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Comic Details

Ross Noble

Date Of Birth: 05/06/1976

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Videos

Bono

From Laughs In The Parks 2011


More Ross Noble videos

Bono
Soluble face
Discerning Gentleman
Ross Noble vs Jonathan Ross
Ross Noble - Sex Criminal
Ross Noble - Fiddy Cent
Ross Noble - Owl Pants
Pre Show Animatics
The Origin of Ross Noble

Other footage

Ross Noble at the Melbourne Comedy Festival
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CV

CV

Radio: 2002:
Ross Noble Goes Global - travelogue shows for Radio 4. Buy on CD | Buy Series 2 on CD
Buy on CD
Radio: 2002:
Ross Noble Goes Global - travelogue shows for Radio 4. Buy on CD | Buy Series 2 on CD
Buy Series 2 on CD
 
Video: 2005:
Somic Waffle DVD. Buy
Video: 2005:
Somic Waffle DVD. Buy
Buy
Video: 2004:
Unrealtime Double DVD set. Buy
Buy
 
Stand Up: 2005:
Randomist tour. Review
Review
Stand Up: 2004:
Noodlesmiester tour and Edinburgh, Melbourne dates.
Stand Up: 2003:
Edinburgh show Unrealtime followed by a run at the West End, and UK tand Australian tour.
Unrealtime
Stand Up: 2003:
Winner of the People's Choice title at the Chortle awards
Chortle awards
Stand Up: 2002:
Winner of the Manchester Evening News theatre award for best comedy, and the New Zealand Comedy Guild award for best international comic.
Stand Up: 2002:
Edinburgh show Sonic Waffle, which transferred to the West End (London review), then a national tour and Melbourne Comedy Festival 2003
Sonic Waffle
Stand Up: 2002:
Edinburgh show Sonic Waffle, which transferred to the West End (London review), then a national tour and Melbourne Comedy Festival 2003
London review
Stand Up: 2002:
Winner of The Barry Award and The Age critics award at the Melbourne Comedy Festival for Slackers' Playtime
Slackers' Playtime
Stand Up: 2002:
Winner of Chortle Awards for best touring comic, the People's Choice and Comedians' Comedian.
Stand Up: 2001:
Edinburgh show Slackers' Playtime
Slackers' Playtime
Stand Up: 2000:
Time Out award winner. Edinburgh show Chickenmaster. Review
Review
Stand Up: 1999:
Perrier nominee for his Edinburgh show Laser Boy
Perrier
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Reviews

Laughs In The Park 2011
Live Review

Laughs In The Park 2011

Just before Laughs In The Park, Eddie Izzard became the first solo comedy act to play the Hollywood Bowl, entertaining 12,000 people in the venue where Monty Python and the Beatles once ruled.

But in St Albans, it’s a more difficult sell. Probably as this most certainly isn’t LA weather. The ambitious Laughs In The Park festival, now in its second year, has a capacity of around 6,000, but on this first night of three, it’s half-full at best, despite the added attractions of Ross Noble, Tommy Tiernan – and a side-stage sponsored by the BBC offering an afternoon line-up of strong circuit acts.

Nor do many shows start with an arial display team, but the four planes that execute impressive manoeuvres above Verulamium Park certainly piloted home the message that this is a big show.

The start of the comedy itself is a little less slick, as Noble cowers in the foliage that dresses the stage, urging the audience to take their seats. They only really comply when he comes out from the undergrowth and starts riffing with Izzard... after all, no one wants to miss the two master surrealists together. And jolly good fun it is too, especially when they start mimicking each other.

Once the show proper starts, Noble seems a little off-form; getting overly fixated on the idea that the on-stage shrubbery might be a dogging spot, although his imagination never really lets fly on the subject. However his banter with the audience members who attempt to yell things out is sharper, undoubtedly helped by the fact that one heckler’s seat hilariously collapses mid-sentence.

Back after the interval, the flightly Geordie hits his mark more accurately, with a prepared routine about Bono visiting that proves hugely entertaining, mainly due to Noble’s drifting accent and grotesque exaggeration of the U2 frontman’s persona.

Then Tommy Tiernan, who continues his steady bid to become as acclaimed in Britain as he is back home with this high-profile appearance – and he would surely have won over a lot of fans tonight.

On the face of it, he’s a walking cliche – a twinkle-eyed Irishman talking about religion, drinking and family life. But that’s to ignore the clear fact that he has the vocabulary of a poet, the soul of a maverick and the passion of an evangelist.

He sermonises against the cosy, cosseted modern life, urging us to be freed by the rush of unpredictability. ‘It’s important to stay wild,’ he exhorts, ‘to have a touch of lunacy about you.’ He practises what he preaches, too, this fiery iconoclast, with a whirlwind set that often has a frisson of danger.

But it’s not all bombast, Tiernan has supreme control of a crowd’s emotions - even a crowd as big as this one – turning them on a sixpence. He’ll rant and rave against the Irish economy or overemotional teenagers one minute, then bring it down to a whisper as he talks about a brother who died. But it’s not maudlin or mawkish, just another way of celebrating life.

