Gar Murran
Gareth Berliner
Gareth Morinan
Gareth Richards
Gareth Urwin
Gary Colman
Gary Delaney
Gary Little
Gary O'Donnell
Gavin Webster
Gearoid Farrelly
Gemma Beagley
Gemma Whelan
Geoff Aymer
Geoff Boyz
Geoff Norcott
Geoff Taylor
Geoff Whiting
Geoffrey Perkins
George Carlin
George Cottier
George Egg
George Ryegold
Gerry Howell
Gerry K
Giacinto Palmieri
Giada Garofalo
Gina Yashere
Ginger and Black
Girl & Dean
Glenn Moore
Glenn Wool
Gordon Brunton
Gordon Southern
Graham Anthony
Graham Fellows
Graham Goring
Graham Hey
Graham Mackie
Grainne Maguire
Greg Burns
Greg Cook
Greg Davies
Greg McHugh
Greg Proops
Gregory Akerman
Griff Griffiths
Gus Tawse
Gwilum Argos
Gary Delaney
At Chortle Fast Fringe 2010Performing an extract from his show, Purist |
More Gary Delaney videos |
| At Chortle Fast Fringe 2010 |
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Just For Laughs Comedy Store showcase |
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![]() Always an odd gig, this one, with no compere and well-established acts compressing their usual 20 minutes or so into a tight eight – all the while trying to impress the talent-spotters from Montreal’s Just For Laughs Festival. Not that this Comedy Store gig is quite an audition, either, more than a chance for the Canadians to get an holistic feel for who’s doing well rather than a night with a definite ‘you’re hired!’ conclusion. Opening act Gary Delaney did his best to try to explain all this – and execute the quickest bit of audience warm-up known to man – without eating too much into his allocated time. Normally with comedians who peddle one-liners, the concern is ‘well, it’s funny.. but I don’t know how much more I could bear.’ But with Delaney’s smart, sometimes edgy, punchlines, his set was over far too soon. His cheeky delivery, cracking up at his own silliness, makes these easy to listen to, and the twists are almost always unforeseeable. Benny Boot has an appealing quirkiness, too. His opening, in which he pulled back the curtain to explain stand-up is actually scripted, missed the mark – not helped by his nasal delivery and too-deliberate nervous wriggles around the mike stand. But the bulk of the material is strong indeed, whether he’s describing fiendishly inventive pranks or making obtuse, almost surreal, observations, this Australian has a keen sense of the absurd. With his consummate rap skills, Doc Brown is the perfect entertainer. His track about everyone being racist is a fairly straightforward take on the ‘is it cos I is black?’ style of victim culture – but the lyrics are slick and the performance faultless. In his allotted time he could only hint at the dichotomy of his life – as a now middle-class nerd who ‘rolls with rappers’, although he’s previously proved how rich a comic vein that is. Swedish-based, English-born, New-Zealand raised Al Pitcher is a fairly broad storytelling type of comedian, with engaging, although not fascinating, stories of train and plane travel – and a few national traits. For my taste, it’s not substantive enough, but most of the audience would probably disagree, based on their easy laughs. And it can’t be denied that he can come up with the occasional analogy that’s just perfect. One of James Mullinger’s earliest gigs was at Just For Laughs in 2005, as he wrote a feature as part of his day job at GQ. Seven years later, and it’s hard to see him among the best of the internationals who make it to Montreal, with a set that’s noticeable short on laughs. He generates a lot of noise, mainly thanks to a forceful, even loudmouth, delivery and a lot of ‘any drinkers in?!’-style soliciting of cheers. But the writing is long-winded, and too often uses a tone of high-pitched incredulity in place of a punchline. Thank god for the man clumsily falling off his chair in the front row, as Mullinger dealt with that deftly enough in a moment that made him more human than the act did. Next up, freaky Paul Savage, who did prove more successful with those sections of the audience not put off by his random stream-of-consciousness style, in which every statement is instantly negated with a ‘not really’, ‘I haven’t’ ‘You can’t’ or ‘They didn’t’. But it’s pretty infuriating to have contradiction in place of payoffs. Away from this nonsense, there are a couple of actual gags, which proved stronger, and the closing song about his exes had a certain charm than surpassed the cat-in-a-blender vocal style. After the interval, Keith Farnan with his self-confessed ‘twinkly Irish bollocks’, although his crowd-pleasing material about his homeland and its economic chaos didn’t boast the insight of which he has previously proved capable. But lines proposing himself as a supreme being, and his take on women’s image issues, provide a potent, and funny, mix of the intelligent and the silly. On the strength of his impressive routine, you wouldn’t want to be married to Josh Howie, who portrays himself as a petty, angry man hell-bent on proving himself