Comedians (J)
Jack Cowley
Jack Dee
Jack Heal
Jack Samuel Warner
Jack Whitehall
Jackie Mason
Jaik Campbell
James Acaster
James Blood
James Branch
James Campbell
James Christopher
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James Dowdeswell
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James Kirk
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Jefferson & Whitfield
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Comic Details

Jack Whitehall

Date Of Birth: 07/07/1988

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Videos

On the Royal Family

From Dave's One Night Stand


More Jack Whitehall videos

On the Royal Family
Jack Whitehall: Jealous of Robert Pattinson
Mummy's Boy
On One-Night Stand
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Biography

Placed second in the Laughing Horse new act competition 2007 and finalist in the So You Think You're Funny? new act competition the same year. Nominated for best newcomer in the 2008 Chortle awards, and for best newcomer at the 2009 Edinburgh Comedy Awards.

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Reviews

Channel 4 Comedy Gala 2011
Live Review
O2 Arena

Channel 4 Comedy Gala 2011

This is comedy as an endurance event – the sort of night that would do Ken Dodd proud. It’s hard enough to build an atmosphere for stand-up in the vast O2, add the fact that the show, with interval, is three-and-a-half hours long, and comics have just a few short minutes to make their mark, and it’s not the most conducive of environments.

Still it’ll look good on telly – which means, idiot O2 punters, you don’t have to struggle to record it on your camera from an eighth of a mile away. And last year’s event raised around £800,000 for Great Ormond Street Hospital, so let’s not be too churlish about what will be achieved. But, good work aside, this is no way to watch stand-up.

In fact, it’s a brutally tough way to judge a comic’s standing, with 21 the top names in the business almost going back to the days of Comedy Store’s gong show– impress or die, and do it quickly.

Closing the first half with a routine longer than most were allowed, Michael McIntyre was probably the biggest draw; and proved his worth with a typically assured observational set. Post-Britain’s Got Talent, he’s not pretending he’s one of us any more (‘I quite like being famous, it’s awesome!’) and has some entertaining yarns about being recognised that nonetheless have a self-deprecating edge. Chuck in some relatable anecdotes about his cheese-obsessed child and that trademark strut that keeps the cameramen on their toes, and you have a success.

Proof that quality will out came earlier on with Sean Lock, with probably the best material of the night, including some ultra-topical material about the new Icelandic volcano on a night when most acts, understandably, played it safe with their greatest hits. He’s evidence that you don’t need a supercharged performance to engage a venue this size if the jokes are strong enough.

On the flipside, Lee Evans, with another longer slot, won over the room midway through the first half with a combination of his fame and his energy. ‘What a big place,’ he gasped at the site of the room, slightly disingenuously since he’s a regular performer here. Some of his routines are so old hat they could be a metaphorical tricorne – getting stuck behind a caravan on a country road or the subtext when meeting a girlfriend’s parents for the first time. But there are some more inventive lines and in a short set his physicality is a welcome adrenaline shot.

Rewind to the start, and one of a couple of odd turns that didn’t quite belong: Ndubz – though their uninspired music was eventually interrupted by an Alan Carr stunt. We were given no such respite from he later interloper, Chris Moyles, who dressed as Freddie Mercury and engaged a reluctant audience in a bout of call and response. Pointless.

So on through the comics. Dara O Briain started strong with conversational but gaggy material about guilty pleasures and of being the daytime dad. Perhaps it was the child-related charity beneficiaries – or the fact that lots of comics at this level are of a certain age – but parenthood was to be a recurring theme of the night. It was good stuff, but the audience were cold (though not weary as they would later be) and being the first of so many means he’d be hard to recall by the end.

Mark Watson’s wonderfully unaffected demeanour proved engaging, and means that when punchlines such as ‘minge of steel’ come, they have extra impact for seeming so natural. More laughs of recognition came from Alan Carr with tales of the after-effects of drinking told with usual high camp.

Jo Brand received a more muted response, her grumpy demeanour perhaps over-familiar now, despite a tale of abduction that’s got quite an edge. But she was certainly a contrast to the following comedian, Lee Evans.

Hosting a few acts, Jonathan Ross made a decent fist of turning his obvious comic sensibilities into stand-up – which is not always an easy transition. His story about visiting Great Ormond Street was natural and entertaining, those of his beloved pet dogs interrupting his sexual congresses were more forced, but not without charm.

Deprived in this venue of his usual forte of messing with the audience, Jason Byrne initially struggled to make an impact with his battle of the sexes material – but a suggestion of a cheeky and childish bedroom game won them round, and he came good in the end.

Sandwiched between Sean Lock and Chris Moyles was the warm domesticity of Sarah Millican. A great opening line leads into a lazy gag or two about underwear carrying slogans, but then a story of her parents and a suicide pact was irresistibly charming.

Next up, Glasgow lad Kevin Bridges had some cheeky appeal – such as calling London home – but didn’t really sparkle after so many other acts, and no interval yet in sight. Routines about driving tests and learning Spanish just seemed a little too familiar.

Jon Richardson’s stint on Stand Up For The Week and as new team captain on 8 Out Of 10 Cats makes it look like he’s being groomed as one of the comedy faces of Channel 4. But his main story of an odd local newspaper story never really took off. His comedy is better looking inward at his own OCD tendencies, but this came too late in this short set.