His command of the mood is matched only by his command of the language. There are the grand, witty metaphors that get the laughs, but it’s the pleasing eloquence in almost every phrase, something as simple as coining the mass noun ‘a platoon of baboons’, that ensures joy in even the smallest detail. It’s why he’s one of the finest comedians Ireland has ever produced.

It was a tough act to follow... even if you are Eddie Izzard. The star attraction was somewhat overshadowed by his support act, not helped by the fact that the heavens opened by the second half, and audiences cowering under umbrellas or pulling hats tight around their ears are never going to be the most responsive.

Izzard trotted through some of his greatest hits from his Stripped show, the one which covers the entire history of civilisation with a slight atheist undertow. Tonight, we got the first bit, from dinosaurs through the dawning of the Stone Age to Hannibal crossing the Alps.

It’s jolly entertaining stuff, thanks to his one-man sketches such as the cavemen discovering language or the Roman messenger struggling with Latin that owes more than a nod to Izzard’s Python heroes. He knows this stuff backwards (and even in French, as his recent run in Paris proved) and the preposterous imagery and witty anachronisms are as funny as Izzard is smart.

But he did do a lot of this material here last year – and while there’s some pleasure to be had in hearing his greatest hits, this festival probably demands a greater turnover of material from one year to the next if it’s to get the repeat business to be sustainable. As tonight’s attendance showed – it’s a big ask filling 18,000 seats in a city with a population of 65,000, even if it is only half an hour out of London.

The idea of Laughs In The Park is a strong one, though, borrowing from music festivals to make a big, bold, must-see event – and the production here is faultless, from that initial flypast to the fireworks at the end. If only the British summer was so reliable.

Date of live review: Saturday 23rd Jul, '11
Review by Steve Bennett
Ross Noble: Nonsensry Overload
Ross Noble: Nonsensry Overload

Wednesday 22nd Sep, '10- Swindon Wyvern Theatre
Ross Noble: Things in the West End
Ross Noble: Things in the West End

Tuesday 22nd Sep, '09- Apollo Theatre
Ross Noble at Just For Laughs, Montreal 2009
Ross Noble at Just For Laughs, Montreal 2009

Wednesday 22nd Jul, '09-
Ross Noble: Things
Ross Noble: Things

Show - Tour - Thursday 6th Mar, '08-
Latitude 2008
Latitude 2008

Show - Misc live shows -
Ross Noble : Original Review
Ross Noble : Original Review

Monday 1st Jan, '01-
Ross Noble: Fizzy Logic
Ross Noble: Fizzy Logic

Show - Tour -
Ross Noble: Nobleism Larger Than Live
Ross Noble: Nobleism Larger Than Live

Show - Misc live shows -
Ross Noble: Chickenmaster
Ross Noble: Chickenmaster

Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2000 -
Ross Noble: Slackers' Playtime
Ross Noble: Slackers' Playtime

Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2001 -
Ross Noble: Sonic Waffle
Ross Noble: Sonic Waffle

Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2002 -
Ross Noble: Unrealtime tour
Ross Noble: Unrealtime tour

Show - Tour -
Ross Noble: Noodlemeister tour
Ross Noble: Noodlemeister tour

Show - Tour -
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Comments

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Ross Nobles is one of the greatest comedians around. He always has me doubled up in laughter. Don't know how anyone cannot think he is funny. Keep up the good work Ross!.

Sophie, September 2011


Saw Ross Noble and friends at Aldershot: Ross turned up wasted, slurring words, and improvised 99% of the show. Billed to compere the evening which two other new acts, he ended up waffling on for an hour and a half including; 40 minutes of wheelchair related comedy, yes really, much of which was just bad taste, also clumsily running with other weak jokes for long periods of time. I have seen him before and found him very funny, but on this he occasion was cringeworthy. Ross had moments but they were few, and were completely overshadowed. The only saving grace was Sarah Kendall who was fresh, witty and very funny. Unfortunately this moment was sandwiched by Ross’s ramblings, the likes of which I could have got for free in the local Wetherspoons. It left nothing but an overwhelming sense of disappointment.

Showbizjonny, July 2011


Genius

hammy, April 2011


Saw Ross last night in Belfast,I will go to more of his shows in the futureT ell him this is from Yoda.

Ronnie Robinson, November 2010


Saw Ross in Grimsby last night and he stormed it. Absolutely incredible routines and great crowd work. You can barely spot where the routine end and the improv begins. An inspiration to idiots like me who want to do stand-up even half as good as he does.

Lukas Wild, October 2010


just seen him in Wolverhampton. Best stand up comic I have seen in years.best value for money we will be going to see him again hopefully in london. Seeing someone like ross makes us wonder why he isn't on our telly with his own show when we watch all the crap that is being put on our telly. 10 out of 10.

sarah, October 2010


Saw Ross Noble this week in Swindon and was disappointed. Found myself yawning and looking at my watch well before the end of the lengthy show. 15 minutes on Avatar is 14 minutes too long for the large number of people in the audience who haven't seen it, us included. Some of the extended gurning and lumbering around the stage would have been better suited to an audience of seven year olds.

Paul, September 2010


I don't find him funny at all. Why alot of people do God only knows!

Rosie, October 2009


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