right, no matter what. Fortunately these antisocial characteristics make comedy gold, and his recollection of the simmering tensions over an ante-natal hospital trip with his wife is skilfully constructed, as he reruns all the annoyances from his side of the argument, well-paced to winkle out plenty of laughs of recognition. You could spot John Lynn’s voice anywhere – a strangulated Irish brogue with long lazy voweeeels that put any word on the rack. His tales concern him being an ex-teacher, being in a bad marriage or picking up his drunk missus, which he acts out with all-too believable conviction. However, the content is otherwise slight, and sometimes predictable, which means the languid approach is a bit of a patience-tester. Ian Stone is a much sharper operator, with a focus on getting the gags out as efficiently as possible. They start with some cynical quickies about his Jewish background and the Middle East situation, which he’s been performing for long enough to be perfectly honed (even while relying on familiar stereotypes) before moving on to an inherently funny Twitter exchange between the Dalai Lama and ‘Sheffield Tony’, with just enough embellishment to make it sparkle. Tony Law’s meta-comedy madness blasts through the room like an Artic wind, refreshing but disorientating. His material piles on the cheese, while his ceaseless commentary on the artifice of his prepared material is an appealing combination of comedy in-jokes and self-referential oddness. He describes himself as a maverick nut bar – and it would be hard to disagree. To wind up, a more gentle storytelling approach from Elis James, living up to the cliché of the lyrical Welshman. After a couple of ice-breakers about the Welsh language, his mother tongue, he regaled with a story about a wedding party incident that had ambitions of Dirty Dancing, but ended up more You’ve Been Framed. It’s a slight story, and gentler than the last couple of acts, but James is charm personified, and it’s a warmly satisfying end to a packed night.
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| Date of live review: Wednesday 22nd Feb, '12 | |
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Review by Steve Bennett |
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Saturday 7th Aug, '10- | |
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Wednesday 1st May, '02- | |
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One of the best gag writers in the country today. Excellent comic. Don Biswas, October 2008 |
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Wonderfully crafted lines. Always raises the roof - more so now he's dropped the deadpan thing. As sharp as they come Adam Montgomery, September 2007 |
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Quality. I watched Gary last night in Kidderminster just rip the roof off the room with half an hour of non-stop gags, every one utter quality. Best bit was that he looked like he was enjoying himself and his material, even with the deadpan approach. Excellent. Jim Smallman, August 2006 |
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At a two-thirds full Comedy Cafe on Friday night with a p'ed-up hen party on the table at the back having given the compere and Act 1 a hard time. Delaney comes on and slaughters them and us with a couple of pull-no-punches comebacks and a string of wicked one-liners. Admittedly, a handful fell flat but its a good chance to have a beer and wait for the next one and the majority are blinding. Stole the show and made our night. Olly Mc, May 2006 |
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Superb. His Hamza gag had me laughing like a fool. Brilliant. ads of charm and - most importantly - very funny. Fantastic! Big Rich, April 2006 |
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Fantastic. Razor-sharp one-liners Gavin Campbell, March 2006 |
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Great at what he does, will always impress the majority of the audience. Personally I prefer a more versatile headline act, and Gary seems to alienate part of his audience that tire of the one liners. The additional comments following the one-liners are prety slick though. Sam, February 2006 |
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I've seen Gary plenty of times now, and it is always beautiful to watch. Makes no secrets, from the off he tells the audience what he will be doing, and it is unfortunate if it's not your thing, because the more you see these jokes, the more you can appreciate them. Not only appreciate though, they are damn funny too. I can't imagine too many people matching his laugh rate, and if he believes the audience are with him, he'll pull out some truly genuine, darkly genius lines. Works hard at what he does, and it show's in the quality of what he is doing. Dave Longley 11.11.05 Dave Longley, November 2005 |
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Where can I see Gary Delaney next?
