Tania Edwards
TanyaLee Davis
Tara Flynn
Tatiana Ostrakova
Teddy
Terry Alderton
Terry Frisby
Terry Saunders
Tez Ilyas
Thankless Child
The 1 Like Fish
Thom Tuck
Thomas Nelstrop
Three Englishmen
Tiernan Douieb
Tiffany Stevenson
Tig Notaro
Tim Bradbury
Tim Clark
Tim Craven
Tim FitzHigham
Tim Key
Tim Minchin
Tim Nutt
Tim Renkow
Tim Rivett
Tim Shishodia
Tim Vine
Tina C
Tobias Persson
Toby Brown
Toby Caldwell
Toby Foster
Toby Hadoke
Toby Whithouse
Todd Barry
Tom Allen
Tom Basden
Tom Bell
Tom Binns
Tom Clutterbuck
Tom Craine
Tom Davis
Tom Deacon
Tom Gleeson
Tom Goodliffe
Tom Parry
Tom Price
Tom Rhodes
Tom Rosenthal
Tom Stade
Tom Toal
Tom Wrigglesworth
Tomi Walamies
Tommy Campbell
Tommy Cooper
Tommy Nicholson
Tommy Rowson
Tommy Tiernan
Tony Burgess
Tony Cowards
Tony Dunn
Tony Gerrard
Tony Hendriks
Tony Jameson
Tony Law
Tony Marrese
Tony Richardson
Tony Tinman
Tony Vino
Topping & Butch
Tracy Morgan
Trevor Crook
Trevor Lock
Two Episodes Of MASH
Tony Vino
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Started comedy in 2005, and runs several Fair Trade comedy nights, as well as the Clean (As Possible) Comedy Show. |
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Clean (As Possible) Comedy Show at the 2010 Leicester Comedy Festival |
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![]() Judging by the queues to get into this show, there’s certainly a demand for clean comedy; primarily from parents who want to introduce their offspring to stand-up safely, but presumably also from those who believe in the maxim ‘you don’t have to swear to be funny’. That’s true, but this show wasn’t the conclusive evidence the moral ‘majority’ might want to prove their point – and that’s largely the fault of Tony Vino, who both masterminds and headlines this show. First, though, some perfunctory but not particularly productive compering from Spiky Mike, chatting with the attention-seeking youngster in the front row, to the exclusion of the rest of the room. And his gambits to any of the children, from ‘how old are you?’ to ‘what’s your favourite flavour of crisp?’ didn’t exactly hit a seam of comedy gold. There was some material based on the slight story of spotting a police car with a defective rear light, then over to Paul Kerensa, doing his second show of the afternoon in this venue. This was more tried and tested material, compared to the new show, Borderline Racist, which he broke in beforehand. His comment about looking like Happy Days’ Ritchie Cunningham prompted a lot of discussion in the room; but Britain’s only belly-buttonless comedian soon got the gig back on track with his silly maths-based material, which might have gone over the heads of the younger members of the audience, but amused the older ones. Vino has a few gently enjoyable lines about his Spanish father and being forced to grow up in dreary Preston, rather than Malaga, where he was born – but for the most part his half-hour set was drearily predictable. Gags revolved around confusing Alcoholics Anonymous with the other AA, and the very hackneyed – and very simple – observation that You Are What You Eat’s ‘Dr’ Gillian McKeith is a weird shit-sniffer. Maybe the thinking is that people who want clean comedy don’t go to stand-up clubs very often, and might not have heard this, but by the end of his set he was performing to patient silence, despite his confident stage manner, suggesting they still weren’t impressed. Vino also had a couple of surprising routines for a ‘clean’ show. There’s a bit about the effect of childbirth on his wife’s nether regions, and a tale about the prostitutes near his home. He may have used oblique language in the first case, and been inoffensive in the second, but it’s hardly family-friendly material. Worse, though, that long story about the sex workers is just not funny, with only a mildly amusing payoff for a lengthy story. Still, he gets to impersonate a ‘scally’ drug dealer, so at least that’s another hack comedy base covered. No, you don’t have to swear to get a laugh. But you do have to be funny. |
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| Date of live review: Monday 8th Feb, '10 | |
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Review by Steve Bennett |
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Saw him appear in a double act stand-up thing with Paul Kerensa. Got to say that Kerensa was quite a bit better. Vino wasn't bad but he wasn't great either. Jonny, April 2011 |
Where can I see Tony Vino next?
| 19:30~22:00 - Thursday 30th May, '13 | |
| Venue: | Northampton Duston Sports Centre |
| Prices: | £10 (£8 in advance) |
| Comics: | Wes Zaharuk, Tony Vino (MC) |
| Info: | Plus: Craig Murray |

Clean (As Possible) Comedy Show
Edinburgh Fringe 2009
Clean [As Possible] Comedy Show
Edinburgh Fringe 2010
Too Early to Laugh Show
