Sajeela Kershi
Sal Stevens
Sally-Anne Hayward
Sam Avery
Sam Gore
Sam Harland
Sam Savage
Sam Simmons
Sam Veale
Sam Wong
Samantha Hannah
Sammy J
Sanderson Jones
Sandi Toksvig
Sandy Nelson
Sara Pascoe
Sarah Bennetto
Sarah Campbell
Sarah Cassidy
Sarah Hendrickx
Sarah Kendall
Sarah Ledger
Sarah Millican
Sarah Silverman
Sarah-May Philo
Scooby
Scott Agnew
Scott Capurro
Scott Forbes
Scott Gibson
Scottish Falsetto Sock Puppet Theatre
Sean Brightman
Sean Collins
Sean Grant
Sean Hughes
Sean Lock
Sean McLoughlin
Sean Meo
Sean Moran
Sean Percival
Seann Walsh
Seb Cardinal
Sebastian Bloomfield
Seymour Mace
Shappi Khorsandi
Sharon Mahoney
Sharon Mannion
Shaun Paczkowski
Shaun Pye
Shazia Mirza
Sheeps
Shelagh Martin
Shelley Bridgman
Silky
Simon Amstell
Simon B Cotter
Simon Bird
Simon Bligh
Simon Clayton
Simon Day
Simon Donald
Simon Evans
Simon Farnaby
Simon Feilder
Simon Fox
Simon Gunnell
Simon Hewitt
Simon Munnery
Simon Pegg
Smug Roberts
Snorri Hergill Kristjansson
Sody Funjabi
Sofie Hagen
Sol Bernstein
Sooz Kempner
Sophie Black
Special guest who cannot be named
Spencer Brown
Spike Milligan
Spiky Mike
Stan Boardman
Stan Stanley
Stanley Baxter
Stanley McHale
Stefano Paolini
Steffen Peddie
Stella Graham
Steph Davies
Steph Lane
Stephen Carlin
Stephen Grant
Stephen Hill
Stephen K Amos
Stephen Lynch
Stephen Merchant
Steve Best
Steve Bugeja
Steve Coogan
Steve Day
Steve Furst
Steve Gribbin
Steve Hall
Steve Harris
Steve Hughes
Steve Jameson
Steve McGrew
Steve N Allen
Steve Pemberton
Steve Rawlings
Steve Royle
Steve Shanyaski
Steve Weiner
Steve Williams
Steven Dick
Steven Young
Stewart Francis
Stewart Lee
Stewart Spaull
Stu Who?
Stuart Black
Stuart Goldsmith
Stuart Hossack
Stuart Hudson
Stuart Mitchell
Sue Perkins
Sully O'Sullivan
Sunil Patel
Susan Calman
Susan Hanks
Susan Morrison
Susan Murray
Susan Vale
Susie McCabe
Suzi Ruffell
Suzy Bennett
Suzy Wylde
Sy Thomas
Sajeela Kershi
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Sajeela Kershi has been performing stand-up since 2006; though she got her biggest break not on stage – but as the audience ‘plant’ in Brendon Burns’s 2007 if.comedy-winning show, So I Suppose This Is Offensive Now. That year she also appeared in a three-handed Edinburgh line-up show, Pretty Dirty Things, wollowing up with a two-hander, Race/Off the following year, with the solo debut Bitch Got Owned in 2009. She is also resident MC at her own comedy night in Redhill, Surrey, Comedy At The Cottage' |
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Meera Syal’s Asian Comedy Night |
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![]() In one of their sketches, comedy duo Asians Provocateurs struggle to list high-profile Asian women: ‘Baroness Warsi, Meera Syal and, erm, Meera Syal?’ It would be just as much of a struggle to name famous British-Asian comedians, certainly without resorting to one of those same names. Yet there is clearly a demand – 8,000 people applied for the 300 tickets to this BBC radio recording – while the content was resolutely mainstream, resonating with everyone, albeit stronger with those who shared a background with the comics. The night – fronted by Syal, who else?, and BBC Asian Network’s breakfast presenter Tommy Sandhu – will be split into two showcases for a short comedy season on the digital station in July. But for the purposes of tonight, it was one continuous show, starting off with Shazia Mirza. With a rather more human attitude than her traditional steely-cold deadpan, she offered a mixed plate: some funny observational material about her family and their bizarre attitudes to relationships – strictly instructing her to keep away from men but desperate for her to reproduce – mixed with pedestrian mentions of Facebook pokes, ‘paedophile’ Michael Jackson and a witless section on fingering that is seemingly designed solely to shock the