Kai Humphries
Kandi Kane Baxter
Karen Bayley
Karen Dunbar
Karen Taylor
Karl Minns
Karl Spain
Karl Theobald
Kate Lucas
Kate Smurthwaite
Katerina Vrana
Katherine Ryan
Kathy Griffin
Katie Mulgrew
Katy Bagshaw
Katy Brand
Katy Schutte
Katy Wix
Katzenjammer
Keara Murphy
Keir McAllister
Keith Farnan
Keith Fields
Ken Campbell
Ken Dodd
Kent Valentine
Kerry Godliman
Kerry Leigh
Kev Orkian
Kevin Bland
Kevin Bloody Wilson
Kevin Bridges
Kevin Day
Kevin Dewsbury
Kevin Eldon
Kevin Gildea
Kevin Hayes
Kevin McCarron
Kevin McCarthy
Kevin Meaney
Kevin Precious
Kevin Shepherd
Kevin Shevlin
Kirsty Moss
Kishore Nayar
Kitty Flanagan
Kojo
Kwame Asante
Keara Murphy
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Keara Murphy's Travelling Circus |
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![]() Keara Murphy notices fairly early on in her show that there's a number of people in her audience for whom English is a second or third language and she acknowledges the need to slow down a little. Unfortunately she only manages to do this for a few minutes before she speeds her powerboat delivery to full throttle again, leaving her audience bobbing helplessly like flotsam in her wake. Speed of delivery was only part of the problem though. Murphy's show is overloaded with local cultural references that required explanation and even the members of her small audience from the 'wrong' side of Hadrian's Wall must have been struggling to keep up with her determinedly Scottish vernacular. Since the Fringe is an Edinburgh event, it may seem small-minded to be critical of an act for including too many Scottish references but it is an international festival and it's foolish for any performer to overlook this. And it's counter-productive as there's not much chance of generating laughter if your audience doesn't understand your jokes. Murphy's show is built on the premise that she has an association with circuses. But this idea drifts in and out of the show in a similar fashion to the music from the band in the courtyard below... randomly and without making any kind of positive contribution to the comedy. Speaking of the band, it always seems fair to draw attention to the elements that are beyond the control of performers at The Fringe, especially at venues like The Three Sisters, and it was genuinely difficult for Murphy to combat the extraordinary noise coming from outside the room. As well as the band's loud rendition of Sweet Home Alabama et al, she had to contend with the din generated by a performer in an adjacent venue who sounded like she was conducting a Baptist service in the Deep South, but petulantly drawing attention to these problems is not the best approach. Nor is constantly changing your mind about whether or not it's best to have the windows open and chiding the crowd for being ‘quiet’. The only entertaining moments in this show come when Murphy offers impersonations of Oprah Winfrey and Liza Minnelli, which are uncannily good. So much so that it strikes you that she's doing the wrong show... with her gift for mimicry, she ought to build her entire set around impersonations. But this is far too insignificant an element of her show to redeem it. Elsewhere there's some hackneyed stuff about growing up in Scotland with an Irish mother as well as predictable routines about the merits of sex toys. This kind of a fodder is now so frequently chewed over by female performers that there ought to be some kind of legally-enforced moratorium. Long after making her promise to slow down, Murphy breathlessly performed a routine built on a Gaelic pun. Unsurprisingly, she was the only person in the room who understood the joke which made it necessary for her to explain it – needless to say, this didn't improve it any. Close to the stage were an elderly couple who, Murphy discovered with some gentle probing, were visiting from California. They had been married for 53 years but as they sat glum-faced as the rest of us, you couldn't help wondering whether the post-gig argument about which of them was to blame for deciding to attend this show would bring their lengthy union to an end. In front of a West of Scotland audience with a smattering of Gaelic, ten or twenty minutes if Murphy's material might have made a positive impact, but in front of an international Fringe audience, she produced a painful and unrewarding experience.
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| Date of live review: Sunday 29th Aug, '10 | |
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Review by Jason Stone |
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Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2006 - | |
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May be a good actress but really bad comedian. No jokes at all. Jack, February 2011 |
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Keara was MC for the night at Eden Court - Inverness,a pivotal role for anyone to take on. She certainly displays an air of confidence on stage and applies her training as an actress to hold the audience's attention, by voice and movement across the stage, and to engage the gathering in this intimate - One Touch Theatre. Given the material she used that night,not innovative/breaking new ground, but got the laug's, essential to any comedian - "oxygen to a comedian". Some well established comedienne's have graced this stage and failed! Keara did not! So with stronger material and a spot on - Live at the Apollo that elusive lucky break, all comedian's seek. Who know's 2011 could be it? Only time will tell? Douglas Thomson, December 2010 |
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Saw you at the Beehive last night Keara - the acts were OK, but you were by far the funniest:-) Uncle George, March 2010 |
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Keara's characters are funny and fierce, this is a great show, go see it! Finlay, August 2007 |

See below...
Travels With My Hip Flask
Edinburgh Fringe 2007
Keara Murphy: Little Love Affairs
'F' Show
Edinburgh Fringe 2009
Keara Murphy: Lyre Burd
Edinburgh Fringe 2010
The F Show
Keara Murphy's Travelling Circus
| keara_murphy@hotmail.com |
| Official website |
| Mobile: 07808768916 |


