Tiffany Stevenson
Contestant in ITV1's 2011 reality/talent series Show Me The Funny.
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Glasgow Comedy Festival 2013 Launch Show

The traditions of Burns Night are well-established: haggis, poetry, enough single-malt to float a battleship, and then, O what a glorious sight, the London launch of the Glasgow Comedy Festival.
Vying with Leicester for the title of Europe’s biggest event of its type, the packed programme boasts more than 400 shows – and this taster is designed to woo tourists north of the border this March... although there’s a notable reluctance to commit to that trip from the audience tonight.
Still, this line-up – hosted by self-confessed ‘needy poof’ Bruce Devlin – offers a perfectly succulent taster. Devlin’s fast-talking patter blends smut, catty audience insults and honest if unedifying personal titbits that, in a full set, might become draining. But in the compere’s role he shovels the night along, getting himself – and by extension the rest of the room – energised by his near-the-knuckle banter with the front rows.
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The festival is proud to be a natural product of Glasgow, rather than simply being located there, but it took two outsiders to offer the best take on Scottishness, going beyond the stereotypes of battering both food and people. The first came courtesy of Henning Wehn, who found little appetite for Scottish independence in the room (though a later comic suggesting England be submersed got a big cheer).
The football-loving German cheekily suggested that sectarian chanting was the only thing that made the Scottish game worth following; though proceeded to dissect the lyrics of one Loyalist anthem with the usual ruthless Teutonic efficiency. (What was that I was saying about stereotypes?) Wehn sometimes needs a little time to set out his theories, but there are plenty of wry lines and astute insight in his set.
Tiffany Stevenson appears to have ambitions to be a Middlesex Sarah Silverman with her bad-taste one-liners... although she doesn’t quite commit to the nastiness, de-clawing each punchline with a deliberate smile to let the audience know it’s only a joke. Some of these lines pack a punch, but when she moves on to topics of middle age, middle class ‘yummy mummies’ and what she considers the real seven signs of aging, the sneer is a little safer.
Richard Herring delivered the opening few minutes of his ‘male answer to the Vagina Monologues’, Talking Cock, which can’t really fail. The legion of Profanisaurus-type euphemisms for the ‘Kojak piggy-bank’ might not be sophisticated, but they are funny - especially when Herring revels so much in their childishness. The responses to his survey about where men put their ‘porridge guns’ for pleasure is as eye-watering as it is eye-opening, and proves that embarrassing comedy about penises is timeless indeed.
A change of style for Jen Brister, who returned to the theme of entering middle age (she’s a youthful 38) yet still wanting the lifestyle of a twentysomething – from Top Shop chic to pill-popping nights out. The subject is bread-and-butter for stand-up, but Brister makes it her own through expertly-performed set pieces: hilariously evocative character sketches that display a flair for cartoonish exaggeration and a mastery of both physical comedy and timing. She’s long-overdue a more high-profile vehicle for these talents.
Mitch Benn’s place in the comedy universe is more well-established, with his quick-turnaround topical-inspired songs, accurately capturing a musical genre. After a fair bit of set-up to evoke the Olympics, his feelgood bounce-along number inspired by the opening ceremony’s inflatable Stonehenge is properly catchy. And the cod rock opera, inspired by children’s literature is nicely done. I could do without the hack Yoda and wookie impressions, though, however good he is at them.
The second half of the showcase rounded up some London-based Scottish comics as a reminder of the festival’s origins. First among them was Dougie Dunlop, a no-frills stand-up who lets his material as a downtrodden everyman speak for itself. It’s something of a mixed bag, with a few pedestrian moments mixed with some great lines and unexpected switcheroos... but there’s a warmth to his dour observations, and an efficiency of delivery that keeps the punchlines coming.
Robert Mugabe-obsessed Matt Winning is a man who forever looks as if he’s just that moment regretted opening his mouth. Whether it’s his tortured puns about the Zimbabwean dictator, or tortured puns about something else, it’s his embarrassment in his own ‘dad gags’ that carries the set. To be fair, some of the wordplay is quite inspired. But some is ‘fucking awful’, to use his own words. Either way, with his odd fixations and deliberate phrasing in his delivery, this Scot is certainly memorable.
A quick transatlantic trip, next, for sassy Yank David Mills, whose sharp comments likening devolution to divorce really hit the spot – and made him the second outsider to successfully nail the Scottish psyche.
Mills is arch and mean, which can be refreshing but sometimes seems misplaced: I don’t think you have to be a super-leftie liberal to think his attacks on the homeless are aimlessly cruel more than ironic, while he sometimes seems to enjoy the sound of his own voice a bit too much, and talks fuzzily around the subject. That said, he cuts a distinctive and stylish figure, with an enjoyably elevated persona and some tart, acerbic putdowns.