conservative. She does that rather too often – seek to provoke reaction by saying something naughty rather that something funny – when her first-hand experiences are far more rewarding. Young livewire Mickey Sharma slipped into cliche too easily – Norfolk people are inbred, gingers are to be pitied and so forth – but he has an engaging energy, best exemplified by his Bollywood take on nursery rhymes. Plus some of his more descriptive passages, such as Indians’ lax attitude to road safety, strike a real chord. Speaking of livewires, few spark with more volts than the wiry Imran Yusuf, delivering some of the greatest hits that earned him the Edinburgh newcomer nod a couple of years ago. He retains a childlike cheek when describing playground teasing, but his primary asset is being a great orator – with all the tricks of stance, of repetition and of emphasis that requires – which he then undermines with a deft flick. The writing isn’t always the most original, but he’s a master of presentation. A real treat next, in the form of Sami Shah, pictured, the stand-up who performed the first ever English-language show in Pakistan, back in 2005. However, he’s not in the Radio Theatre tonight, but in an anonymous hotel room in Singapore, where it’s the early hours of the morning, and he’s performing into a tiny webcam, to be Skyped back to London. Incredibly, none of these obstacles dent his precision timing, and he delivers a masterclass in comedy. A set list might suggested some quite hackneyed topics: airport immigration, young people and their text speak and the like. But this self-diagnosed ‘paranoid narcissist’ combines insight with oblique wit and linguistic flair which brings such subjects to life. He should come to Britain; he’d surely be a smash. Asian Provocateurs next – Sajeela Kershi and Yasmeen Khan, who bill themselves as the only female British-Asian sketch duo. Though of course the words ‘female’, ‘sketch’ and ‘duo’ mean they are inevitably introduced as the Asian French and Saunders. The comparison stacks up in as far as the pair are likeable performers of exaggerated archetypes – from posh Hooray Henriettas to BNP wags – but their scenes feel very underwritten and often too predictable. There’s usually a good gag or two in each skit, but padded with such comic white noise as the Sloanes fretting about their hummus coming from Ocado. Hyde Panaser managed a double-cliche with a gag that mocked ginger people and ended with the line ‘...so I stabbed him’. Such slips into the predictable feel like rookie mistakes for someone who’s being going for five years, especially when other parts of his jaunty, conversational set are more engaging as he discusses the pitfalls of living at home at 29 with malapropism-spouting relatives. There were some fans in for Humza Arshad – aka Humza Badman, an internet sensation who has racked up more than 34.5million views for his 26 videos on YouTube. Live, this arrogant, fast-talking, high-pitched would-be rapper is a chaotic character, but in a good way – with his engaging, energetic personality more than making up for a scrappy script. Plus he’s excellent at bringing to life supporting players in the drama of his life, such as his uncle who picks fights with the TomTom navigation system. It’s easy to see why he’s so popular online. Finally, more fine character work from Kulvinder Ghir, as a wisftul corner-shop owner. His tender and evocative reminiscences of life in Amritsar seemed to spark fond memories in some of the audience, while his repeated pondering of whether he did the right thing in coming to Britain add a pathos to his performance. That’s not to say this closing act was not funny – Ghir worked with Syal on Goodness Gracious Me back in the day, and he hasn’t lost his impish touch – but this was a more mature presentation than gag-heavy standup.
