Milton Jones
Nominated for the best headliner award in the Chortle Awards 2009 and 2010 – winning it in 2011
Milton Jones Videos
Reviews
We Are Not Amused 2012

There were moments in the first half of the Prince’s Trust star-studded We Are Most Amused fundraiser where simply watching the performance seemed like an act of charity, with a series of ill-judged ideas casting a pall over the night that the real stand-ups had to battle to overturn.
Compere Ben Elton was one such mood-killer. He’s a patron of the charity and tonight’s creative director – and treated us to the coup of a Blackadder comeback sketch to close the night. But for all the brilliant work he put into the night, he’s no stand-up any more, and his opening monologue came within a whisker of dying completely, with long rants playing to silence.
Just moaning about Starbucks calling their small coffees ‘tall’ or whining about being put on hold doesn’t really cut it, and sound more like the grumblings of an out-of-touch old man – however structurally sound the routines, or how much incredulous emphasis he puts into delivering his complaints. Occasionally a well-drawn image would break the dreariness – such as his descriptions of the massive popcorn and drinks containers sold in cinemas – but he set the bar low.
read more of this review …
Opening act Stephen K Amos would surely have been a better host. He might not be as famous as Elton, but he’s got a friendliness people warm to, and a few cracking lines – even if the best, about him being one of twins, comes courtesy of his blunt-speaking mother. Amos is no stranger to performing to royals, of course, and when he played this very benefit in 2008, Prince Harry infamously told him afterwards: ‘You don't sound like a black chap.’ Perhaps wisely, that story didn’t make his routine tonight – although an even more racist comment from an Adelaide radio DJ did.
Next up a truly dismal sketch, in which Sanjeev Bhaskar and Helen Lederer played a wine-chugging middle-class couple feigning concern for the education system while really being self-serving and callous. The premise might have been OK, but the script was laugh-free – so imagine the audience’s indifference when it turned out this would be a recurring scenario over the night. By the third time they reappeared, the disappointment was actually audible.
Another misfire quickly followed, with Jon Culshaw appearing as Simon Cowell and ‘singing’ what allegedly could have been his X Factor song – just a list of words associated with him, like ‘high trousers’ and ‘Sinitta’ listed in the style of Billy Joel’s We Didn’t Start The Fire. Sorry, Jon, you shouldn’t go through to the next round.
Bhaskar returned for a brief, inconsequential linking slot when he imagined the Royal Albert Hall as an intimate Indian wedding venue, then it was left to Patrick Kielty to try to get the audience properly laughing again. He had something of a fight on his hand, from such a cold start, and after a hit-and-miss routine discovered that the harsh jokes were what the crowd wanted, regardless of whether they were really the sort of gags you should be telling in front of Charles and Camilla.
But if Kielty was rude, it was a mere hors d’oeuvre for the unashamedly vulgar Joan Rivers, in true bilious mood, bitching about how old people depress her and how she hates handicapped people – a feeling born from having to look after one. Shocked laughs came from her discussing her 79-year-old vagina... and even her unreconstructed racist material about all Mexicans being ugly and the Chinese eating dogs, even though it’s not to be encouraged. Still, the passion of her performance filled the space like no one else could.
Culshaw partially redeemed himself in his second appearance of the night, showing his considerable talents for mimicry of various characters... which makes you wonder why he insists on having each of them say their name rather than allowing the audience to figure it out for themselves. Material-wise, his jokes about George Bush’s linguistic atrocities are well beyond their tell-by date, but his brisk and entertaining round-up of some telly comedians could save you a fortune on DVDs this Christmas.
He came back after the interval as Boris Johnson, for no good reason, to introduce comedy band The Midnight Beast, for the kids. At the risk of sounding like a fuddy-duddy, though, a combination of poor acoustics and poor diction made it very difficult to discern any of their lyrics - which is something of a drawback if that’s where the jokes lie. Still, the music of Medium Pimpin' and Just Another Boyband got the section off to an energetic start.
After Elton returned, Milton Jones took to the stage with his deliciously eccentric one-liners, most of which took a second or two for the penny to drop. Skilful writing, including an imaginative callback to someone else’s earlier material, made him one of the strongest acts on the bill – and kicked off a run of stand-ups who knew what they were doing.
Omid Djalili went down well, too, with his silly mix of ethnic piss-taking and Godzilla impressions, and showed a flash of treasonable insubordination with a very funny line about the work the Prince’s Trust does. There’s a bit too heavy a reliance on funny accents in some of his older material that got an airing tonight, but in the style of a slightly old-fashioned entertainer, entertain is what he did.
Observational Ed Byrne kicked off with some cliched material about airline travel - the dumb questions at check-in, the confiscation of tweezers as if you could bring a jet down with grooming products etc – before moving on to more distinctive, and funnier, observations on the same subject, which turned out to need at least a bit of that earlier, hackier stuff to work. And he has the best ‘bathroom scales’ routine in the business.
