MoodyComedy

Comedians

November Comedian of the Month #53, Ignacio Lopez

December 13, 2018 by Becca Moody Leave a Comment
Each Comedian of the Month on MoodyComedy is a comic who has never previously featured on the website. Reasons for selection can include various current projects the comedian is involved with, or perhaps recent appearances on television programmes or podcasts. There is no strict criteria however, as Comedian of the Month simply stands as a collection of recommendations, highlighting interesting and original aspects of certain comedians and their work.

Ignacio Lopez is a Spanish stand-up comic and MC currently based in Cardiff. MoodyComedy saw him acting as MC at Buffalo Comedy’s Christmas showcase, and he was undeniably the linchpin of the whole affair.

Lopez is a very playful comic who isn’t afraid to make brutal asides about members of the audience. He doesn’t even try to cover them with a fake gasp or a laugh or some kind of appeasement. He’s pretty reckless with it, but it is this that gives him his charm. Ignacio is so endearing that his audiences feel obliged to give him a free pass; we don’t care if he rips us apart on stage, because he’s bloody funny with it.

Ignacio Lopez

And paired with this affable demeanour, Ignacio has a distinguished ability to generate relevant anecdotes for his current audience, seemingly having something interesting to say about any topic or situation. This flexibility will stand him in good stead and no doubt he’ll be making an even bigger impression on the club circuit in years to come.

For more information, follow Ignacio Lopez on Twitter, or visit his website.

COMEDIAN OF THE MONTH

Posted in: Comedian Of The Month, Comedians Tagged: Comedian Of The Month, Ignacio Lopez

October Comedian of the Month #52, Athena Kugblenu

December 3, 2018 by Becca Moody Leave a Comment
Each Comedian of the Month on MoodyComedy is a comic who has never previously featured on the website. Reasons for selection can include various current projects the comedian is involved with, or perhaps recent appearances on television programmes or podcasts. There is no strict criteria however, as Comedian of the Month simply stands as a collection of recommendations, highlighting interesting and original aspects of certain comedians and their work.

Athena Kugblenu is an effortless performer who is incredibly easy to listen to. She expertly blends topics of varying significance, blurring the line between political debate and more light-hearted social topics. In doing this, Athena is allowing political discussion to become the norm within her comedy; she makes it accessible, understandable and less worrying.

© Michael de Leon

Kugblenu is centred in herself and confident in front of a crowd, meaning that the laughs come easily. Often exploring themes involving race and identity, Athena champions her African-Indian heritage, whilst also considering wider social areas such as racism and democracy. She is tackling big, big topics here, but this comic brings a kind of peace with her on stage, meaning that audiences feel comfortable under her care.

Eloquent, perceptive and laid-back, Athena Kugblenu is a comedian who has fantastic potential. Expect to see a lot more from this intelligent comic.

For more information, follow Athena Kugblenu on Twitter, or visit her website.

COMEDIAN OF THE MONTH

Posted in: Comedian Of The Month, Comedians Tagged: Athena Kugblenu, Comedian Of The Month

Interview: Ali Cook, Principles of Deception

November 1, 2018 by Becca Moody Leave a Comment
Ali Cook is a magician, illusionist, comedian and actor. He has often supported fellow stand up comics’ shows, as well as appearing on BBC’s Now You See It and CBBC’s The Slammer, to name just a couple of shows. Cook is embarking on a tour of his latest show Principles of Deception throughout November. MoodyComedy had a chat with him about how things are going.

Hi Ali, how has the comedy world been treating to you recently?

Pretty good. I’ve done two tours in the last year and very happy to say I’m starring alongside Jay Pharoah and Katherine Parkinson in the new political satire movie “How To Fake A War” directed by Rudolph Herzog.

What draws you to the art of illusion? 

A lack of social skills at a young age.

How do you marry magic and stand-up comedy together?

Basically I do as much stand up as possible and when I begin to die, I do a trick… It’s a simple formula.

© Ali Cook

Have you ever had any major on stage disasters? 

I was once trapped in a Houdini style water tank live on stage, which is a bad place to be when you’ve forgotten your keys.

Do you find it hard to create a full show from an abundance of shorter tricks and illusions?