| 20:15 - Friday 25th May, '12 | |
| Venue: | Leeds Highlight |
| Prices: | £17 |
| Comics: | Gary Delaney, Joe Lycett, Martin Beaumont, Phil Butler |
| 19:00 - Saturday 26th May, '12 | |
| Venue: | Leeds Highlight |
| Prices: | £18.50 |
| Comics: | Gary Delaney, Joe Lycett, Martin Beaumont, Phil Butler |
| 22:30 - Saturday 26th May, '12 | |
| Venue: | Leeds Highlight |
| Prices: | £18.50 |
| Comics: | Gary Delaney, Joe Lycett, Martin Beaumont, Phil Butler |
| 20:00 - Thursday 31st May, '12 | |
| Venue: | Grantham Funhouse |
| Prices: | £7 |
| Comics: | |
| Info: |
Plus: Jonny Awsum
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| 21:00 - Thursday 31st May, '12 | |
| Venue: | Bourne Late Bar and Venue |
| Prices: | £15 incl meal |
| Comics: | Gary Delaney, Phil Butler, Anthony King (MC) |
| 19:00 - Friday 1st Jun, '12 | |
| Venue: | Piccadilly Jongleurs |
| Prices: | £15 |
| Comics: | Colin Cole, Gary Delaney, Junior Simpson |
| Info: | Plus: Jeff Delaney |
| 21:00 - Friday 8th Jun, '12 | |
| Venue: | Nottingham Jongleurs |
| Prices: | From £12 |
| Comics: | Andy White, Curtis Walker, Gary Delaney, Tony Burgess |
| 21:00 - Saturday 9th Jun, '12 | |
| Venue: | Nottingham Jongleurs |
| Prices: | From £15 |
| Comics: | Andy White, Curtis Walker, Gary Delaney, Tony Burgess |
| 20:00 - Friday 15th Jun, '12 | |
| Venue: | Nottingham Glee |
| Prices: | Adult - £11.00, Student - £4.00 |
| Comics: | |
| 20:00 - Saturday 16th Jun, '12 | |
| Venue: | Nottingham Glee |
| Prices: | Adult - £14.00, Student - £4.00 |
| Comics: | |
| 20:30 - Thursday 21st Jun, '12 | |
| Venue: | Cardiff Glee Club |
| Prices: | Adult - £9.50, Student - £6.00 |
| Comics: | |
| 20:30 - Friday 22nd Jun, '12 | |
| Venue: | Cardiff Glee Club |
| Prices: | Adult - £14.50, Student - £6.50 |
| Comics: | |
| 20:30 - Saturday 23rd Jun, '12 | |
| Venue: | Cardiff Glee Club |
| Prices: | Adult - £17.50 |
| Comics: | |
| 20:00 - Sunday 24th Jun, '12 | |
| Venue: | Yeovil Octagon Theatre |
| Prices: | £14 (£10 in advance) |
| Comics: | Gary Delaney, Mark Olver (MC) |
| 20:30 - Thursday 28th Jun, '12 | |
| Venue: | Birmingham Glee Club |
| Prices: | Adult - £11.00, Student - £6.00 |
| Comics: | |
| 20:30 - Friday 29th Jun, '12 | |
| Venue: | Birmingham Glee Club |
| Prices: | Adult - £15.50, Student - £6.50 |
| Comics: | |
| 20:30 - Saturday 30th Jun, '12 | |
| Venue: | Birmingham Glee Club |
| Prices: | Adult - £18.50 |
| Comics: | |
| 20:15 - Friday 13th Jul, '12 | |
| Venue: | Highlight Camden |
| Prices: | Call for prices |