Almost finally, Jimmy Carr doing something good for Britain’s underprivileged. No, not pay his taxes - but deliver for charity his usual stream of slick one-liners, starting with the silly and moving into increasingly dark territory about shagging around and non-consensual sex. But it’s not about morals, it’s about wordplay – at which he is a master engineer.
Then came that Blackadder sketch – which started rather clunkily (and even managed a ‘what about her knockers?’ joke which would have been dated by the end of Seventies) despite Miranda Hart's best efforts. But it burst into life when Rowan Atkinson made his surprise appearance, proving his comic genius at infusing every line with wit that even the writer might not have seen. The script got sharper and more satirical too, andTony Robinson’s Baldrick completing the double-act made the scene even more special... giving punters who paid up to £125 a ticket something memorable for their money.
News
Comments
Milton Jones Dates
Fri 5 Jul 2013
- Milton Jones On The Road
- The Bedford
- 20:00
- £10 to £16
Fri 2 Aug 2013
- Milton Jones On The High Road
- Assembly Hall
- 19:30~20:30
- £16.50
Sat 3 Aug 2013
- Milton Jones On The High Road
- Assembly Hall
- 19:30~20:30
- £16.50
Sun 4 Aug 2013
- Milton Jones On The High Road
- Assembly Hall
- 19:30~20:30
- £16.50
Wed 7 Aug 2013
- Milton Jones On The High Road
- Assembly Hall
- 19:30~20:30
- £16.50
Thu 8 Aug 2013
- Milton Jones On The High Road
- Assembly Hall
- 19:30~20:30
- £16.50
Fri 9 Aug 2013
- Milton Jones On The High Road
- Assembly Hall
- 19:30~20:30
- £16.50
Sat 10 Aug 2013
- Milton Jones On The High Road
- Assembly Hall
- 19:30~20:30
- £16.50
Sun 11 Aug 2013
- Milton Jones On The High Road
- Assembly Hall
- 19:30~20:30
- £16.50
More Milton Jones Dates …
Mon 12 Aug 2013
- Milton Jones On The High Road
- Assembly Hall
- 19:30~20:30
- £16.50
Tue 13 Aug 2013
- Milton Jones On The High Road
- Assembly Hall
- 19:30~20:30
- £16.50
Wed 14 Aug 2013
- Milton Jones On The High Road
- Assembly Hall
- 19:30~20:30
- £16.50
Wed 9 Oct 2013
- Milton Jones On The Road
- Basingstoke Anvil
- 20:00
- £20
Thu 10 Oct 2013
- Brighton Dome
- 20:00
- £20
Fri 11 Oct 2013
- Chatham Central Theatre
- Call for prices
Wed 16 Oct 2013
- Milton Jones On The Road
- Dorking Halls
- 20:00
- £21
Fri 25 Oct 2013
- Broadway Theatre Catford
- 20:00
- Call for prices
Sun 27 Oct 2013
- Milton Jones On The Road
- Buxton Opera House
- 20:00
- £21
Thu 31 Oct 2013
- Milton Jones On The Road
- Crewe Lyceum Theatre
- 20:00
- £21
Mon 18 Nov 2013
Thu 21 Nov 2013
Thu 21 Nov 2013
- Milton Jones On The Road
- Lincoln Engine Shed
- 20:00
- £20
Sat 23 Nov 2013
Represented by
We do not currently hold contact details for Milton Jones's agent. If you are a comic or agent wanting your details to appear on Chortle, click here.


continue
Older Comments
shabby - 02/05/2012
The man with MANY Gradfathers! Very funny guy, cannot wait to go see him again.
Izzy - 02/12/2011
Predictable one liners and really old corny jokes that a kid could make up! Don't understand all these people who like him! If you like proper comedy and not a performance by a 10 year old saying knock knock jokes, stay clear!
J & L Shawe - 30/09/2011
Fun without filth. Very clever. Laughed 'til we cried.
Douglas Thomson - 22/06/2011
Witnessed the surreal,puerile, absurd,infantile -call it what you like! humour of Milton Jones at Eden Court Theatre, Inverness. Delivered in a deadpan expression! reminiscent and worthy of any silent movie star, and I loved every minute of this silly pun laden gig. It's incredible how Milton has weaved all these puns together like some English equivalent of the Green Giant of corn or should I say puns! A retentive mind that entertained his audience with ludicrous anecdotes drawn in like - "moths to a flame" with his humour. The reaction of the audience said it all.
Mel Winters - 27/03/2011
Am I missing something? I saw Milton Jones last night at Queens Hall Edinburgh and really couldn't get into the corny puns that pass as his humour.