It is hard. The average effect is over in a matter of seconds. Things don’t disappear slowly. This is great for TV but live you really have to find a good framing for the effect. Each trick is like a short scene.

What would your ideal audience be like?

I’m constantly amazed at how broad my audience appears to be and I’m always trying to define it. Perhaps the most telling: I was once doing an Edinburgh preview in Leicester before Sarah Millican to a room full of her fans – basically women in their thirties up and it was the best show I’ve ever done.

On tour though it seems to be half a comedy crowd and half families with a teenager in tow.

What can people expect from your latest show Principles of Deception?

It’s based on my favourite magic book of the same title written by Arthur Buckley in 1948. It was the first book to categorise every style of deception there is. That’s what we do. We do every type and style of effect there is from levitation to autosuggestion and I go hunting for rarely seen mysteries that no one has seen before.

 BUY TICKETS TO SEE ALI COOK: PRINCIPLES OF DECEPTION ON TOUR

Posted in: Comedians, Interviews Tagged: Ali Cook, British Comedy, Comedy, Magic, Magician, Principles of Deception

September Comedian of the Month #51, Robin Clyfan

October 8, 2018 by Becca Moody Leave a Comment
Each Comedian of the Month on MoodyComedy is a comic who has never previously featured on the website. Reasons for selection can include various current projects the comedian is involved with, or perhaps recent appearances on television programmes or podcasts. There is no strict criteria however, as Comedian of the Month simply stands as a collection of recommendations, highlighting interesting and original aspects of certain comedians and their work.

As one half of former double act Robin and Partridge (with fellow comic Charlie Partridge), Robin Clyfan has had his fair share of experience as a comedy performer, but only recently has he forayed into solo stand up. But he’s a natural and skilled story teller, so this transition doesn’t feel forced.

Listening to Clyfan talk to Cariad Lloyd on the GriefCast podcast, it’s hard not to be drawn in by Clyfan’s warm personality. And there are lots of aspects to this comedian’s background that are fascinating. For one, as the son of parents named Clive and Anne, the surname Clyfan (that he shares with his twin sister) is actually a compound of his parents’ forenames.

© Ollie Harrop

He brought his debut solo show, The Sea Is Big Enough To Take It to the Edinburgh Festival this August. As the child of an activist mother, who fought restrictive gender roles and sadly passed away quite recently, this show explores his relationship with his mother as a child and in later years.

He considers the difference between his own and his parents’ generations, and opens his audience up to his experiences of being raised by a politically charged feminist activist. And he speaks about his family with undeniable love and tenderness, in such a way that makes Clyfan a truly compelling performer to listen to.

For more information, follow Robin Clyfan on Twitter, or visit his website.

COMEDIAN OF THE MONTH

Posted in: Comedian Of The Month, Comedians Tagged: Comedian Of The Month, Robin Clyfan

Review: Jason Byrne – You Can Come In But Don’t Start Anything

October 6, 2018 by Becca Moody Leave a Comment

Jason Byrne is the kind of comedian you can’t ignore. And that’s not solely because he’s stood up on the stage at Cardiff’s TramShed with a microphone. From the second Byrne bounds on to stage, he has his devoted audience like a ball of putty in his hand. There’s Nana who came last year who has baked him a box of Welsh cakes, and her entire family who the comic remembers immediately.

Quite fittingly then, Byrne’s new show, You Can Come In But Don’t Start Anything, is about family, childhood, and the values you acquire as a result of the way in which you are raised. Growing up as an 80s kid himself, Jason has his fair few ridiculous anecdotes to share, and he uses these as a comparison to his view of the way children are raised in 2018. He talks of being slapped by his mum, and jokes about being unassisted whilst choking on the toys hidden in boxes of cereal (both of which didn’t seem too far from my own childhood, despite having been born in the late 90s). The comparisons are quite distorted to fit the view that today’s children are being mollycoddled, but he gets away with it as he is such a charming and energetic performer. His faux-exasperation leads to hysteria, which leads to the biggest laughs.