Wendy Wason also can’t help but get caught up in digressions ‘I was going to tell you something, but I’m chatting here...’ she chirpily confesses at one point – and it’s futile to hope that this engaging gossip will fully focus. For the first half of her set you wonder if she’s going to get anywhere, but eventually reveals some delightfully catty comments aimed at her own offspring – she’s an ultra-competitive mum in that respect – while her story about saying the wrong thing to a friend heading out to Thailand is a brilliant anecdote.
A real treat of a headliner came in the form of Mark Thomas who, inspired by his bilious contempt for the romantic novel One Day, revealed his new favourite pastime: heckling books. You’ll all be doing it soon.
You might think that a rather trivial topic for a political comedian, but his whole ethos is to encourage direct acts of rebellion – executed with a disarming wit that always makes his targets look silly. He’s currently reviving his Manifesto show, which encourages audiences to make suggestions for policies that would make Britain better – and it’s testament to the humour, imagination and sense of justice among his fans that he’s collected such a hilarious set of pronouncements, every one of which should probably be enacted straight away.
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Tiffany Stevenson Dates
Tue 9 Jul 2013
Book Now- Bloomsbury Theatre
- 19:30~23:00
- £20
- Glenn Wool, James Acaster, Jigsaw, Lee Mack, Lucy Beaumont, Lucy Porter, Rich Hall, Robin Ince, Roisin Conaty, Stewart Francis, Tiffany Stevenson
Sun 28 Jul 2013
- Pineapple Pub
- 20:00
- £5
- Luke Toulson, Tiffany Stevenson
Sat 10 Aug 2013
- Nottingham Just the Tonic
- 20:00
- £10 (£6 concs)
- Debra-Jane Appelby, Stephen Grant, Tiffany Stevenson, Tom Deacon
Sat 10 Aug 2013
- Leicester Just The Tonic
- 20:00
- £12.50 (£8 concs)
- Junior Simpson, Ola, Tiernan Douieb, Tiffany Stevenson
Fri 18 Oct 2013
- Leicester Just The Tonic
- 20:00
- £9 (£6.50 concs)
- Brett Goldstein, Rev Obadiah Steppenwolf III, Romesh Ranganathan, Tiffany Stevenson
Sat 19 Oct 2013
- Leicester Just The Tonic
- 20:00
- £12.50 (£8 concs)
- Brett Goldstein, Rev Obadiah Steppenwolf III, Romesh Ranganathan, Tiffany Stevenson
Sat 19 Oct 2013
- Nottingham Just the Tonic
- 20:00
- £10 (£6 concs)
- Rev Obadiah Steppenwolf III, Tiffany Stevenson
Represented by
Lisa Thomas
Lisa Thomas Management
Unit 10,
7 Wenlock Road
London
N1 7SL
contact by email
Office: 0845 900 5511


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Older Comments
Rob Ince - 11/01/2012
Seen her several times over the past 5 years or so and each time it reinforces in my mind how shit she is. Same tired jokes, lack of rapport and general unlikeability. She may very well be a lovely person but watching her do stand up is, to me at least, a pain to be endured.
DG - 05/02/2011
Brilliant! Not a crude shock comic like too many female comics are. She went down a storm. Good luck to her, Having watched a few of her TV clips I would say... stick to stand up. Good luck to her
Jon White - 22/11/2010
We had Tiff open at the Musket Club in Colchester where the audience is mainly (98%) military wives. She was brillient. Came over with just the right feel on a club that is still in its infancy. She started strong, gained support and grew her material to match the feel coming back. She is defintely on the way up and has not reached a plateau as yet. Her wit bounces around the room and she would do well in any environment. She is one to watch and book if you can.
Charron - 03/11/2010
Saw this amazing lady storm an impromptu headline slot on Monday (Lenny Henry let everyone down by canceling at the very last minute) at the club she usually MCs with Phil Nichol (Old Rope) Her material was faultless, fresh and had the whole club clutching at their sides. This woman will go far, mark my words.
Chris Nesbitt-Smith - 02/11/2010
Tiffany is one of my favourite comics, having seen 'Dictators' grow from conception at Old Rope (a night deserving recommendation on its own) to the Enormously funny Edinburgh set that it grew to become; I just simply can't recommend her enough. Book to go see her as a matter of urgency.
Lobster - 26/07/2010
I saw Tiffany on Saturday previewing her Edinburgh show and she was very funny. I'd recommend seeing her.
G - 22/07/2010
How the hell does she get the gigs she does? Completely average and dull.
Mauro Saccardo - 28/05/2010
Shit.
Joey Smyth - 21/05/2010
Simply awful. She opened at the Glasgow Stand last night and just wasn't funny. There were one or two lines which got a laugh, but one or two lines in an entire set is not good enough.
