Comic Details

Adam Bloom

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Videos

Just For Laughs - Adam Bloom

Adam Bloom performs at the Montreal Just For Laughs comedy festival.


More Adam Bloom videos

Just For Laughs - Adam Bloom
Adam Bloom: Comedy Bunker, Ruislip
Adam Bloom at Brighton Comedy Festival
Comedy Cuts

Other footage

Adam Bloom on The World Stands Up
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Biography

Adam Bloom was 18 months old when his parents nicknamed him The Voice, and when he was 10, he told them he was going to be a comedian. By the age of 23, he was.

His first show at the Edinburgh Festival was in 1996, and he returned in 1997, 1998 (where he won a punters' prize) , 1999, 2001 and 2004. He was named best stand-up in the Time Out awards in 1998 and nominated for best club comic in the 2012 Chortle awards.

Bloom has also appeared at Montreal's Just For Laughs Comedy Festival in 1998, 2001 and 2005, and at the Melbourne Comedy Festival in 1999 (where he was nominated for the Stella Artois award) and in 2000. He has also played in Sydney, Auckland, Wellington, Kilkenny and Cape Town as well as a 27-date tour of Canada organised by Just For Laughs.

He has appeared on various stand-up and panel shows on TV, and has recorded three series of his own Radio 4 show, The Problem with Adam Bloom.

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Reviews

Adam Bloom etc at Ginglik
Live Review
Ginglik

Adam Bloom etc at Ginglik

These days, you have to spend a little more than a penny to get into Ginglik – the bar that used to be the public toilets on Shepherds Bush Green – but it’s still a prime example of the excellent value-for-money you can get from a good local comedy club. Eight quid - or five for members – last night got you not just the advertised headliner Adam Bloom, but a famous face off the telly trying new stuff, and a Mock The Week neophyte tipped for greater things.

Things started a little slower, though. Opening act Joe K is one of the plethora of modern comedians with charm, style and control over the room, but little real soul. He offers a a few interesting tidbits, such as a section about wedding tradition in his native Ghana, but generally this is a set of mildly amusing anecdotes told with technical skill that disguises their lightweight nature.

It’s evidenced by a call-back that’s awkwardly jemmied on to the end of a silly tale of a midget on a train; the reference mechanically generates an applause break, even though it doesn’t fit into the story. So he’s entertaining enough, but not in a way that would make him stand-out.

He was followed by the first unscheduled act, Seann Walsh, running through a ‘greatest hits’ package of everyday observations with the broad appeal that could make him a mainstream star. Animatedly acting out everything from the commuters asleep on the Tube to his own laptop viewing stance, his witty material about common experiences strikes more chords than a thrash metal guitarist.

Opening the second section, Laurence Tuck had more difficulties engaging with an audience not convinced whether his awkward style was an act or genuine discomfort at being there.

With his quirky one-liners, he’s going for a Milton-Jones-in-a-tweed-jacket vibe, but doesn’t quite judge the level correctly. He needs an opening stronger that the waffle about his dress sense to make a convincing argument that’s funny from the get-go, and his rigid style gives him no wriggle room when the material falls on stony ground, as it did tonight.

It’s a shame as some of his best jokes are inventively offbeat – though there are some groaners in the mix too. He’s better that the frosty reception he received, but not good enough to be able to do anything about it.

A frisson went around the room when compere Tom Craine announced a big name known to all would be taking to this intimate stage to work through some new stuff. Then Patrick Kielty arrived and admitted he probably wasn’t the comedy superstar they were expecting.

It may have been his fame, or perhaps a mastery of technique only experience can bring, but he got warm reactions to some pat lines about this low-ceilinged basement being reminiscent of Josepf Fritzl’s cellar, or complaining, tongue-in-cheek how the Muslims have taken all the terrorism stereotypes from the Irish.

Kielty is, of course, from Northern Ireland - and he griped at how that made him an instant expert on the recent riots, at least in the eyes of lazy TV producers. Yet he has his Molotov cocktail and throws it, for he does, indeed have some sharp and funny comments on the disturbances. Just shame on you for expecting him to.

Elsewhere he had some nice comments on Beyonce, which permitted him to dance badly to the crowd’s delight, and rather patchier material on footballers and phone sex that went down an obvious route. Quite how much of this will end up in the tour he’s presumably trying for, and while the writing is understandably shaky, he does have an impressive stage manner.

Reviewing Adam Bloom is always redundant, as he offers his own ultra-nerdy biopsy on every moment of his set as it progresses, even down to explaining how he’s slowed his pace to adapt to the ‘jazz club’ feel of this small venue. Not that you’d know he was more relaxed if you hadn’t seen him before, as his fidgety style fizzes with nervous energy.

Bloom is one of the circuit’s best joke craftsmen, always wrong-footing expectations, switching earnest set-ups about his wife and child into bold punchlines and tagging on endless witty asides. Nor will he ever settle for an obvious payoff, with a strong vein invention running through the writing.

