteller who needs more convincing material

Decent storyteller who needs more convincing material

My, what an entrance Jack Whitehall makes on the last night of his first arena tour. The 25-year-old - not that long ago making his Edinburgh Fringe debut - rides into the arena on a Segway with music blaring and fireworks. But he may have overreached himself, however, as a whole tier was curtained off and the remaining two were by no means full.

Miranda Hart, O2 Arena

MIRANDA HART, O2 ARENA Sitcom star returns to stand-up

Sitcom star returns to stand-up

What a career arc Miranda Hart has had; from playing tiny venues at the Edinburgh Fringe in the early 2000s, followed by roles in television comedies including Hyperdrive, Lead Balloon and Not Going Out, to starring in her own sitcom, Miranda, and in the BBC One drama Call the Midwife. And now she is returning to live comedy not with a few dates in standard-size venues, but with an extensive arena tour.

Miles Jupp, Touring

Superb mix of personal and political material

It's a mark of Miles Jupp's charm that he can do a show with a long segment about being the father of four young children and win over both non-parents and those who wish to forget for two hours that they have left their own offspring at home with a babysitter. But in Miles Jupp Is the Chap You're Thinking Of, which I saw at the Ambassadors Theatre in London, the comic expounds at length on life chez Jupp, which appears to be a whirl of cleaning Weetabix-encrusted crockery and finding faecal matter in inappropriate places.