Jason Byrne: You Can Come In But Don’t Start Anything

But this comic is not trying to take the moral high ground here. In fact, in many of the anecdotes he shares he’s keen to paint himself as a ‘stupid man’ who’s occasionally moronic actions (such as taking nine magnesium tablets in one sitting) get no respect from his no-nonsense wife. Byrne is down to earth and not afraid to make a fool of himself, in fact, he seems to really enjoy it. And this drives home the clear fact that his amiability is his strongest quality.

He’s comfortable honing in on specific people in the room, having very natural discussions with audience members and remembering specific details about them to call back on later in the show. As ever with Jason Byrne, as he brings his whole audience together by chatting to different corners of the room, it becomes evident that each live show is a one-off, unique spectacle.

Jason Byrne is so likeable because he encourages his audience, however old or young, to be naughty and mischievous just like him. It’s clear that he could play even bigger rooms than this one, with this confident charm and apparent ease in front of an audience. Jason is currently his show, You Can Come In But Don’t Start Anything, across the UK and Ireland, and you can see the full list of dates here.

Posted in: Comedians, Live Comedy Tagged: Cardiff TramShed, Jason Byrne, You Can Come In But Don't Start Anything

Interview: Ivo Graham at Soho Theatre

September 25, 2018 by Becca Moody Leave a Comment
Ivo Graham is bringing his new show Motion Sickness to the Soho Theatre from the 1st to 13th of October. In anticipation for this fortnight of fun, MoodyComedy has been picking Ivo’s brains about the emotional core of this new show, and the difficulties he has experienced whilst performing it.

How was your show Motion Sickness received at the Edinburgh Festival this year?

Ivo Graham: Motion Sickness

30% returning customers revelling in spending another hour with a comedian they always enjoy.

20% returning customers broadly appreciating the well-told stories but perhaps lamenting the lack of interactive quiz/Weakest Link video from 2017.

10% new people thinking “god, this guy can turn a phrase”.

10% new people thinking “god, this guy’s a bit pretentious”.

10% family and friends wondering how long they have to keep coming to this shit.

10% too drunk / hot / in need of a wee to concentrate on what was happening.

10% empty seats.

What issues does your latest show concern? Which aspects (if any) have been challenging?

The latest show is about commitment and, more specifically, parenthood (the best answer on the board in the Family Fortunes category “commitments”: the worst on Pointless). It was challenging to write because it forced me to decide which of my own insecurities on the subject I felt comfortable sharing with an audience of mostly (see above) strangers. It was challenging to perform because by Edinburgh I’d learnt I was going to be a parent, rendering the central question of “am I ready to take this next step” frustratingly/hilariously inappropriate.

Admin-wise, I then had to decide whether to sit on this news or change the show: I decided the former, only for a couple of rather ambiguously-worded reviews leading to family members getting in touch to ask why I was doing comedy about news they hadn’t even been told about yet. Even now, a few weeks on, we’ve eschewed the obligatory Facebook ultrasound post, preferring to tell friends as and when we see them, so I’ve now got to make a whole lot more decisions as to how I present the information at the Soho. People might even find out having stumbled across this e-interview! A Moody Exclusive!

None of this is to suggest, by the way, that my life updates are of any Great Import beyond my various nearest and dearest, or that the difficulties described above hold a candle to any of the infinitely greater challenges being faced by people around the world. Fundamentally, my girlfriend and I (out of wedlock ahoy!) have had some great news, and being able to do stand-up about this sort of thing is always a Great LarkTM. But I can only respond to the questions as they’re asked (/copy-pasted) to me, and there’s no denying that this year’s issues and their representation have been more of a challenge than previous years’. So there you go.

How has your comedy changed over the past two years?

It’s got more commitment-based (see above). To quote a friend, “instead of talking about how you don’t get off with girls (2009 to 2016), you’re now talking about how you can’t get off with girls (2016 til death/divorce).

How would you describe Ivo Graham The Comedian in three words?

Surpassing expectations.

Why should people come to your Soho Theatre run?

Because the show is charming, relatable, articulate, and my god I’ve suddenly got rather a lot riding on this.

BOOK TICKETS FOR IVO GRAHAM: ‘MOTION SICKNESS’ AT THE SOHO THEATRE

Posted in: Comedians, Interviews Tagged: Ivo Graham, Motion Sickness, Soho Theatre

Is Comedy a Londoner’s Game?