James - 01/04/2010
I saw Tiffany at one of the Old Rop nights at the Phoenix. Its a night she runs, I believe, where comedians get to try out new material and have to hold a rope above the stage if they are linking the new stuff with old material. Nice gimmick and obviously works for a lot of comedians to try out stuff. We lucked out the night we went, Marcus Brigstocke, Dave Gorman, Milton Jones, Robin Ince, Lloyd Langford and Jack Whitehall to name a few all played. It was June so a lot were probably just getting some stuff together for Edinburgh. Anyway, I have to say, she really doesn't belong in the company mentioned above. She was dithery, unfunny and had no charisma. The only real laugh she got was when she fell over coming from the bar during the interval. It was a nasty fall and I did help her up, but it was also a real slapstick nosedive too. Good luck to her though, she seems nice enough.
Jimmi Henshite - 29/01/2010
I saw Tiffany at the red raw night at the Stand in Glasgow which she headlined. I knew of her as a comedy actress and wasn't sure how she would be. She was very good, very funny, witty and knew how to work the audience. A refreshing change to some of the others that still think you just need to talk about sex and drugs to be funny.
Steve - 15/12/2009
She's average on a good night and simply not good enough to be on at the gigs she gets, or used to get. She might land a job as a tv actress in a sitcom and good luck to her. But as a comic, no way.
Rosie - 22/11/2009
I saw Tiffany the other evening at Geeks at the Library in Islington and I found her hilarious and professional. I think the review provided on this website should be studiously ignored as I read it before I saw her gig and it is grossly inaccurate. Go see her for yourself!
sinisterpictures - 20/09/2009
I saw Tiffany twice at Bestival and found her very funny with her observations on life and spot on description of Greenford.
Laura - 28/08/2009
What an ignorant review. They completely missed the point!
Marie - 25/08/2009
I think that review is accurate (though a touch generous). My friend and I saw this act by chance, the name dropping and attempt to dismiss previous incarnations is indeed excruciating, presumably from someone who actually did very little modelling/acting which makes it all the more cringeworthy, hopefully she's a nice woman as in all honesty she seemed to be, but comedy performing is not her calling.
Lisa - 03/02/2009
I saw Tiffany Stevenson for the first time at the Frog and Bucket, her performance was faultless, i enjoyed every minute of it and at one point i thought i had actually wet my pants. (I hadnt) The one thing i left sure of, was the fact that Tiffany will go far, she was a pleasure to watch and i hope to see her again soon.
Nicola - 03/02/2009
Anyone who has anything negative to say about Tiffany Stevenson quite simply just doesn't get it... I've seen her several times, most recently at the Frog and Bucket in Manchester, and have not once been disappointed. Her 'detached style' is hilarious, and her air couldn't be further away from unapproachable and bored. Her stage presence is confident and charming, making her as incredibly charismatic as the comedians you see on TV selling out the Apollo and bringing tours out on DVD. I have no doubt that she will be doing the same in a few years and petty inaccurate reviews such as the one on this page will be irrelevant and laughed at as much as Tiffany is by an entire room of people at every gig I have seen her do. Which for the record, is a LOT.
Richard - 11/08/2008
I think the reviewer is spot on. I first saw Tiffany last year at one of her Old Rope gigs in London, where she was a capable if unmemorable hostess. I saw her again last week in Lady & the Tramp in Edinburgh where her laissez faire and overly self-aware delivery made for an awkward 20 minutes, her material came across as ill-prepared despite much of it being recognisable from the previous year's offering. Her Scottish comments fell flat, and all the chav/teenage mother jokes have been heard a hundred times before, albeit with far cleverer observations and better delivery. All in all an unpolished performance that would just about make the grade at a first-timers, open mic type event. Lady Carol, on the other hand, was an absolute breath of fresh air. Understated, hugely talented and captivating from start to finish. This juxtaposition only served to emphasise Stevenson's shortcomings.
Michael Monkhouse - 17/06/2008
Strong set, no messin'. Good rapport, easy delivery, original take on less-than-original topics. Not earth-shattering, but worthwhile.
Gayle - 06/05/2008
I saw Tiffany at Headliners on 3 May. Her performance was superb and very entertaining. She is very talented with high energy. It's very refreshing to have a female comic who can hold an audience incredibly well. Can't wait to watch her again!
Caitlin - 07/02/2008
I agree with most of the above comment, I think the review was harsh to the extreme. I think she's incredibly joyous to watch with real stage presence. I don't think being intelligent and likeable is a rare combination and can think of many performers pull it off. But yes I enjoy her set and I enjoyed how much she seemed to enjoy herself and would be very happy to see her on a bill.
Davey - 15/01/2008
I have seen Tiffany Stevenson on several occasions both at the fantastic Old Rope and also at various gigs on the circuit. I think she is a accomplished MC and stand up who is both likeable and intelligent which is a hard combination to achieve that combined with her good looks make her entirely watchable and someone to keep an eye on as she progresses (which I have no doubt she will) in the comedy world. I don't agree with the review at all.