Finally the Michael McIntyre, and then that long-awaited interval. After which came Rich Hall, who protested: ‘I’ve been thrown to the wolves here.’ The show – obviously over-running - restarted far too quickly, and he had to perform to thousands of people streaming into the auditorium, and shuffling past others into their seat. If they missed any of his set, it was their loss, as he doled out some great lines – especially about Osama Bin Laden’s death and the ‘dignified burial at sea’ before performing a witty and surprisingly tender love ballad to a Ku Klux Klan member, backed by a full backing section.

Jack Dee might have been one of the more established stars of a show not short on familiar faces, but he seemed to phone in his routine about the health service. Taking those annual lists of accident statistics and sneering at the people who hurt themselves on swing bins or cruet set seems easy, and his deadpan slipped into lacklustre.

Rhod Gilbert reinvigorated things with a typical lively rant about his misadventures in retail. This time the thing he got annoyed trying to buy was a hoover – his sharp anti-bullshit rage spilling over to the ridiculous when it comes to the anthropomorphic Henry; but the audience go with him, just to see how it all turns out.

Micky Flanagan was another highlight of the night, with a rather bottom-centric set, but the cheerily matter-of-fact way he described his bout of Delhi belly proved a definite winner from this charismatic working-class everyman.

A lull started to kick in around now, which Andi Osho didn’t really have the material to overcome – charisma and likability proving not enough on their own as her ideas about the Olympics lacked killer lines, the odd nicely descriptive phrase not withstanding.

Her Stand Up For The Week co-star Jack Whitehall pulled things around. As always, much of his material didn’t stand out – though his take on the Midsomer Murders racism row is sharp – but it was delivered with real aplomb. Never was this more evident in his confession to ‘posh shame’ when he disguised his roots by talking like a youth from the ghetto. Such patois is probably the most hackneyed topic among modern comics, but he did his set piece with an impressive comic rhythm that guaranteed a round of applause.

Shappi Khorsandi didn’t have a good gig, with thousands of people falling largely silent during her set. The material, largely about being a single mum, was bitty, not building enough momentum to get us on board, while her punchlines were not strong enough for this not to matter. Her timing seemed off, too, as she rushed too quickly from one gag to the next.

Penultimately – yes, the acts still came – Jason Manford brought his winning ways to the stage, starting off with a knowing nod to his own infamy when he said of Andy Gray: ‘Imagine losing your job for something you did off air…’ His suggestion that all football officials be female was a cunning way into some old clichés, and actually gave them some new life. That and his instant affability.

A small but continuous stream of people left the show throughout John Bishop’s routine, which began after 11pm (the show had started at 7.30pm). And I’m not convinced he really gave them much to stay for. His chit-chat about parenthood was wordy and longwinded, with an obsession with the phrase ‘wank off a tramp’ the audience didn’t share. His style has always been such, but we all needed something punchy after so long a night, and he wasn’t the man to deliver that.

  • The Channel 4 Comedy Gala airs on June 10 from 9pm.
Date of live review: Wednesday 25th May, '11
Review by Steve Bennett
April Fool for Mencap
April Fool for Mencap

Monday 4th Apr, '11-
Jack Whitehall: Learning Difficulties
Jack Whitehall: Learning Difficulties

Wednesday 11th Aug, '10-
Jack Whitehall: Nearly Rebellious - Fringe 2009
Saturday 29th Aug, '09-
Hackney Empire New Act Final 2008
Hackney Empire New Act Final 2008

Show - Misc live shows -
Jack Whitehall : Original Review
Jack Whitehall : Original Review

Wednesday 5th Dec, '07-
Laughing Horse New Act Final 2007
Laughing Horse New Act Final 2007

Show - Misc live shows -
So You Think You're Funny? 2007 final
So You Think You're Funny? 2007 final

Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2007 -
Comic Abuse
Comic Abuse

Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2006 -
Comedy Store's 30th Anniversary Charity Gala
Comedy Store's 30th Anniversary Charity Gala

Show - Misc live shows -
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Comments

Skip to page: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4

He is going places, slowly but surely. All of the haters have probably only ever seen him on ridiculous panel shows and would need to see this young man in real standup environments to appreciate his genuinely funny and likeable stage personality. Saw his fringe show and loved it. Guys are just jealous because he is the ideal package: hilariously funny, extremely good looking and rather rich too! Seriously worth watching!

MarvinKMooney, November 2010


Another example of how a total absence of comic skill is no handicap when there are enough vacuous idiots to applaud you.

radish, September 2010


Propelled on a cloud of agents and PR men onto our TVs, advertising nothing and incurring sound and fury. See the infinitely more talented Adam Bloom to see what his reps' 2001 attempts at same got him... nowhere.

Mandy Allan, August 2010


I have no doubt that Jack will be massive. Largely because he already is. The guy is clearly talented, but the overwhelming clout and influence he (or his agents/ publicists) has is wildly disproportionate. I don't think he's ready for the TV appearances and O2 gigs he's getting, where he usually comes across as very much a work in progress. Five or ten years down the line perhaps, but fortunately I am not one of the people whose opinion matters in that respect. I hope he enjoys his success, but, with better acts working so much harder for so much less, it would be disingenuous to say that he’s earnt it.

Dripfed, April 2010


I love Jack he's cute, young and incredibly funny! One of my favourites!

DaisyShaun, February 2010


Shit on telly, even worse live. Nothing original to say, just copying alot of other people's material and playing the "ooh i'm a posh upper-middle class boy so everything i say is tinged with irony" card.

James Evans, November 2009


He is all over the place. he's even presenting Buzzcocks tonight. Get him off my TV, he's not even funny

Jake, October 2009


Brilliant! I love the guy.

Lucie, September 2009


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