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Radio Waves
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Raymond Mearns
Rebranding Mr God
Reflections From My Toilet By The Bishop Of Gallst
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Rich Hall and Dave Fulton Present Terry Dullum App
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Raymond Mearns
Bafta-award winning Raymond Mearns in an exciting new solo comedy show, expect anything.
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Original Review:
Is it too demanding to ask that an hour-long solo show has some sense of purpose? Glaswegian Mearns is a competent club comic who is easily able to chat entertainingly for 60 minutes. But just because he can, it doesn't mean he should, and it all proves a pretty forgettable, and ultimately unsatisfying, experience. A mark of a show's depth must be the speed at which it gets under way. Mearns, tellingly, banters with his audience for a good quarter of his allotted time. And while he occasionally gets a good laugh from the usual 'where do you come from, what do you do?' line of questioning, it's really a bit aimless, and much more suited to a distracted comedy club audience than those seeking a one-man show. His core material is funny enough, though nothing extraordinary, as he talks mainly about time as a criminal solicitor in one of Glasgow's less salubrious districts. It's a solid, if slightly old-fashioned, routine, raising more than a few smiles and the odd bigger laugh. Yet it all seems just a little too slight to be worthy of its own slot on the Fringe, where there are scores of shows with ideas and ambitions more worthy of a punter's time. |
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Raymond Mearns is quite simply the finest act to come out of Scotland since Connolly. No question. His compering skills are second to none. This man could write a fringe show about being stuck in a lift for 12 minutes. An awesome talent. Des McLean, May 2003 |
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Raymond has the unrivaled nack of getting a laugh, he can turn a seemingly innocent comment into a side-splitting routine, to compare him with Connolly would not be overstating the case Piero, January 2002 |
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Go and see Raymond, one of the funniest hours you will see at the fringe this year Grant McManus, August 2001 |
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The big man is a funny, funny man. Let's hope he goes on to bigger and brighter things Alex Bell, August 2001 |