September 18, 2018 by Becca Moody Leave a Comment

Anyone who knows me knows that I love comedy. I’ve been to countless stand-up shows in Birmingham over the years and a fair few in Cardiff too since starting my degree. But one thing I have never done is see any form of live comedy at a venue in our country’s capital: London. No tour shows, no club nights, no previews in the back of a pub. Zilch. I could give you a whole bunch of reasons, from money considerations to the fact it’s just easier to wait for the comedians to come to me than to scout them out in London. I’ve always intended, one day, to go and experience London’s comedy scene first-hand. But why do I have this intention? What is it that makes the London comedy scene so unlike Birmingham, or Cardiff, and why do I feel like I need to go and experience it?

Suppose it’s a Friday night. You want to see some live comedy in central London, but where to go and who to see? A quick internet search provides a whole host of interesting events. On the night I’m looking at, Stewart Lee is performing his Content Provider show at the Leicester Square Theatre, and Geordie comedian Lauren Pattison is performing Lady Muck at the Soho Theatre (a show which saw her nominated for Best Newcomer at the Edinburgh Comedy Awards in 2017). Both shows have completely sold out. There are also comedy club nights happening all over this part of the city, from the Comedy Store in Soho, to the 99 Club in Covent Garden. Some comics’ names are even appearing two or three times, as they perform a set at one club, then move straight on to the next (and sometimes the next). There are also shows that start as late as 10-11pm; closer to the finishing time of most comedy gigs across the country than the start.

Lauren Pattison © Andy Hollingworth

There’s clearly a lot of comedy to cram in over the weekend, and certainly high demand for it too. London has a population of almost 9 million people, whereas Birmingham (my home city) comes in lower at around 1.1 million. Cardiff, at the other end of the scale, is home to just under 500,000. So we might assume that the demand for comedy is much lower in Cardiff than in London, but is this all there is to it? Are these comedians flocking in their hundreds just to perform to bigger, more frequent audiences? It may be true that other cities in the UK just don’t have the same demand for stand-up comedy, but I’m curious to find out if this is the main attraction for stand-up comics, or whether there are other factors that make this city such an appealing place to work.

Now, I’ve made it pretty clear that my knowledge of London’s comedy scene is limited. However, I have interviewed countless comedians about their theatre runs, new material nights and club nights in the city. And, after all, writing an article about stand-up comedians working in London, without speaking to any stand-up comedians who have worked in London, is about as useful as writing a dissertation on the social behaviours of ants but spending the whole time only speaking to toddlers about their verdicts on such ant behaviours. I need to ask some comedians first-hand about why they feel drawn to London’s comedy scene, because surely it can’t just be the size of the crowds.

Lauren Pattison moved to London in September 2016. She confided in me at the time: ‘I’m worried moving to London was the wrong thing to do; I’m worried that I’m never going to be in a position financially to leave my day job and just be a comedian.’ (See: ‘Seven Questions With Lauren Pattison’). But since this conversation, Lauren has skyrocketed into the public consciousness. She regularly performs as tour support for the quick-witted Katherine Ryan, and is currently touring her acclaimed show Lady Muck across Australia and New Zealand. It hasn’t been an easy ride, with financial worries understandably playing a big part in the comedian’s struggles to properly settle in London, but her success appears to be increasing by the day. I’m intrigued to know how Lauren is managing to make her move to London financially and creatively viable, so I started by asking her why she moved to London in the first place.

‘I moved to London because I felt a bit stuck in Newcastle,’ Lauren tells me, ‘I was doing alright for myself up North but felt like I didn’t really play anywhere down South – partly because I wasn’t known and partly because the expense of travelling and staying down there for a gig was so high that it would cost a week’s wage for me to go and do an unpaid gig. I had nothing to lose by moving to London (aside from my hopes and dreams).’ It seems that moving somewhere more central, like London, is a way of opening up other parts of the country for Britain’s commuting comics. ‘A lot of places seem to be a bit easier to get to from down here! Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester, Newcastle and Birmingham are all relatively easy to get to via train and being based down here means it’s much easier and cheaper to get to gigs down South.’