Philip Schlee - 24/01/2011
I would rather be fisted by Joe Calzagie than sit through one more painful minute of clearly scripted puns. no orgininality, just cheap puns a five year old could have made. It sapped my will to live.
Graeme & Eva Parker - 07/07/2010
My wife and I saw Milton Jones on Friday July 2 at the George IV Chiswick and we both loved him. It was funny line after funny line. We are now both big fans. He is the Prince of Puns. Go see him; you’ll not be disappointed.
so terrible it\'s painful - 03/06/2010
it's so predictable and dull and the radio shows are f'ing terrible. shit shit shit.
Harry Grainger - 27/03/2010
Saw MJ headlining at Travestees Comedy Club at the Tor Centre in Glastonbury Wed 24 March 2010. Well worthwhile. Most enjoyable.
Ian - 20/11/2009
Saw him tonight at the Wycombe Town Hall, absolutely brilliant, I was in stitches. He is so underrated it hurts.
Rhys Nicklin - 12/09/2009
Brilliant. Not much more to say about this guy.
Jonavon - 02/09/2009
The Almighty God Of Pun!
Matt Tasker - 01/11/2008
Saw Milton Jones at a under-18s night in Ipswich at Halloween was absolutely brilliant. He hardly had to say anything to make everyone laugh. I couldnt understand why its hilarious when he starts a joke "a friend of mine died yesterday" or something equally serious but you cant help laughing. The crowd didnt want him to leave at the end! If he doesn't become a huge star in the next few years it will be a crime... 10/10!
Darren & Carla Smith, Liverpool 2009 - 05/06/2008
Oh My God! We saw Milton last night as part of the BBC Presents tour at the Liverpool Comedy Festival and he totally usurped Richard Herring, who was headlining. What an array of one-liners! I was waiting for the standard to drop, but gladly it never happened. Poor old Mr Herring could not step up to the plate afterwards and ended his set being heckled, duly laying the blame at the feet of the one and only Milton Jones for being so damn good! Take a bow Sir, and get back to Liverpool in the nearest future!
Nessie Flange - 29/02/2008
Wonderful. Headlined for me in Basingstoke recently at short notice. Audience loved him so much no one wanted to go home - even the guy in the front row who 'out-weirded' him. Thanks, Milton
Mark - 15/10/2007
Watching Milton is like watching atoms collide. Atom one comes along (the setup) and gets hit at great speed - but with perfect comic timing - by Atom 2 (a brilliant punchline you weren't expecting!). Genius.
BCF - 18/05/2007
Awesome
Mark - 03/05/2007
Saw him last night at Knock2Bag comedy night - absolute first class - rocked it!
Ian - 16/04/2007
I've seen Milton about three or four times now, but he doesn't get any less funny. His sheer wit is incredible as it is hilarious, if you see him playing I fully advise you to go and see him.
James Wilkins - 24/03/2007
Genius, pure and simple.
Mike Wake - 28/09/2006
Made my night, absolutely brilliant. Well done Travestees for prising him out of the South East and down to Glastonbury for the evening!
Pete - 11/09/2006
An absolute comedy genius, up there with Jeff Green as the best stand up I have seen
Jacki - 23/08/2006
He is absolutely brilliant and delightfully bonkers! Magnificent!
Laurence Ellis - 22/08/2006
Quite simply the funniest performer we have ever seen. Please lets have a dvd of this man. As near to perfect as you will get
LC - 12/07/2006
I've seen Milton quite a few times while working at Jongleurs in Reading. The guy is a master of one-liners and spot on with the timing. As said earlier its a shame hes not as well known as other comics who aren't really worth the ticket.
Narny - 07/07/2006
Saw Milton last night in Lincoln. Really, really funny and bizarre. His jokes are still sinking in now! I'm sure not everyone's cup of tea but if he is, you're in for a grerat laugh.
Louise - 27/06/2006
He comedy is so skillful, charming, warm, intelligent and very funny - he is such a talented wordsmith. Listening to him makes me wish I was clever enough to write it, as when I've read an inspiring novel or listened to a brilliant album. Clever, very British, stylish humour. Simply the most clever comedian in the UK.
Julie Jenner - 25/06/2006
I was very impressed with his clever twist to the punchlines, timing and the ability to not resort to swearing/crudeness. His appearence reminded me of Bobcat, Goldthwaite, only in impeccable English. My only groan was it wasn't long enough
Derek Walker - 06/05/2006
I have seen Milton several times now, but it's not enough. He has me grinning as soon as he hits the stage, and usually has me helpless. Even more credit to him because he doesn't resort to cheap and dirty laughs. His wit is simple, twisted and ingenious, timed to perfection. I have never seen anyone funnier and can't wait to see his show again.
s Malcome Moss - 28/04/2006
Absolutely shit. I can't belive the praise he gets
Mike B - 21/04/2006
Dear me what an amusing chap
Matthew Argentq - 12/04/2006
Has been consistently the best UK stand up for the last ten years. Saw him again on Saturday and the quality is still there, in abundance.
