Rab Brown
Rachel Anderson
Rachel Fairburn
Rachel Parris
Rachel Stubbings
Rainer Hersch
Raph Shirley
Ray Alan
Ray Bradshaw
Ray Kane
Ray Peacock
Raymond & Mr Timpkins Revue
Raymond Mearns
Rebecca Carrington
Red Redmond
Reece Shearsmith
Reggie Watts
Reginald D Hunter
Rev Obadiah Steppenwolf III
Rex Boyd
Rhod Gilbert
Rhodri Rhys
Rhona Cameron
Rhona McKenzie
Rhys Darby
Rhys James
Rhys Thomas
Ria Lina
Rich Fulcher
Rich Hall
Rich Wall
Rich Wilson
Richard Ayoade
Richard Bowen
Richard Brophy
Richard Coughlan
Richard Gadd
Richard Glover
Richard Hanrahan
Richard Herring
Richard Morton
Richard Perry
Richard Pryer
Richard Pryor
Richard Rycroft
Richard Sandling
Richard Stainbank
Richard Todd
Richard Vranch
Rick Kiesewetter
Rick Molland
Rick Right
Rick Shapiro
Ricky Gervais
Ricky Grover
Rik Mayall
Rik Moore
Rio Bauer
Rita Rudner
Ro Campbell
Rob Alderson
Rob Beckett
Rob Brydon
Rob Carter
Rob Coleman
Rob Collins
Rob Deb
Rob Deering
Rob Delaney
Rob Heeney
Rob Hitchmough
Rob Newman
Rob Riley
Rob Rouse
Rob Schneider
Rob Tarbuck
Robert Commiskey
Robert Webb
Robert White
Robin Banks
Robin Buckland
Robin Cousins
Robin Ince
Rod Shepherd
Roddy Fraser
Rodney Marques
Roger D
Roger Monkhouse
Rohan Agalawatta
Roisin Conaty
Roland Gent
Romesh Ranganathan
Ron Vaudry
Ronnie Barker
Ronnie Corbett
Ronnie Edwards
Ronnie Golden
Rory Bremner
Rory O'Hanlon
Rosie Martin
Rosie Wilby
Ross Ashcroft
Ross Lee
Ross Noble
Rowan Atkinson
Rowena Haley
Roy Chubby Brown
Rudi Lickwood
Rufus Hound
Russell Brand
Russell Howard
Russell Kane
Russell Peters
Ruth Bratt
Ruth E Cockburn
Ryan Cull
Ryan Gleeson
Ryan Gough
Ryan McDonnell
Ryan O’Donoghue
Robert White
Showreel 2011 |
More Robert White videos |
| Showreel 2011 |
| Anything |
| Puppet Song |
| Showreel |
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After graduating in music, Robert White spent eight years doing various jobs before trying comedy in 2004. He was finalist in the Hackney Empire New Act Of The Year competition in 2006 and in 2010 won the Malcolm Hardee award for comic originality at the Edinburgh Festival. |
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Robert White etc at Dukes Headliners |
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![]() Yet that hyperactive energy, partly fuelled by his Asperger’s-syndrome autism, creates a uniquely compelling delivery. It’s like listening to an old episode of the Goon Show on fast-forward, as snippets of puns, stories and musical bursts from his primitive keyboard smash into each other in a babbling cascade of odd humour. The cost is that gags often aren’t given much space to breathe, but the pace is appealing, and there are some inspired jokes in the melee. When he loses some of that twitchy mania, as he relaxes (a bit) into the routine, the lively spirit is diminished a little. An extended bit of banter with an audience ‘volunteer’ is an excuse for little more than some gross Julian Clary-style double entendre, but with less of a cheeky wink. However, tonight’s victim’s inability to grasp the basic rules of engagement yields laughs – although a touch of tetchiness, too, from White. He’s got a quick improvisational wit, though, which frequently surfaces throughout an unpredictable set that also includes jaunty satirical songs and even the odd prop gag. It’s inconsistent, but the best is impressive, even if he could do with a more clarity in the delivery that big clubs and TV producers demand. How he does that without losing his haphazard charm will be a tough circle to square. The evening, kicked off with Matthew Highton, who bears an unfortunate similarity in booth looks and comic approach to Alex Zane. He engaged in rather a lot of aimless audience banter, redundant as compere Kate Smurthwaite had ably been through the entire audience, while his random, pseudo-surreal ramblings left the audience cold. Not that he has yet settled on one approach, and other chunks scored better, with a couple of amusing topical moments and an inspired offbeat comment inspired by old video games. But he needs his own voice, rather than the universal tone of cool, detached irony and unfocussed randomness that makes him seem a bit studenty, in the worst sense of the word. Talking of weird, Norwegian Daniel Simonsen raised the stakes. His stark, unsmiling demeanour, imposing spectacles and strong Nordic accent, exaggerated, and slowed down to a creepy monotone, disquieted the audience. The strange sense of uncertainty elicits nervous laughs from the dry-as-dust non-sequiturs, but you wouldn’t want to listen to more than a few minutes of this quirky whine. But it’s an entertaining break from the norm in short doses. Club co-promoter Justin Brett was more expressive and lyrical, with a couple of reasonable, but forgettable, comic poems and a deliberately intimidating paean to some unfortunate front-row woman that got the funny-stalkery balance slightly wrong. His calling card, though, is that familiar shtick of being a posh boy rapping about his privileged life. Shame Mr B The Gentleman Rhymer does this so much better… if Mr B is Eton, Brett is a minor provincial grammar school. More music from Carly Smallman, who’s perhaps a better songstress than she is comedian, although her folksy MOR tunes remain warmly entertaining. The shorter ones that open