Stephen Bailey © Comedy Central

Stephen Bailey (a stand-up comedian from Manchester who also regularly supports Katherine Ryan on tour, it seems she has good taste) lives and works in London too: ‘I was living in London anyway because of my day job. Then, when I was in a position to leave the office, I kind of just stayed. For me, just breaking into TV, I feel like I need to be here for the meetings, the auditions, the showcases – as it would cost an arm and a leg for me to go back and forth to Manchester as a non-driver.’

Both Stephen and Lauren agree that London is a great place to develop yourself as a comic and potentially get noticed by important industry people. ‘The good thing,’ Stephen tells me, ‘is that you can perform several times, every night of the week, which can arguably help you get better. On the flip side, it’s so oversaturated… you could just be playing to other comics if you don’t know where to look.’ Lauren’s comments back this up: ‘Comics can literally do something every night of the week without having to leave London. It helps you hone your act and you can notch up a lot of gigs in a short space of time, but I think what made me the comic I am is by not just gigging in one place but gigging in different rooms, in different cities with different audiences.’ But just because there might be more opportunities in our capital for hopeful stand-ups, you can’t just move there and expect a career handed to you on a plate. The sheer number of comedians working in London goes to show how much effort needs to be put in to make sure you stand out from the crowd. Not only do you need a clear, original and genuine comic voice, but you need to be savvy about where and when you perform, otherwise you can find yourself out of pocket and performing to smaller crowds than you’d like.

Lauren confirms my suspicions: ‘People tell you, “you can gig every night of the week!”. You soon find out that you can, but none of those gigs are paid and you’re on with twenty other comics and there’s no progression and you’re lucky to have an audience. For me it was about not just saying yes to everything (which is what I usually do) but sussing out which gigs were worth my time and effort. Focusing my energy on the gigs I knew would get me places or swing a tenner my way so I could cover my tube fare soon made me much happier.’

Money is, and I expect always will be, a massive obstacle for comedians working in London. Starting out in comedy is an expensive game anyway, with many continuing to work different jobs in the day and gigging during the evening. The financial aspect was an issue for Lauren (she continued to work as a waitress when she first moved to London), and I suspect she is just one of countless creatives who struggle to make living and working in London financially possible for themselves. ‘I was burning the candle at both ends, working a day job and going straight to a gig after. Yet at the end of the month I was still broke. All my wages were being pumped into affording travel to gigs and trying to cobble together rent.’

And it doesn’t help that some comedy clubs seem to be in no rush to pay comedians for their work. Lauren fills me in: ‘I’ve had nightmares before where I’ve had to chase promoters for months for £50 and you’ve got bills to pay and food to buy and travel to cover to get to another gig. If any other job didn’t pay on time you’d be straight to HR but there isn’t really an HR department in comedy and it’s not unusual to wait nearly two months to be paid.’ Stephen tells a similar story: ‘Good acts that are working the circuit have to quit because they can’t get their payments off promoters. You have to be good at budgeting as most places just pay you as and when they feel like it. I am owed money from December, I’m always chasing payments. The longest I ever had to wait was a year. Jongleurs didn’t pay for ages, kept booking in more gigs then went bust so most comics lost dollar for work done. Not cool.’

Jongleurs announced on the 17th of October 2017 that they were closing down. In a statement, the company said: ‘Every possible effort has been made to keep the company viable, including cash injections of over £200,000 from the director and shareholders since late 2014. Unfortunately there are now no more funds available to inject into the company.’ The closure left many comedians unpaid; some had even racked up a whole year’s worth of gigs that they hadn’t been paid for.

So maybe working in London as a stand-up comic isn’t a plausible reality for many comedians working today. But while working in London can help get you noticed by industry professionals and punters, and will thus inevitably help you to establish yourself as a comedian, it surely isn’t the be all and end all. There are other big cities with a large variety of people making up their comedy audiences. I asked Lauren what she thinks about this prospect, and she felt a similar way: ‘I don’t think London is necessarily the best place to be working as a stand-up comedian for everyone. I think it’s not necessary to move – for example, if I lived Manchester or Birmingham and could drive, I wouldn’t move. Everything would be more accessible via car and living costs would be lower.’ If you want to access areas aside from London, then any city that is relatively central could be a good place to set up camp, opening up cities in the North and the South, whilst avoiding the living costs of the capital.

