Barnaby Slater
Barry Castagnola
Barry Cryer
Barry Dodds
Barry Ferns
Barry Hilton
Barry Humphries
Barry McDonald
Barry Took
Bay Citee Molars
Bec Hill
Becky Love
Ben Bailey
Ben Clark
Ben Clover
Ben Davids
Ben Davis
Ben Elton
Ben Ennis
Ben Harland
Ben Hayman
Ben Hurley
Ben Miller
Ben Norris
Ben Schofield
Ben Target
Ben Travis
Ben Van Der Velde
Benjamin Crellin
Bennett Arron
Benny Boot
Benny Hill
Bernard Manning
Bernard O'Shea
Bernie Mac
Bethany Black
Bill Bailey
Bill Bruce
Bill Burr
Bill Cosby
Bill Woolland
Billy Connolly
Billy Kirkwood
Bo Burnham
Bob Doolally
Bob Hope
Bob Mills
Bob Monkhouse
Bob Mortimer
Bob Slayer
Bobby Freeman
Bobby Mair
Boothby Graffoe
Boy With Tape On His Face
Bratchy
Brendan Burke
Brendan Dempsey
Brendan Naughton
Brendan O'Carroll
Brendan Riley
Brendon Burns
Brennan Reece
Brett Goldstein
Brett Sharpe
Brian Damage & Krysstal
Brian Gittins
Brian Higgins
Bridget Christie
Brigitte Aphrodite
Bruce Devlin
Bruce Griffiths
Bruce Morton
Benjamin Crellin
Edinburgh 2011Late-night set |
More Benjamin Crellin videos |
| Edinburgh 2011 |
| New Zealand Comedy Gala |
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Benjamin Crellin began performing in New Zealand in 1995 at the age of 18; and in 2004 appeared at the Montreal Just for Laughs Festival. He has written and toured eight solo shows and played across the world, but it now based in the UK. |
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Dirty Uncle Comedy Roadshow |
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![]() You do have to wonder how the Brighton Fringe was sold to these Swedish comedians – and whether they really expected their trip to Britain to involve performing to half a dozen people in a very hot room above a pub. It’s tough for them in any case, performing in a second language they are clearly not used to and being tripped up by social differences that prove more even difficult obstacles than words. When one act refers to a train carriage as a wagon, we know what he means; when another say ‘talking about evil… my mother-in-law’ he seems surprised by the ironic laugh, perhaps unaware just how cheesily passé mother-in-law gags have become. Compere Tomas Ahlbeck is presumably the titular uncle figure, a relative of the rather shambolic, drunken type. He doesn’t appear to have particular grasp of his material, in English at least, but can conjure up the occasional oddly funny image; while his laissez faire attitude – if we can add yet another language into the mix – is endearing, like a Nordic Arthur Smith. First up, Stefan Söderblom was performing only his third gig in English and his first on UK soil… and it showed. He’s a gag-driven comic, so you can see the juxtaposition of ideas that make the crux of his jokes, although the ideas are not yet really working across cultures and language and the audience sometime have to join the dots themsleves. His wife, a nursery school teacher, treating him like one of her pre-school charges is probably his most fertile, identifiable area. Anders Celin is introduced as being the most complained-about comic in Sweden, but although he can be dark, it’s nothing that will shock a regular comedy-goer, with ideas such as maltreating midgets almost hack these days. Although his jokes don’t always land, the impishness is apparent, as his playful eyes dart around the room with every supposedly edgy line. It makes him endearing, even when being crude; as demonstrated by his most graphic take on the old gag about ventriloquists’ dolls always having their master’s hand up their arse. Finally, a guest Anglophone in the guise of shaven-haired Kiwi Benjamin Crellin. He’s an intense, almost menacing, presence as he sets out his considered take on how technology has become our new religion, including the obligatory attacks on the old religion. He is a mesmerising performer, albeit one who is quite deliberately posturing and brooding, as effective when advancing new ideas as when reinforcing ones you’ve heard before. He could easily be accused of being more fascinating to watch than he is laugh-out-loud funny, but there’s no denying you are captivated by his performance. |
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| Date of live review: Wednesday 23rd May, '12 | |
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Review by Steve Bennett |
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Monday 14th Nov, '11- | |
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Saw his show Stands to Reason at Edinburgh fringe, really enjoyed it G, August 2012 |
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Funny and intelligent. He does well at creating a warm welcoming atmosphere where the audience doesn't feel like he's going to ruin their night by picking on them. A lot of good material that, in parts, is waiting to be developed. One of the better MCs Bob Hidler, May 2012 |