| Comics: | Andrew O'Neill, Gary Delaney, Richard Morton, Sean McLoughlin |
| Info: | Plus: Mr Cee |
| 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 |
| 20:30 - Saturday 21st Jul, '12 | |
| Venue: | Oxford Glee |
| Prices: | Adult - £14.00, Student - £5.00 |
| Comics: | |
| Friday 27th Jul, '12 | |
| Venue: | Newcastle Hyena Cafe |
| Prices: | £11 |
| Comics: | Gary Delaney, JoJo Sutherland, Silky |
| Saturday 28th Jul, '12 | |
| Venue: | Newcastle Hyena Cafe |
| Prices: | £12 |
| Comics: | Gary Delaney, JoJo Sutherland, Silky |
| 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 |
| 20:00 - Thursday 9th Aug, '12 | |
| Venue: | Cardiff Glee Club |
| Prices: | Adult - £9.50, Student - £6.00 |
| Comics: | |
| 20:30 - Friday 10th Aug, '12 | |
| Venue: | Cardiff Glee Club |
| Prices: | Adult - £14.50, Student - £6.50 |
| Comics: | |
| 20:30 - Saturday 11th Aug, '12 | |
| Venue: | Cardiff Glee Club |
| Prices: | Adult - £17.50 |
| Comics: | |
| 20:15 - Thursday 16th Aug, '12 | |
| Venue: | Birmingham Glee Club |
| Prices: | Adult - £11.00, Student - £6.00 |
| Comics: | |
| 20:15 - Friday 17th Aug, '12 | |
| Venue: | Birmingham Glee Club |
| Prices: | Adult - £15.50, Student - £6.50 |
| Comics: | |
| 20:15 - Saturday 18th Aug, '12 | |
| Venue: | Birmingham Glee Club |
| Prices: | Adult - £18.50 |
| Comics: | |
| 20:30 - Tuesday 21st Aug, '12 | |
| Venue: | Derby Vie |
| Prices: | From £7 |
| Comics: | |
| Info: |
Plus: Scott Bennett, El Purnell
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| 20:00 - Friday 24th Aug, '12 | |
| Venue: | Nottingham Glee |
| Prices: | Adult - £11.00, Student - £4.00 |
| Comics: | |
| 20:00 - Saturday 25th Aug, '12 | |
| Venue: | Nottingham Glee |
| Prices: | Adult - £14.00, Student - £4.00 |
| Comics: | |
| 20:15 - Friday 14th Sep, '12 | |
| Venue: | Birmingham Highlight |
| Prices: | From £14 |
| Comics: | Chris McCausland, Gary Delaney, JoJo Smith, Nathan Caton |
| 20:15 - Saturday 15th Sep, '12 | |
| Venue: | Birmingham Highlight |
| Prices: | From £14 |
| Comics: | Gary Delaney, JoJo Smith, Nathan Caton |
| Info: | Plus: Paul Garvey |
| 20:00 - Saturday 1st Dec, '12 | |
| Venue: | Barnard Castle St Mary's Parish Hall |
| Prices: | £10 (£8 in advance) |
| Comics: | Danny Deegan, Gary Delaney, Jason Cook |

BBC New Comedy Awards Grand Final 2002
Comedy Zone
The Daily Telegraph Open Mic Award Final
Edinburgh Fringe 2003
Big Value Comedy Show (Late)
Edinburgh Fringe 2010
Gary Delaney: Purist
Misc live shows
Twitter Comedy Night