Yet although the tone is always jokey, with anything fair game for a gag, even chatty audience members who he insults and charms in equal measure, there’s some heart to the set too. Despite cracking out the witticisms, Bloom reveals something of himself as an over-analytical geek who’s fallen on his feet.

Date of live review: Wednesday 28th Sep, '11
Review by Steve Bennett
Comedy Of Ashes
Comedy Of Ashes

Monday 24th Jan, '11-
Latitude 2008
Latitude 2008

Show - Misc live shows -
Adam Bloom: Look At Me, Anybody
Adam Bloom: Look At Me, Anybody

Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2007 -
Adam Bloom : Original Review
Adam Bloom : Original Review

Saturday 1st Oct, '05-
Adam Bloom: Entertaining The Thought
Adam Bloom: Entertaining The Thought

Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2004 -
Adam Bloom: And God Created Adam
Adam Bloom: And God Created Adam

Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2001 -
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Comments

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Just seen Adam at Staffordshire University and he is excellent, funny and really draws you in. This is comedy at its best.

Emma, January 2004


Only seen him as a compere, but that is a role he plays with great skill. A real master at establishing and manipulating a relationship with the audience - only problem is he is so good that he can make the acts seem disappointing

Jason Holdcroft, January 2004


When he comes, he shoots out fluffy bunnies and Easter eggs.

Brendon Burns, January 2004


This man is responsible for turning me into a fan of live comedy.

Brendan, January 2004


Brilliant. Energy and humour in perfect harmony.

[Anon], November 2003


Is this guy serious? I think he's a bit crazy upstairs if he thinks he's funny.

Rebecca, November 2003


I've been a fan of Bloom's for a while but I agree he is really a comedy force right now. He stormed it when I saw him in Reading he just seems blissfully happy with his comedy/life & the audience go away feeling a bit of that. Wish I could have a bit of what is making him buzz.

Joel, October 2003


Fucking superb! He is on such first rate form at the moment which is good because I started to think he had lost something for a while there. It seems he has been born again with an even cheekier glint in his eye.

Ricardo Senna, September 2003


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News
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Where can I see Adam Bloom next?

Where can I see Adam Bloom next?

20:00 - Friday 25th May, '12
Venue: Rich Mix Studios
Prices: £15 (£10 in advance)
Comics: Abandoman, Adam Bloom, Fergus Craig
Show starts: 20:00 (Doors open approx 30 mins earlier)
20:15 - Thursday 14th Jun, '12
Venue: Basingstoke Laughter-House
Prices: £12
Comics: Adam Bloom, Joseph Wilson
Info: Plus: John Pendal
Show starts: 20:15 (Doors open approx 30 mins earlier)
21:30 - Friday 15th Jun, '12
Venue: The Bedford
Prices: £14 (£11 concs)
Comics: Adam Bloom, Alistair Barrie, Don Biswas, Tommy Rowson
Show starts: 21:30 (Doors open approx 30 mins earlier)
21:00 - Saturday 16th Jun, '12
Venue: The Bedford
Prices: £16 (£13 concs)
Comics: Adam Bloom, Alistair Barrie, Loretta Maine
Show starts: 21:00 (Doors open approx 30 mins earlier)
Recommended
21:00 - Saturday 7th Jul, '12
Venue: The Bedford
Prices: Call for prices
Comics: Adam Bloom, Henning Wehn, John Moloney, Kerry Godliman, Lucy Porter
Info: The Best of Banana Cabaret
Show starts: 21:00 (Doors open approx 30 mins earlier)
20:15 - Saturday 14th Jul, '12
Venue: Highlight Camden
Prices: Call for prices
Comics: Adam Bloom, Andrew O'Neill, Gary Delaney, Jessica Fostekew, Pat Burtscher
Show starts: 20:15 (Doors open approx 30 mins earlier)
20:15 - Saturday 4th Aug, '12
Venue: Highlight Camden
Prices: Call for prices
Comics: Adam Bloom, Gary Delaney, Mickey D
Info: Plus: Matthew Grantham, Johnny Cochrane
Show starts: 20:15 (Doors open approx 30 mins earlier)
20:15 - Saturday 11th Aug, '12
Venue: Reading Highlight
Prices: From £17
Comics: Adam Bloom, Ava Vidal, John Mann, Pete Cain
Show starts: 20:15 (Doors open approx 30 mins earlier)
20:15 - Friday 24th Aug, '12
Venue: Highlight Camden
Prices: Call for prices
Comics: Adam Bloom, Amadeus Martin, Ben Norris, Windsor
Show starts: 20:15 (Doors open approx 30 mins earlier)
20:15 - Saturday 25th Aug, '12
Venue: Highlight Camden
Prices: Call for prices
Comics: Adam Bloom, Ben Norris, James Goldsbury, Windsor
Show starts: 20:15 (Doors open approx 30 mins earlier)
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Adam Bloom's Shows:
Edinburgh Fringe 2001
Adam Bloom: And God Created Adam

Edinburgh Fringe 2004
Adam Bloom: Entertaining The Thought

Edinburgh Fringe 2007
Adam Bloom: Look At Me, Anybody

Misc live shows
Latitude 2008