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| Date of live review: Tuesday 1st May, '12 | |
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Review by Steve Bennett |
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Monday 21st Mar, '11- | |
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Bitch Got Owned – Fringe 2009
Monday 31st Aug, '09- | |
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Thursday 25th Jun, '09- Enterprise | |
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Show - Montreal 2008 - | |
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Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2007 - | |
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Saw her recently and thought she was superb, very very funny and handled the crowd with aplomb. Steve Miller, October 2012 |
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Brilliant. Absolutely brilliant jing qui, February 2011 |
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I agree. I have seen this show twice after the first time I liked it so much that i went to see it on the last day.I think that its unfair the reviewer came on the last day because most comics (play)on the last day. Horrible and rubbish critic Benjamin Musgrove, September 2010 |
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I don't get that review at all. I've seen her twice - once in Bitch Got Owned and once in Asian Provocateurs. Pure out-of-the-bottle, geni-e(ous) Mick Kelly, May 2010 |
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Very funny lady. I didn't think I would enjoy her Bitch Got Owned show as much as I did. lee duress, November 2009 |
Where can I see Sajeela Kershi next?
| 20:30~21:30 - Thursday 23rd May, '13 | |
| Venue: | Brighton The Temple |
| Prices: | Free, voluntary donation at the end |
| Show: | Sajeela Kershi: Always Moneypenny, Never the Bond Girl! |
| 20:30~21:30 - Friday 24th May, '13 | |
| Venue: | Brighton The Temple |
| Prices: | Free, voluntary donation at the end |
| Show: | Sajeela Kershi: Always Moneypenny, Never the Bond Girl! |
| 16:45~17:45 - Saturday 25th May, '13 | |
| Venue: | Brighton Hobgoblin |
| Prices: | £5 |
| Comics: | |
| Info: |
The Immigrant Diaries with Sajeela Kershi and Sameena Zehra,
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| 20:30~21:30 - Saturday 25th May, '13 | |
| Venue: | Brighton The Temple |
| Prices: | Free, voluntary donation at the end |
| Show: | Sajeela Kershi: Always Moneypenny, Never the Bond Girl! |
| 16:45~17:45 - Sunday 26th May, '13 | |
| Venue: | Brighton Hobgoblin |
| Prices: | £5 |
| Comics: | |
| Info: |
The Immigrant Diaries with Sajeela Kershi and Sameena Zehra,
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| 20:30~21:30 - Sunday 26th May, '13 | |
| Venue: | Brighton The Temple |
| Prices: | Free, voluntary donation at the end |
| Show: | Sajeela Kershi: Always Moneypenny, Never the Bond Girl! |
| 20:00~23:15 - Friday 31st May, '13 | |
| Venue: | Redhill Harlequin Theatre |
| Prices: | £10 |
| Comics: | Don Biswas, Ed O'Meara, Jimmy Bird, Juliet Meyers, Lindsay Sharman, Nick Revell, Sajeela Kershi (MC) |
| Info: | Comedy Cottage in aid of Macmillan Cancer. Plus: Lynn Ruth Miller |
| 16:45~17:45 - Saturday 1st Jun, '13 | |
| Venue: | Brighton Hobgoblin |
| Prices: | £5 |
| Comics: | |
| Info: |
The Immigrant Diaries with Sajeela Kershi and Sameena Zehra,
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| 16:45~17:45 - Sunday 2nd Jun, '13 | |
| Venue: | Brighton Hobgoblin |
| Prices: | £5 |
| Comics: | |
| Info: |
The Immigrant Diaries with Sajeela Kershi and Sameena Zehra,
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| 20:00~23:00 - Friday 28th Jun, '13 | |
| Venue: | Redhill Harlequin Theatre |
| Prices: | £10 |
| Comics: | Bobby Freeman, Patrick Monahan, Sajeela Kershi (MC) |
| Info: | Comedy Cottage. Plus: Mark Diamond, Mel Moon |

Brendon Burns: So I Suppose THIS Is Offensive Now
Pretty Dirty Things
Edinburgh Fringe 2008
Race Off
Edinburgh Fringe 2009
Bitch Got Owned
Edinburgh Fringe 2011
Asian Provocateurs Rule Britannia
Edinburgh Fringe 2012
Laughing Horse's Funny Fillies 2012
Sajeela Kershi: Regret-Me-Nots
Edinburgh Fringe 2013
Sajeela Kershi: Always Moneypenny, Never the Bond Girl!
Montreal 2008
Brendon Burns: So I Suppose THIS Is Offensive Now [Montreal]