the set rely a little to predictably on ‘the old switcheroo’, but longer numbers are wittier. Her ode to being middle-class might not be strikingly original in inspiration, but its accurate list of stereotypical behaviour strikes such a strong note of recognition, especially here in chichi Putney, that it goes down very well. Gwilum Argos is a very straightforward comedian, with a few good gags but a good proportion of duff ones, too. Much of his set revolves around films, with one-line quips about them all, though it seems superficial to make just one glib joke about an entire movie and the length of the list becomes tiring. On the other hand, the set moves quickly along, so he’s never wrong for long… and a gag that does shine will be along at some point. So as with most smaller clubs, the bill was variable, but the club itself is a little gem, set up with care and attention in the intimate basement of a slightly posh, and rightly popular, pub. It’s definitely worth your patronage if you’re in this corner of South-West London. |
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| Date of live review: Friday 15th Oct, '10 | |
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Review by Steve Bennett |
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Friday 5th Nov, '10- Highlight Camden | |
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Brilliant! Brian Damage, September 2010 |
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Re: My review - People keep asking me how I can do comedy and be so good having Aspergers syndrome. They comment on my confidence and seeming social ability in such tricky circumstances. Well the truth is that all my skills with people on stage are put on, practised and learned , they do not come naturally. This learning has taken time and has got to the point now where i storm many rooms and do well and very well consistently 99.999999% of the time. But for all this i still have aspergers. The autistic trap to see things as a simplistic choice between yes and no, or choice between continue and stop, got to me at the above gig - like a rabbit in the headlights - as i focussed on the fact that a reviewer was in (having never been told before when they were) and my mind decided that , in a split second, it was all lost. So i abandoned the show even before my first joke, a thing i have not done before and will not do again. This was a one in a million thing and I am very sorry for it. But knowing how I am and that it is a thing that is just in me, what am i suppossed to do except move on to do as well as i can at the next gig ? I cannot put my mind on or worry about something i cannot change! So this i did as i went to smash the next spot at old rope, with new material, where just a few moments earlier i couldn't even get a word out of the show i had put years into. This is a one off, an anommolly and something to occour once in a blue moon. This is not me as many promoters, bookers, acts, freinds, reviewers and audiences alike have seen me and know me. yours, with all the best Robert. ps. The last time this happenned was when i was 11 and ran out of church instead of playing a trumpet solo so these incidents have a 22 year frequency. Robert White, September 2010 |
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Steve, you had no option but to give this 0 stars. and what you say is worth reading. HOWEVER... I think the comedy world can fit in an occasional act like Robert's where the unpredictability is genuine, not rehearsed. When he's good (ie, nearly always), he's bloody good. Bob, August 2010 |
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A brilliant comedian with non-stop gags and very funny songs. Shame the reviewer was denied the chance to see the show. I've seen him storm big and small rooms on the two occasions I saw him live. Sherlock, August 2010 |
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Slightly crazy! He doesn't stay still for 2 seconds! But very smart jokes, quick witted with any audience participation, and plays piano very well with hilarious and complicated songs. Overall, worth seeing Denise, February 2010 |
Where can I see Robert White next?
| 20:00 - Friday 24th May, '13 | |
| Venue: | Up The Creek |
| Prices: | Call for prices |
| Comics: | Robert White, Steve Williams, Ninia Benjamin (MC) |
| Info: | Open Mic Night |
| 20:00 - Saturday 25th May, '13 | |
| Venue: | Up The Creek |
| Prices: | Call for prices |
| Comics: | Robert White, Steve Williams, Ninia Benjamin (MC) |
| Info: | Open Mic Night |
| 20:00 - Friday 31st May, '13 | |
| Venue: | West Malling The Wheatsheaf |
| Prices: | Call for prices |
| Comics: | Juliet Meyers, Michael Fabbri, Robert White, Erich McElroy (MC) |
| Info: | Plus: Luke Capasso |
| 20:00 - Saturday 15th Jun, '13 | |
| Venue: | Portsmouth Jongleurs |
| Prices: | From £15 |
| Comics: | Rich Wilson, Robert White |
| 20:00 - Saturday 22nd Jun, '13 | |
| Venue: | Funny Side Of Covent Garden |
| Prices: | £12.50 |
| Comics: | |
| Info: |
Plus: MC Gareth Kane
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| Friday 13th Sep, '13 | |
| Venue: | Sevenoaks Town Golf Club |
| Prices: | £10 |
| Comics: | Edward Aczel, Robert White, Rudi Lickwood, Erich McElroy (MC) |
| Info: | Plus: Luke Capasso |