Andy - 11/04/2006
Milton, if you read these comments, I just want to say sorry on behalf of the polite and sober members of the Basingstoke audience you played to on April 7. We are sorry you had to endure (along with the other three comedians) constant mindless heckling and abuse. Quite why the inebriated woman in question wasn't thrown out, I have no idea. Despite this, your put-downs of her were absolutely inspired and hugely appreciated by the rest of the audience. Well done - and please come back soon!
Chris - 07/04/2006
Absolutely stunning! Couldn't breathe for laughing.
Jim - 20/03/2006
Just seen him at Dominion Theatre, completely showed up Jimmy Carr and Ricky Gervais. The guy's a genius
Tim - 20/02/2006
More clean comedy! Rock on Milt
Dave - 19/02/2006
If only this guy DID write the jokes for crackers - Christmas would be a happy occassion. Bit of genius here
Adam - 18/02/2006
He's absolutely brilliant, a true british comedian
Simon Sadler - 03/02/2006
Saw this guy yesterday in Cardiff and he had the audience of 200 in pain with laughter, my hips are still hurting. Probably the cleverest stand-up I've ever seen and I've seen hundreds
Manda - 15/07/2005
Before tonight I\'d never heard of Milton Jones. But now his is a name I will never forget. A very very funny man who had a tremendous rapport with the audience. Manda 15.07.05
Alec Blackman - 30/04/2005
I saw Milton play in Yeovil last week. Some old material and some new stuff too - and all of it killer. His delivery\'s lost none of his trademark deadpan and it was a thrill still to find myself laughing at him, despite the familiarity with his material. This man should be bigger than he is - and the Uk\'s missing out on a true talent. Alec Blackman 30.04.05
Lee - 29/04/2005
This guy is amazing, Joke after joke deadpan thrill ride, still laughing now, a month since I watched him. Lee 29.04.05
Sophie - 16/04/2005
I had the pleasure recently of going to see Milton Jones at the redcording of the Lee Mack show and he was funnier (sorry to say) than Lee Mack himself, everyone was cracking up, he is the best stand up comedian i have ever come across. Just the look on his face had everyone in nfits before he even began. Even now, weeks later i still seem to quoting his material and laughing out loud - what can i say the man\'s fantastic Sophie 16.04.05
Angela - 07/03/2005
This man is a comic genius! Angela 07.03.05
K - 18/02/2005
Genius! Clever and dry... with perfect timing on every punchline. Why hasn\'t this guy got his own TV show? K 18.02.05
James - 12/02/2005
Bloody brilliant James 12.02.05
Mark Dunn - 31/01/2005
I have not laughed so hard for so long! The way he just fires out a joke then stops and waits, just long enough, for the audience to realise what the actual punchline is, before firing off another one, he is a genius! If you get the chance to see him GO! as you wont be disappointed. Mark Dunn 31.01.05
Gaz - 24/01/2005
Few people on the circuit can compete with Milton Jones. His jokes come so thick and fast, and you\'ll be so busy laughing, that you\'ll struggle to recall even a tenth of his jokes when you\'re trying to explain how funny he is to your friends the next day. Gaz 24.01.05
Andy Lambley - 24/01/2005
Fantastic, very funny and one of the best acts I\'ve ever see. Andy Lambley 24.01.05
Will Green - 23/01/2005
Fantastically funny and wonderfully deadpan. I\'m not going to call him a genius though! The word is a little over-used on this page. Will Green 23.01.05
Trix - 22/01/2005
Why is this guy not more famous? Three months after seeing him I\'m still laughing Trix 22.01.05
Felix Beacher - 14/01/2005
He looks like a cross between Jeremy Hardy and Ken Dodd - lucky dog. And for my money, Milton Jones is the funniest stand up in the country - ever. Fantastic. Felix Beacher 14.01.05
Koaste - 14/01/2005
Saw him for the second time last night at The Komedia in Brighton and he was fantastic! When will this man bring out a DVD? Koaste 14.01.05
Annie - 06/01/2005
We still wake up in the night laughing. An achingly funny man. Come back to Bristol, please. Annie 06.01.05
Thomas Bush - 14/12/2004
He had a gig at my school the other day, being an ex-pupil, and actually did quite well, surviving a bunch of cynical sixth-formers, and actually being genuinely funny. Thomas Bush 14.12.04
Cecilia - 02/12/2004
He is responsible for some of the best jokes ever written. Fantastically funny act. Cecilia 02.12.04