American: The Bill Hicks Story, BBC Four

A hagiography of a remarkable comedian who was faster than his audiences

Being hailed as “the comedian’s comedian” is all well and good after you’re dead; but – as is often the way with great artists – it didn’t much help to pay the bills while Bill Hicks was walking and talking.

Edinburgh Fringe: Andrew Maxwell/ Hannibal Buress/ Cariad Lloyd

Great political material, a laid-back American and characters aplenty

Andrew Maxwell, Assembly ****

Thank goodness for a performer like Andrew Maxwell. The Edinburgh Fringe opens just as parts of the UK take a mad pill and start shopping outside normal opening hours. Most comics ignore the mayhem, while some insert a clever line or two, but Maxwell ditches his opening 15 minutes and writes completely fresh material about the state of Britain today in the light of the riots in England.

Thank goodness for a performer like Andrew Maxwell. The Edinburgh Fringe opens just as parts of the UK take a mad pill and start shopping outside normal opening hours. Most comics ignore the mayhem, while some insert a clever line or two, but Maxwell ditches his opening 15 minutes and writes completely fresh material about the state of Britain today in the light of the riots in England.

Edinburgh Fringe: Josie Long/ Josh Widdicombe

Josie Long: her political material would embarrass the average six-year-old

Naive politics and inoffensive stand-up

Josie Long, Pleasance Dome **

Last year, Josie Long, famous for her whimsical comedy and fey delivery, decided to get serious. Disheartened by the election result, she started to do political comedy, but sadly her level of analysis was along the lines of: “Anyone who voted Tory in May's election is a fucking cunt.” One year on in The Future is Another Place, the level hasn't been raised.

Edinburgh Fringe: Chris Ramsey/ Thom Tuck

Great storytelling and Disney lost in love

Chris Ramsey, Pleasance Courtyard ****

It's easy to see why the Edinburgh Comedy Awards panel shortlisted South Shields comic Chris Ramsey. He's personable, very funny, has a well-constructed show - and is destined for a big television career any day soon.

Edinburgh Fringe: Sam Simmons/ Totally Tom/ Humphrey Ker/ Nick Helm

From surreal to plummy, and from sketch to sketchy

Sam Simmons, Gilded Balloon ****

 

Sam Simmons clocks a young girl in the front row and stops the show. “How old are you?” the Aussie comic asks. “Ten,” comes the reply, and he suggests to her mother that this may not be the show for them, so they leave. And just in good time, as what follows is a load of cock and balls as Simmons is dressed in vest and pants which, after he is drenched during a gag, become increasingly, er, figure-hugging.

Edinburgh Fringe: Kieran and the Joes/ Conor O'Toole/ Tom Allen/ Kate Smurthwaite

Kieran and the Joes: clean-cut comics with a dark side

Sketch, geeky, sit-down and stand-up funnies

Kieran and the Joes, The Store ****

Kieran and the Joes are a three-man sketch group (Kieran Hodgson, Joe Markham and Joe Parham, working with co-writer Tom Meltzer) who are young, personable and very neatly dressed in shirts and ties - but while they may appear clean-cut their comedy veers nicely towards the dark.

Edinburgh Fringe: Tiffany Stevenson/ Carl Donnelly/ The Two Wrongies

Two engaging stand-ups and dire performance art


Tiffany Stevenson ★★★★

The comic is currently appearing on Show Me the Funny on ITV, where her smily disposition is a welcome antidote to some of the sneery critics they have mustered. There’s boyfriend stuff in Cavewoman but Stevenson also delivers a few astute political observations, as well as the occasional unPC gag - such as suggesting Tina Turner's dance moves were inspired by her avoiding Ike’s punches.

Edinburgh Fringe: DeAnne Smith/ A Slow Air/ Dregs

A not-so-fey comic, David Harrower's new play, and a sketch duo

DeAnne Smith, Gilded Balloon ****

 

Don’t be fooled by DeAnne Smith’s gamine appearance of boyish clothing and Bieberesque hairstyle. And don’t be fooled either by the way her act begins with a riff on existential angst - prompted by an Australian waiter saying “No worries” when he took her order - which turns into a song (one of a few in the set) accompanied by a ukulele. Don’t be fooled because you’ll realise there’s a lot of much edgier and darker material that she gets away with because she looks and sounds so sweet.

Edinburgh Fringe: Jason Cook/ Cul de Sac/ Fear of a Brown Planet

Jason Cook: the comic has masterly audience skills

A comic looking for happiness, the dangers of a cul-de-sac, and Muslims on a mission

Jason Cook, Pleasance Dome ****

Jason Cook has masterly audience skills, and he needed them all the night I saw him. A middle-aged teacher (who really should know better), whose refreshment clearly led her to the delusion that she was the person people had paid to see, kept interrupting. Even the engaging and unfailingly polite Geordie comic's patience was wearing thin, but he constantly bested her and got on with the job of making us laugh.

Edinburgh Fringe: Glenn Wool/ Jerry Sadowitz/ Ford and Akram

An Indonesian adventure, a vitriolic magician and a date with Colin Farrell

Glenn Wool, Assembly *****

 

When you watch Glenn Wool, you realise the heights that a talented performer can reach simply by standing on stage and telling stories – not all of them necessarily true - when they are weaved with wonderfully crafted gags and slow-burn pay-offs, with some subtle political humour also in the mix.

When you watch Glenn Wool, you realise the heights that a talented performer can reach simply by standing on stage and telling stories – not all of them necessarily true - when they are weaved with wonderfully crafted gags and slow-burn pay-offs, with some subtle political humour also in the mix.