Mae Martin
Maeve Higgins
Maff Brown
Magnus Betner
Malcolm Hardee
Mandy Knight
Mandy Muden
Marc Lucero
Marc Maron
Marc Wootton
Marcel Lucont
Marcus Brigstocke
Marcus Ryan
Marek Larwood
Margaret Cho
Maria Bamford
Marian Pashley
Marie Vagen
Mark Allen
Mark Cooper-Jones
Mark Cornell
Mark Dolan
Mark Felgate
Mark Gatiss
Mark Hurst
Mark Maier
Mark Nelson
Mark Olver
Mark Restuccia
Mark Simmons
Mark Steel
Mark Stephenson
Mark Thomas
Mark Walker
Mark Watson
Markus Birdman
Marlon Davis
Martha McBrier
Martin Beaumont
Martin Coyote
Martin Davis
Martin Hill
Martin Mor
Martin Tapley
Martine Pepper
Marty McLean
Marty Wilson
Mary Bourke
Masai Graham
Mat & Faron
Mat Ewins
Mathew Horne
Matt Blaize
Matt Dyktynski
Matt Grantham
Matt Green
Matt Hollins
Matt Kirshen
Matt Lucas
Matt Price
Matt Reed
Matt Rees
Matt Richardson
Matt Rudge
Matt Tiller
Matt Watts
Matt Welcome
Matthew Hardy
Matthew Highton
Matthew Holness
Matthew Osborn
Matthew Winning
Maureen Langan
Maureen Younger
Max Dickins
Max Dowler
Men In Coats
Men With Bananas
Meryl O'Rourke
Michael Ayers
Michael Fabbri
Michael J Dolan
Michael Legge
Michael McIntyre
Michael Mooney
Michael Redmond
Michael Smiley
Michael Tombs
Michael Winslow
Mick Ferry
Mick McGrath
Mick Miller
Mick Sergeant
Mickey Anderson
Mickey D
Mickey Hutton
Mickey Sharma
Micky Flanagan
Mike Belgrave
Mike Birbiglia
Mike Gunn
Mike McShane
Mike Milligan
Mike Newall
Mike Sheer
Mike Wilkinson
Mike Wilmot
Mike Wozniak
Miles Crawford
Miles Jupp
Milo McCabe
Milton Jones
Miranda Hart
Miriam Elia
Miss London
Mitch Benn
Mitch Fatel
Moonfish Rhumba
Moshe Kasher
Mowten
Mr B The Gentleman Rhymer
Mundo Jazz
Matthew Winning
Chortle Student Comedy Award heat 2010Glasgow |
More Matthew Winning videos |
| Chortle Student Comedy Award heat 2010 |
| Chortle Student Comedy Award final 2011 |
| 2010 Chortle Student Comedy Final |
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Finalist in the Chortle Student Comedy Award in 2010 and 2011, when he performed in character as Steph E Graph |
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Davey Connor: Pieces Of What? |
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![]() As part of his comedy apprenticeship, rising Scottish stand-up Davey Connor has been the support act for Jenny Éclair and Russell Kane’s Glasgow Comedy Festival gigs. Now that he has been given his own hour-slot after such exposure, it’s little surprise that he has an assured, calm and personable stage presence. This solo debut, Pieces Of What?, is an amiable but slightly underpowered hour of musings about his upbringing, relationships, superstition, buying lingerie and death, though his only real brush with the doings of the Grim Reaper was the carnage wrought upon some tadpoles he owned as a boy. As a care worker, Connor (aka the stand-up artist formerly known as Davey See) freely admits that his day job is not exactly ‘sexy’, but stand-up has provided him with an escape. But not even he could have imagined that he would one day ‘be’ James Bond as part of a Marie Curie promotional campaign. This scenario acts as the core of the show, to which he returns on a few occasions, showing us the enlarged photos of himself, tuxed-up, alongside his ‘Bond Girl’, former Miss Scotland Nieve Jennings insisting that they didn’t quite have the chemistry that the organiser might have wanted: ‘It was more like a WAG with her butler’. The day ended rather oddly, with Connor being introduced to an elderly blind woman who happened to be an 007 obsessive. A few throwaway lines about air travel and the French being arrogant should be chucked in the bin and replaced with the kind of routines that made this show work best. He vividly recounted growing up in Saltcoats, dubbing the seaside Ayrshire town as ‘Blackpool with leprosy’. There was also a lovely line about how to discover whether someone is a ‘cat person’ and pleasing material about his relationship with his young son. While the Edinburgh Fringe gets plenty of justifiable criticism over cramming crowds into tiny sweatboxes or venues with cold leaky drips, Brel, had its own problems: to audience’s left was a boisterous beer garden whose revellers occasionally tried to gatecrash the venue on their way back to the toilet or bar. Connor ploughed on regardless though he did seem temporarily distracted by events outside where a heated exchange thankfully turned out to be a harmless spot of Glasgow banter rather than a brewing of trouble. Ultimately. though, Connor was outshone by his own support act, Matthew Winning. With some actual jokes and delicious bits about his painfully unfunny parents who can’t see the dividing line between their son’s comedy and his real life, there was an edge and drive to Winning’s brief but inventive set that Connor could do with injecting into his own material. |
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| Date of live review: Monday 26th Mar, '12 | |
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Review by Brian Donaldson |
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Chortle Student Comedy Award Final 2011
Monday 29th Aug, '11- | |
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Monday 21st Mar, '11- Glasgow Capitol | |
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Wednesday 18th Aug, '10- | |
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Very funny man - seen him a few times around Scotland now and always good value. It's not obvious lap it up humour - more weird and thinking-type humour... Tim Keen, August 2011 |

Chortle Student Comedy Award Final 2010
Edinburgh Fringe 2011
Chortle Student Comedy Award Final 2011
Gadd, Kirk and Winning: Well, This is Awkward

