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
Jim Smallman
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
James Redmond
Date Of Birth: 24/11/1971
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Tickle My Fancy review |
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![]() Our MC, Lloyd Griffith added to the amateurish ambiance. He acts exactly like David Brent, and I’m fairly sure it’s not an act. As he chats to the audience, he comes out with weak jokes followed by nervous high-pitched giggle of self-consciousness. He punctuates his patter with ‘Yeah?’ and at one point he even tagged a sentence with ‘– fact’, just to underline the comparison. As the show progresses, he reveals his day job to be not a manager of a Slough paper merchants, but a choral singer with an impressive male alto voice, and his party-piece bursts of song certainly have the crowd rapt in a way his limp banter never does. More awkwardness came from opening act Robert Commiskey, a nerdy American stand-up whose deliberate delivery is so soaked in ironic distance that it’s hard to warm to him. Adopting an exaggerated Muppet-like voice for every third party makes him seem like almost a parody of a geeky smart-arse college student who mistakes a cynically sarcastic tone for genuine wit. This approach creates an unnecessary barrier as some of his material – particularly on British traits only an outsider could have noticed – is well-observed and naturally funny, something his rather unnatural delivery does a disservice to. Kishore Nayar was almost the mirror-image, with some rather pedestrian conversational stand-up told expertly well. There’s some stuff about him Asian, and some stuff about him being a lawyer, even though he lives up to the stereotype of neither. Slick presentation at the expense of personality is perhaps, the norm in today’s comedy-course-germinated open-mic circuit – so while he’s exudes an air of a man who knows what he’s doing, there’s not enough to mark him out. Given his background as a former star of Hollyoaks and Casualty, it’s only to be expected that sharp-suited James Redmond addressed that issue straight off the bat, to save any audience mutters. But the first half of his set, in which he talks about being recognised in the street and doling out autographs, seem rather boastful when he hasn’t yet established his credentials as a stand-up. They neither connect to the crowd, nor set him up as a high-status comic funny in his arrogance, but inadvertently alienate him as a ‘celeb’ among plebs like us. Beyond that, the set’s a mixed bag, with several good lines on admittedly rather unadventurous subjects such as how the people of his home town of Bristol sound a bit dim. Plus he wasn’t afraid to try a few ad-libs, being the first act of the night to reference the on-stage darkness. And for all the talk of being a TV face, he’s an affable presence at home in front of a crowd – which will stand him in good stead once he starts evolving into a genuine comedian, rather than an actor trying his hand at it. The dry and offbeat Sara Pascoe served up a lot of what had previously been lacking: creative ideas. Her success rate was wildly inconsistent, but the quirky routine was always intriguing, and when a gag did hit home, it was all the more impressive for its originality. Her persona of a mildly spaced-out naïf lets her explore borderline surreal material, yet make it still sound convincing, while heightening the impact of the smartly-written jokes when they arrive. Even so, the star of the show was undoubtedly headliner Jarred Christmas, a big, playful lug of a comedian who’s the closes thing stand-up has to a human teddy-bear. Although he forces his dopey persona on to the audience with quite some force, he’s so affable and unthreatening, he sweeps everyone up in his good-natured mischief, even a room that’s as sluggish as this one. The opening quips are, inevitably, about his unusual surname, though he avoids being too predictable, then proudly announced a section of miscellaneous jokes he can’t fit together any other way. With this refreshing abandoning of any contrived conversational premise, he knocks in the silly punchlines until the audience has unshakable belief in his abilities. That means that when he moves on to longer routines, some of which admittedly don’t hit the high-water mark he’s already established, we’re just happy to go along in his spirit of devil-may-care good humour. And, of course, he’s enough of a pro to have a bankably strong section to finish on, even if he announces that’s exactly what he’s going to do. For all the appearances of just messing about, Christmas is a real pro. |
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| Date of live review: Friday 18th Jun, '10 | |
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Review by Steve Bennett |
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No comments are currently available for this comic. |
Where can I see James Redmond next?
| 21:00 - Saturday 25th May, '13 | |
| Venue: | The Hob |
| Prices: | £9 (£6 concs) |
| Comics: | Andrew Bird, Mary Bourke, Rob Heeney, James Redmond (MC) |
| 20:30 - Sunday 26th May, '13 | |
| Venue: | Downstairs at the King's Head |
| Prices: | £7 (£5 concs) |
| Comics: | David Whitney, James Redmond, Yianni Agisilaou |
| Info: | Plus: Jim Grant |
| 20:30 - Wednesday 29th May, '13 | |
| Venue: | Boston Supreme Inn |
| Prices: | £10 |
| Comics: | James Redmond |
| Info: | Plus: Johnny Kats, Steffan Alun, Stephen Bailey, Matt Dwyer |
| 19:30 - Wednesday 12th Jun, '13 | |
| Venue: | Gravesend Woodville Halls |
| Prices: | From £20 |
| Comics: | Adam Bloom, David Ward, Dominic Holland, Hattie Hayridge, Isy Suttie, James Redmond, Lee Mack, Paul Sinha, Paul Tonkinson, Rich Wilson, Ricky Grover, Terry Alderton |
| Info: | Plus: Philippic Beatbox, Kerry Bilson. Stand-Up For Stacey benefit to raise money for a local girl who has neuroblastoma cancer |
| 19:00~23:00 - Friday 28th Jun, '13 | |
| Venue: | Ashford International Hotel |
| Prices: | £16 |
| Comics: | Gerry K, James Redmond, Maff Brown |
| 18:00~21:00 - Thursday 5th Sep, '13 | |
| Venue: | Via Fossa |
| Prices: | £10 |
| Comics: | Earl Okin, James Redmond (MC) |
| Info: | Plus: Viv Groskop, George Rowe, Bianca Arlette, Andrew West, Daniel Breakey |

The One And The Many
Edinburgh Fringe 2011
Get Up, Stand Up! Gala
His N Hers
Edinburgh Fringe 2012
James Redmond and Ellie Taylor