© Birmingham Glee Club

You may have noticed whilst reading this article that Birmingham is where my heart lies. It’s where I’m from, where I spend the majority of my time, and my favourite city to go and see live comedy in. One quick search of comedy events next Friday night flags up lots of results. Though admittedly not as many as my search of London venues, I still find that Patrick Monahan is performing his show Rewind Selector 90s at Birmingham Glee Club, there’s a Machynlleth Comedy Festival Showcase at the MAC (Midlands Arts Centre), and Dane Baptiste is performing G.O.D. (Gold. Oil. Drugs.) not too far outside of Birmingham at the Leamington Spa Royal Spa Centre, plus more. 

If you want to take advantage of the vast range of opportunities that working as a stand-up in London can bring, are prepared for the potential financial struggles and willing to put the work in, then I’m sure that London can be a wonderful, vibrant place to live and work. One final thing that Lauren says sticks with me, and proves to me once and for all why she has found such great success in recent years: ‘I am beyond pleased I gritted my teeth, kept my head down and ploughed on. Yeah, it can feel harder for sure if you’re less privileged, but rather than sulk about it I’ve always tried to find a way to still make it happen – even if it takes a bit longer and I have to eat noodles for weeks.’ This sums everything up for me: you can make your way in comedy, wherever you’re working, if you have passion and grit (and perhaps a day job on the side). Yes, being based in London can help you to reach more audiences in a shorter time frame, but if you’re not financially able to live in the capital, that’s not the end of your chances of making it big time. London is a place where comedians can gig as much as they like and develop their material and comic voice, but, at the end of the day, there are audiences in every town and city if you’re prepared to root them out. Comedians, the world is your oyster.

This article was originally published in Issue #167 of Quench Magazine, in March 2018.

Posted in: Comedians Tagged: British Comedy, Comedy, Katherine Ryan, Lauren Pattison, London, Stand Up, Stephen Bailey

August Comedian of the Month #50, Kiri Pritchard-McLean

September 7, 2018 by Becca Moody Leave a Comment
Each Comedian of the Month on MoodyComedy is a comic who has never previously featured on the website. Reasons for selection can include various current projects the comedian is involved with, or perhaps recent appearances on television programmes or podcasts. There is no strict criteria however, as Comedian of the Month simply stands as a collection of recommendations, highlighting interesting and original aspects of certain comedians and their work.

There has been a lot of noise around Kiri Pritchard-McLean over the last couple of years. She’s part of the award-winning comedy sketch group Gein’s Family Giftshop, though never appearing on stage with the group, as well as being a very successful stand-up comic in her own right (having received an abundance of 5 star reviews for her show Victim, Complex at this year’s Edinburgh Fringe).

Kiri Pritchard-McLean

Pritchard-McLean’s comedy is down-to-earth in a way that really invites listeners into her world. It’s as if your guilty conscious, where all your darkest fears and thoughts hide, could talk, but there’s something celebratory in it. McLean’s comedy is honest and confessional, but it’s as though she’s never questioned being so open, it just comes naturally. She is what she is, and this authenticity is a valuable asset. Managing to take difficult personal topics and make them devilishly funny, whilst still maintaining their emotional significance and impact, proves McLean to be a strong voice on the comedy circuit. She is exuberant and compelling, and will no doubt blossom all the more in the coming months and years.

McLean is also the brains behind Amusical, alongside Dave Cribb. The show consists of stand-up comedians going head to head performing their favourite songs from film and television, with the audience deciding the winner. The format has recently been picked up by Comedy Central, with McLean and Jayde Adams acting as hosts.

For more information, follow Kiri Pritchard-McLean on Twitter, or visit her website.

COMEDIAN OF THE MONTH

Posted in: Comedian Of The Month, Comedians Tagged: Comedian Of The Month, Kiri Pritchard-McLean

Seven Questions With… Chris Chopping

September 6, 2018 by Becca Moody Leave a Comment

© Michelle Huggleston

Stand-up comic and regular MC Chris Chopping has recently been performing his second hour of comedy, Chris Chopping’s Lonely Hearts Club Band at the Edinburgh Festival. Having previously been a semi-finalist of So You Think You’re Funny, this engaging performer is producing comedy that is smart and unpredictable – definitely worth keeping an eye on him.
I asked Chris these seven questions to find out more…

1) How did your career in comedy begin?

