Jack Carroll
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
James Corden
James Dowdeswell
James Farmer
James Goldsbury
James Hately
James Kirk
James Mason
James Mullinger
James Redmond
James Sherwood
Jamie Sutherland
Jan Ravens
Jane Bostock
Jane Bussmann
Jane Hill
Janey Godley
Janice Phayre
Jared Hardy
Jarlath Regan
Jarred Christmas
Jason 'Entertainment' Cooke
Jason Byrne
Jason Cook
Jason Freeman
Jason John Whitehead
Jason Kavan
Jason Manford
Jason Patterson
Jason Rouse
Jason Wood
Jasper Carrott
Javier Jarquin
Jay Cowle
Jay Foreman
Jay Lafferty
Jay Ryan
Jay Sodagar
Jeff Brighton
Jeff Caldwell
Jeff Green
Jeff Innocent
Jeff Leach
Jeff Stevenson
Jefferson & Whitfield
Jellybean Martinez
Jem Brookes
Jen Brister
Jennifer Saunders
Jenny Eclair
Jeremy Dyson
Jeremy Hardy
Jeremy Hotz
Jerry Lewis
Jerry Sadowitz
Jerry Seinfeld
Jessica Fostekew
Jessie Cave
Jethro
Jim Bowen
Jim Breuer
Jim Campbell
Jim Davidson
Jim Gaffigan
Jim Jefferies
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Jim Tavare
Jimbo
Jimeoin
Jimmy Bird
Jimmy Carr
Jimmy Cricket
Jimmy McGhie
Jimmy Tarbuck
Jo Brand
Jo Caulfield
Jo Coffey
Jo Dakin
Jo Enright
Jo Romero
Jo Selby
Joan Rivers
Joanna Neary
Joanne Lau
Joe Bor
Joe Bromehead
Joe Cornish
Joe Heenan
Joe K
Joe Lycett
Joe Mercer
Joe Rooney
Joe Rowntree
Joe Wells
Joe Wilkinson
Joel Dommett
Joey Page
John Bishop
John Cleese
John Colleary
John Cooper
John Flint
John Fothergill
John Gavin
John Gillick
John Gordillo
John Kearns
John Lenahan
John Lloyd
John Lynn
John Mann
John Moloney
John Oliver
John Pinette
John Robins
John Ryan
John Scott
John Tansey
John Warburton
John-Luke Roberts
Johnny Armstrong
Johnny Candon
Johnny Vegas
JoJo Smith
JoJo Sutherland
Joleed Farah
Jon Culshaw
Jon Levene
Jon Plowman
Jon Richardson
Jon Torrens
Jonathan Hearn
Jonathan Mayor
Jonathan Paylor
Jonny And The Baptists
Jonny Lennard
Jonny Pelham
Jonny Sweet
Jordan Brookes
Joseph Wilson
Josh Howie
Josh Widdicombe
Joshua Ross
Josie Lawrence
Josie Long
Josie Wicks
Jovanka Steele
Joy Carter
Jude Mahon
Judith Lucy
Julia Clark
Julia Davis
Julia Morris
Julian Clary
Julian Deane
Julie Jepson
Juliet Meyers
June Brown
Junior Simpson
Justin Brett
Justin Moorhouse
Josie Lawrence
Date Of Birth: 06/06/1959
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Josie Lawrence was born in Old Hill in the West Midlands and decided at the age of five that she wanted to be an actress. When she was 16 she joined the Barlow Players in Oldbury and from 1978 to 1981 she studied theatre at Dartington College of Arts. Josie has appeared in numerous theatre productions including playing Moll Flanders at the Lyric. Hammersmith , Lisa Dolittle in Pygmalion at the Nottingham Playhouse and ate in the Taming of the Shrew for the Royal Shakespeare Company and Mrs Anna in the King and I at the London Palladium and Mrs Overall’s evil daughter in the West End version of Acorn Antiques. Her TV career started in earnest with Whose Line Is It Anyway - and she is still a regular improviser with the Comedy Store Players – which led to her own series, Josie. She has also starred in three series of the award winning Outside Edge, among many other TV roles. |
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Mike Myers with the Comedy Store Players |
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![]() You’d be forgiven for thinking that The Comedy Store Players are as old as London itself. It’s not such a stretch of the imagination to picture Guy Fawkes taking time out from stock-piling his sulphur by popping over to Piccadilly Circus to watch Neil Mullarkey pretending to be an Argentine cross-dressing cross-country skier trying to unblock a gutter with an ironing board. In Pyongyang. And Jack the Ripper allegedly loved Richard Vranch’s impression of a thimble. Alas, the comedy collective have in fact been going for just 26 years and the sweaty throngs in The Store on Sunday night witnessed a performance like no other: a rare, unbilled, return from one of their original members- Hollywood funny man Mike Myers. Myers’s Wayne’s World and Austin Powers creations alone have grossed almost one billion dollars (say it in the voice) worldwide and his most recent pay packet was reportedly $10million for his voice in Shrek 3 - a role he could’ve performed in his underpants. Or dressed as a thimble. But on Sunday night in London the unassuming Canadian rocked up off the street in a Joy Division T-shirt and jeans looking for some off-piste action. He looked less like a multimillionaire movie star and more like, well, a Comedy Store Player. Sporting a pleasant centre parting, trademark curtains, and cheeky beer gut, the 48-year-old appeared in jovial spirits throughout and his mere presence seemed to spark a celebratory charge among the Players. There was a lot of love in the Store... just don’t mention The Love Guru. It’s often been suggested that The Players are so in tune with each other that their improv performance can often seem a bit too polished - and, because of this, some of the biggest laughs come when they’re purposefully trying to catch each other out. So no prizes for guessing who was at the receiving on this occasion. Indeed, they constantly threw impossible song themes, which no one else could deal with, straight at Myers. He fended them off by singing, perfectly on cue: ‘This is how you treat A GUEST!?’ As the Guest, Myers himself excelled; when his laughs came they were the biggest squeals of the night. His Last Gas Station before the Desert and Mind The Gap routines with Josie Lawrence and Neil Mullarkey respectively were delights, as was his bionic arm skit, which saw his arm sprout back and forth depending on the multiple flashback scenes. This was no chore for Myers- being funny comes naturally to him- he could’ve spent the whole two hours farting the Canadian national anthem and the audience would’ve still lapped it up. And though he wasn’t quite as consistent as one or two of the other Players, he was still strikingly adept and quick-witted (watching him attempt to squeeze the blood from a blood orange with his robot arm was as funny as anything else all night) and there’s no doubt that he’d be an even better ‘improviser’ had he been doing this every week since 1985 but, well, he’s been somewhat busy conquering Hollywood. What of the trusty Players themselves? Richard Vranch’s impressive display makes you wonder why he was so wasted as the musician on Whose Line Is It Anyway? Neil Mullarkey gave a commandingly charismatic display as the alpha-male ringleader and Myers’s BBF. Suki Webster, while very capable, struggled to escape her role as the Token Girl. Andy Smart, resembling a science teacher who takes his work (read: chemicals) home with him just seemed happy to be there, and was very good, to boot. Wearing the snazziest pair of brogues seen on a London stage this year, Phelim McDermott was a revelation, injecting proceedings with a very welcome offbeat surrealism – think David Lynch meets Mr Bean. But the standout was Josie Lawrence - churning out a flawless performance, she was the one whom the others turn to to bail them out of a sticky spot. She was never lost for words, noises, or lyrics and rather resembled that annoying kid in the school play who knows everyone’s lines. It’s true that no Comedy Store Players show is the same, with or without Myers, but you’re guaranteed the laughs no matter what the bizarre context. Five minutes of Phelim McDermott mumbling a completely nonsensical, made-up language (he was supposed to be a Peruvian landscape gardener obsessed with pissoirs on mountain tops) contained more laughs than an entire Michael McIntyre DVD. The only segment which fell flat was the ‘Guess the job’ round - it was too long, too strained, just too much of a one-trick pony with increasingly tenuous puns and, ultimately, not funny enough. That is to say, it would probably still be good enough for a commission on BBC3. But, then, the whole nature of this show is throwaway. It exists only in its time; there is no script, the narrative is conjured up on the spot and largely forgotten thereafter. But that’s fine, because for those two hours in The Store it is a complete and utter treat performed by an improv group of unparalleled quality and standing. And a chap called Mike. Just a quick word about the audience, who seem to think it their mission to be as funny as the Players: FYI it’s probably not the first time the Players have heard ‘gynaecologist’ or ‘taxidermist’ being suggested as jobs. Hearing such tiresome bellows from the audience on a weekly basis is surely enough to make Mullarkey and Co. contemplate packing this improv lark in and getting themselves real jobs. Like a gynaecologist. Or a taxidermist. Please don’t. And Mr Myers, please feel free to return to The Store whenever you so desire; even if it’s to fart the national anthem. |
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| Date of live review: Wednesday 6th Jul, '11 | |
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Review by © 2011 Marc Butler |
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Monday 1st Nov, '10- | |
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Stunning in 'Whose Line..' as her repeated comedy store performances witness. Shame about the series 'Josie' but that was ages ago! A true star of improvisation. Michael Monkhouse, November 2010 |
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Where can I see Josie Lawrence next?
| 19:30 - Sunday 19th May, '13 | |
| Venue: | Comedy Store |
| Prices: | £17 (£12 conc) |
| Comics: | Josie Lawrence, Lee Simpson, Neil Mullarkey, Paul Merton, Richard Vranch |
| Info: | Comedy Store Players Plus: Suki Webster |
| 20:00 - Wednesday 22nd May, '13 | |
| Venue: | Comedy Store |
| Prices: | £17 (£12 conc) |
| Comics: | Josie Lawrence, Neil Mullarkey, Phill Jupitus, Richard Vranch |
| Info: | Comedy Store Players Plus: Suki Webster, Steve Edis |
| 19:30 - Sunday 26th May, '13 | |
| Venue: | Comedy Store |
| Prices: | £17 (£12 conc) |
| Comics: | Andy Smart, Josie Lawrence, Lee Simpson, Neil Mullarkey, Paul Merton, Richard Vranch |
| Info: | Comedy Store Players |
| 19:30 - Sunday 16th Jun, '13 | |
| Venue: | Comedy Store |
| Prices: | £17 (£12 conc) |
| Info: | With Paul Merton, Josie Lawrence, Richard Vranch, Lee Simpson, Neil Mullarkey, Niall Ashdown |
| Show: | The Comedy Store Players |
| 20:00 - Wednesday 19th Jun, '13 | |
| Venue: | Comedy Store |
| Prices: | £17 (£12 conc) |
| Info: | With Josie Lawrence, Richard Vranch, Neil Mullarkey, Andy Smart, Ian Coppinger, Marcus Brigstocke |
| Show: | The Comedy Store Players |
| 19:30 - Sunday 23rd Jun, '13 | |
| Venue: | Comedy Store |
| Prices: | £17 (£12 conc) |
| Info: | With Josie Lawrence, Richard Vranch, Neil Mullarkey, Andy Smart, Niall Ashdown, Steve Steen |
| Show: | The Comedy Store Players |

Whose Line Is It Anyway? Series 1 And 2
DVD (2007):
Whose Line Is It Anyway? Series 1 And 2

