Carey Marx
Cariad Lloyd
Carl Barron
Carl Donnelly
Carl Hutchinson
Carl-Einar Häckner
Carly Baker
Carly Smallman
Caroline Aherne
Caroline Clifford
Caroline Mabey
Catherine Semark
Catherine Tate
Catie Wilkins
Cecilia Delatori
Celia Pacquola
Chambers & Nettleton
Charlie Baker
Charlie Chuck
Charlie Covell
Charlie Drake
Charlie Ross
Charmian Hughes
Chris Addison
Chris Brooker
Chris Cairns
Chris Corcoran
Chris Cox
Chris Cross
Chris Fitchew
Chris Forbes
Chris Gilbert
Chris Hardwick
Chris Henry
Chris Kent
Chris Langham
Chris Luby
Chris Lynam
Chris Martin
Chris Mayo
Chris McCausland
Chris Morris
Chris Neill
Chris Norton Walker
Chris Quaile
Chris Ramsey
Chris Roche
Chris Rock
Chris Stokes
Chris Tavner
Chris Turner
Christian Elderfield
Christian Reilly
Christian Steel
Christina Martin
Christophe Davidson
Clare Campbell
Clare Lomas
Clever Peter
Clyde West
Cole Parker
Colin and Rob
Colin Cole
Colin Hoult
Colin Manford
Colin Murphy
Colin Owens
Colm O'Regan
Conor Neville
Craig Campbell
Craig Cash
Craig Hill
Curtis Walker
Chris Corcoran
|
Teacher-turned stand-up Chris Corcoran is a regular on BBC Radio Wales, where he has presented a six-part documentary on working men's clubs called Nice Club, No Trouble; been a regular team captain on panel game Jest A Minute and co-hosted a Saturday morning show with Rhod Gilbert. He has also fronted televised rugby coverage for BBC Wales. Corcoran also presents the CBeebies show Doodle Do, aimed at pre-schoolers, and wrote and performed in CBBC's animated show Nelly Nut. As a stand-up, Corcoran made his Edinburgh debut in 2004 with the show Welsh Assembly and has supported Rob Brydon on tour. |
|
Chris Corcoran & Elis James: The Committee Meeting |
![]() |
|
This is the sort of show the Free Fringe was designed for: a couple of reasonably established comedians messing about on a side project more for their own pleasure than anything else. But while some of the fun that Chris Corcoran and Elis James are having reflects back at the audience, The Committee Meeting is so sloppy and inconsequential, it seems cheeky to charge up to £10 for it. The set-up suggests this might be some Welsh version of Absolutely’s Stoneybridge, with rural bumpkins making a meal of ambitious decision-making. In fact, the committee meeting conceit is largely redundant, save for allowing the comics to hide behind the characters – and I use the term loosely – of a working men’s club chairman and his hard-working caretaker. In the meeting we, the punters, are supposed to be the other committee members; a set-up which largely exists to outsource picking on the audience. Rather than seeking volunteers directly, Corcoran’s Mr Chairman invites us to propose someone against their will… but there’s a huge reluctance to dob in a stranger, or even a friend so these segments always drag. Seems people are more generous than the comics anticipated. Other than this, the set pieces bear no relation to the committee of a working men’s club. There’s a Mastermind competition, some video footage of vox pops recut to make the hapless members of the public look like they are talking about edible knickers, or a ‘name that tune’ quiz with the hits played out on a hotel-reception bell. Quite why that latter segment even exists is something of a riddle; if you want to play silly parlour games, you don’t need an Edinburgh show to help you, and there’s no real joke to it, beyond how frivolous an exercise this is. A haphazard, shonky sensibility runs through the show, and they get laughs from lost props, failed sound cues and falling out of character. How much of this is intentional is unclear, but it’s obvious that even at the best of times this is a loose hour that doesn’t take itself too seriously. James and Corcoran have an easy style about them, shrugging off the snafus and engaging enjoyably with the audience, many of which seemed to be having a good time – if not quite as good a time as the people on stage. It feels more than a bit curmudgeonly not to go along with that playful spirit, but this show is too scrappily put-together to make a connection. Mind you, the play-out video of a male voice choir singing Lily Allen and the like was great… now those guys, I’d like to see more of.
|
|
| Date of live review: Saturday 4th Aug, '12 | |
|
Review by Steve Bennett |
|
|
Saw Chris Corcoran at the Fringe and was the highlight of 3 shows I went to. Had great audience interaction but not in a picking on you kind of way. I actually didn't want this show to end. Rachel, August 2010 |
|
Saw Chris on his latest tour 'What goes on tour, stays on tour' and what a brilliant gig it was, made me and my mates laugh out loud from start to finish, a start of the future, go and see him Lee Saunders, April 2010 |
|
Last night I saw his Committee meeting show. A really honest and enjoyable show where the audience played a part which made it even more enjoyable for us. I'm not surprised that he's done a few shows for the BBC as he's an extremely funny bloke and also a nice guy too! Haulwen Pughe, September 2009 |

Chris Corcoran & Elis James: The Committee Meeting
Tour
Chris Corcoran: What Goes on Tour, Stays on Tour