When I was growing up stand up comedy didn’t seem like a thing real people could do. There were no comedy clubs near me so comedians were these people who existed exclusively on home video and had a new tour show out for Christmas every year. It was years later I got a job at a comedy club in Cardiff and realised you didn’t have to start out with a full hour. Having not really set the world of retail or call centres alight I thought I might as well have a crack at the dream job.

2) What’s something you used to hate that you now love?

Recently my parents took me out for dinner and my mum tried to persuade me to eat courgette. I’m 31. I’m too old for these conversations. I think if I had refused I wouldn’t have been allowed pudding. So I tried it, it was deep fried and delicious. Love would be a strong word. I used to hate courgette, now I regard it with a healthy scepticism. 

3) What is the most difficult aspect of writing and performing stand-up, for you?

I’t took me a long time to start writing more and replacing my material frequently enough. When I started other comedians would talk about getting bored of their material. I worked in a call centre reciting the same script over and over all day for two years. In comedy I was performing a script I’d written myself at most once a day and being rewarded with laughter and approval instead of people swearing and hanging up. I never got bored but sometimes boredom is a good motivator.

4) Do you have a good memory?

No I have a terrible memory. I don’t even remember where I live. If you were staying at my house and I met you at the station we’d be walking for about 45 minutes before you asked, “how much further now?” And I realised I’d been following you the whole time. Is that what you asked? I don’t remember.

5) Which year of your life has been the best so far?

When I was eight, that was pretty good. I lived next door to my best friend and for my birthday I got Ring Raiders. Airplanes that you wore attached to your fingers via a plastic ring and a translucent plastic pole. It was a simpler time. They came with a VHS cassette with a cartoon of their adventures. That’s got to be hard to beat, year wise.

6) What one person would you be most afraid to meet?

I’d be terrified to meet my younger self. He’d be delighted I was doing stand up comedy but I feel like he’d find my life wanting in other crucial areas. I don’t want to see the disappointment in his eyes when he finds out I ate courgette for example.

7) Where would you like to be in six months time?

I’d like to be the new face of the £50 note with the film of my show Chris Chopping’s Lonely Hearts Club Band being made part of the national curriculum having rocketed me to national treasure status. Realistically, best case scenario I’ll be in Gloucester services buying some sort of gourmet pie.

For more information, visit Chris Chopping’s website and follow him on Twitter

SEVEN QUESTIONS WITH…

Posted in: Comedians, Seven Questions With... Tagged: Chris Chopping, Chris Chopping’s Lonely Hearts Club Band

Edinburgh Review: Kai Samra – Brothers (WIP)

August 18, 2018 by Becca Moody Leave a Comment

© Kai Samra

[usr 4]

This year, Kai Samra brings his work in progress show, Brothers, to The Mash House. Relatively new to the stand up circuit, this Brummie comedian appears remarkably comfortable in front of his audience. His delivery is calm and self-assured, but certainly not an act.

Samra talks about his family with no qualms about letting his listeners in, and this makes for a deeply personal hour of comedy. There are no sob stories here, just honest anecdotes and clever observations. He’s a very likeable performer and his relaxed and confident nature allows his audience to settle into the show effortlessly.

Brothers is a show about family, along with all its frustrations and affections. And Samra makes 45 minutes feel like ten. The laughs come easily and frequently, making it starkly clear that this comic could warm up even the coldest of audiences. It’s not hard to imagine this comic cracking into the mainstream some time soon.

This show is not a skeleton of a piece, and neither is it an amalgamation of too many half-formed ideas. This show already feels polished. So, when Kai Samra returns to Edinburgh next August, prepare for a fantastic, brilliantly formed hour of proficient stand up.

Posted in: Comedians, Edinburgh, Previews, Reviews Tagged: Brothers, Edinburgh Festival, Edinburgh Reviews, Kai Samra
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