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A Thurber Carnival
Aargh! Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The Plan
Abracadabaret
Abraham Lincoln And The Art Of Faking It
Absolute and Almost Beginners Comedy Course Showca
Adam Hills: Happy Feet Perrier nominee
Addy Borgh: Hearing Voices
Adrian Sellers Can't Sleep - Clowns Will Eat Me
Air Freshener and Christmas Tree
Aisle 16: New Wave Beat Poetry
Alan Carr: Me 'ead's Spinnin'
Alan Francis: Clobbered
Alan Shitface: I Am Virus
Alex, Lawry and Richard's Friendly Inn Of Comedy
Alistair Barrie: Uncertainty Principle
Amused Moose Comedy's Hot Starlets
Andre Vincent Is Unwell
Andrew Clover's Birthday Party
Andrew Maxwell
Andy Zaltzman Unveils The 2002 Catapult Of Truth
Anorak Of Fire
Around The World In A Bad Mood: Confessions Of A F
Art Of Schmoozing
Auld Reekie's Oxters
Aunty And Me
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Andy Zaltzman Unveils The 2002 Catapult Of Truth
Perrier newcomer nominee in 2001 returns to Edinburgh this year with his new show in a gallant attempt to rid the world of all falsehood.
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Original Review:
That someone is tackling the intelligently surreal, all-encompassing comedy that Andy Zaltzman does is surely a good thing. Whether it should be him is becoming increasingly debatable. A bit harsh, admittedly, but Zaltzman is frequently let down by his delivery, and this show is no exception. He demands a lot of his audiences - you have to be alert to follow the winding arguments and catch onto the obtuse analogies - but he doesn't make it easy, with little charisma nor enough variety in pace and structure. It's telling that the high point in this hour was a game of Despot Top Trumps, with various leaders from Hitler to George W Bush battling it out in a variety of absurd categories. Here were lots of good points, cleverly, concisely and wittily made, with a device to break up the monotone monologues. But this is the only such maguffin he employs. In last year's affair, which earned him the Perrier newcomer nod, the Dog of Doom provided a handy excuse to break up Zaltzman's diatribes into bite-sized morsels, but this time the veracity-hurling device of the title is merely employed in some shamelessly silly shenanigans to close the show. That finale is one of several good moments in the show, but too often the tales seem slow and laden. He also tries too hard to be indirect sometimes, with unnecessarily complex stories and deliberately show-offy references to demonstrate his intelligence, rather than cut to the punchline. There's a fine line between dumbing down and simply making complex ideas accessible, and Zaltzman hasn't yet got that incredibly delicate balance right. Zaltzman himself seems to concede that he hasn't yet found the right vessel for his message. "Don't judge me on one gig," he implores at the show's conclusion. "If you'd judged Ayrton Senna only on his last race you would have a pretty poor impression of his driving ability." But by then, it was a bit too late for pithy one-liners - even if it proves that Zaltzman can actually tell a joke in something shorter than essay form. |
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I think his understated delivery allows the material to stand on its own. The jokes are sheer quality and class and he has a certin charm that means he will be extremely successful without flapping and noncing around like a lot of others Claire P, September 2002 |
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Bah, don't bury the guy just cos he doesn't do endless jokes about tits and ass, or banal nonsense that every other comedian on the fringe seems to thrive on. This is a genuinely funny guy, who entertains through his genius and humerous delivery - if you don't want to think about your world, go and see some other crap. Simon Jones, August 2002 |
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Zaltzman is better on content than on presentation, long live Zaltzman. Presentation can be worked on, better material can only be written by someone else. Harsh review, with care and nurture, this boy could be a home counties Bill Hicks Jane Mackay, August 2002 |
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You may need to alter the delivery in your head a bit if you're desperate for laugh-out-loud gags, but his Edinburgh show made for a thoroughly absorbing hour, and I laughed more than enough. And I'm not even an Oxbridge graduate. You'll need some mental agility though. Jon Sandys, August 2002 |
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This man is funny and right. Confound the critics ... go see him. But only if you can read, write and don't give a fuck about Big Brother. Jane Mackay, August 2002 |
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This man is everything a comedian shouldn't be. I was very tempted to wait behind afterwards to ask for my entrance fee back. His routine is poor at best and if the only people that he appeals to are Oxbridge graduates then he should get a residency there instead of peddling his act around the country. Zaltzman, give up. John Stones, August 2002 |
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Loads of stuff to chew over, not enough time to fit the laughs in. Liked him though, had a lot of amusing nonsense to talk about and the lack of traditional punchlines didnt hurt him one bit..Recommended. Paulie, August 2002 |
Political Animal
Andy Zaltzman Detonates 70 Minutes Of Unbridled Afternoon
Political Animal
John Oliver & Andy Zaltzman: Erm, It's About T
Political Animal
Edinburgh and Beyond
Andy Zaltzman vs The Dog of Doom
Edinburgh and Beyond FHM Comedy Tour 2001
Andy Zaltzman: Political Animal
Andy Zaltzman, 32, Administers His Emergency Dose Of Afternoon Utopia, Steps Back And Waits To See What Happens
Political Animal [2007]
Andy Zaltzman Boldly Unbuttons The Cloak Of Civilisation, But Is Perplexed And Perturbed By What He Finds Lurking Beneath.
Honourable Men Of Art 2008
Political Animal 2008
Andy Zaltzman: Swears To Tell The Truth, The Half Truth And Everything But The Truth
Political Animal [2010]
Andy Zaltzman: Armchair Revolutionary
Political Animal [2011]

