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Marilyn: I Wanna Be Loved By You
Mark Little: Whingeing POHM
Mark Steel
Mark Thomas: Dambusters and Tales of Dissent
Mark Walker: The Man Who Fell To Mirth
Mat and Mackinnon: One
Matt King Is A Child
Meet Me At The Bijou: Wild West Review
Mervyn Stutter's Pick of the Fringe
Mickey D And Justin Hamilton Are The Indescribable
Middle England
Midnight Comedy with Edd Case and Pete Kerr
Midnight Show
Midnight Velvet Comedy Club
Mike Dugan: Men Fake Foreplay
Mike Wilmot
The Mitchell and Webb Clones
Mom I'm Not A Lawyer
Monkey House Cabaret
Music To Watch Boys By
My Life With The Titanic
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Show type: Edinburgh Fringe 2001
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Midnight Comedy with Edd Case and Pete Kerr
An hour of irreverent, irrelevant and outlandish humour Join Edd and Pete for their unique outlook on life.
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Original Review:
With fewer punters than bar staff, this was never going to be a storming show. Introduced by a thankfully brief, unnamed compere reading some of the weakest 'jokes' you've heard from messy scraps of paper, this basement gig is designed as a showcase for two very new stand-ups. First up was Edd Case, a Cockney thug character with a pun-laden set. His opening routine about inadvertently sounding aggressive while using such fighting talk as 'do you want some?' in innocent situations was OK, but no better and quickly became predictable. From then on the gags got increasingly weaker, as he got increasingly louder. Peter Kerr was more promising, though still with plenty of faults. He paced nervously around during his political rant, which proved quite off-putting, and his ideas never seemed to gel into properly-formed routines or jokes. Simply repeating a well-known, but inherently funny, news story - such as the angry mob who targeted a paediatrician rather than a paedophile - is not enough in itself, the idea needs to be developed. And that was a trap into which he frequently fell. He was watchable, though, and his heart is in the right place. But neither he nor Edd Case are at a stage where they can carry even half a full-length show. It's an ambition beyond their talents |
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Peter Kerr is an absolute genius. Im pretty sure this is his first full year in comedy, and having seen him with a more appreciative audience, I think this miserable and uneducated article is slightly unfair. Perhaps a little support wouldn't go amiss, and then you'll see him live up to his true potential. Just because his style isn't simple, doesn't mean it's not good. A legend in the makings. Vic Hawkins, August 2002 |
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Pete Kerr was OK. Leave him alone. He is probably already a fecking millioniare, or is dating the daughter of one, and doesnt need your support any old how. Pete Kerr, March 2002 |

