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Ross Noble: Sonic Waffle
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Ross Noble: Sonic Waffle
Following the worldwide success of his 2001 hit Slackers Playtime, king of comedy Noble returns to Edinburgh for the world premiere of his new show
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Original Review:
Expectations are always high with Ross Noble. He's an enviable and well-deserved reputation for spontaneous brilliance, spinning funny and fanciful tales from the smallest of details. And he doesn't disappoint here with another dizzying display of improvisational pyrotechnics. After a typically far-fetched intro, describing how he became a radioative fridge-boy, kung-fu monkey slayer, Noble bounds on stage for his trademark high-octane riffing, sparked off by the slightest things in the audience. He produces such inspired punchlines from the most bizarre premises, so precisely formed yet genuinely unexpected, that it's hard to believe that he's making it up as he goes along, although there's no doubt that he is. Arsing about has never been so funny. Noble could improvise like this for hours, weeks possibly. If there's one problem with his Edinburgh shows, it's the constraints of sticking to the hour-long timeslot, and several times during this performance he seemed to be racing against the clock. For as well as the inspired ad-libbing, Noble also wants to give the material he's actually written a bit of an airing, too. Alongside the genius of his spontaneous routines, his prepared routines can actually be a bit of an anticlimax. Only a little, mind, as his wonderfully surreal scenarios are still brilliantly inventive and funny, but they just don't have the same element of danger of his sublime freeform routines. In Sonic Waffle, Noble muses mainly about Angel Delight and the Dalai Llama in the usual mix of absurd observation and dementedly surreal tangents, all delivered in his evocative Geordie drawl. (No one relishes the word 'e-vil' quite like him, which is probably why he uses it so often). As he becomes increasingly established, it is tempting to dismiss Noble, especially as he makes it all look so easy, never falling from his comedic high-wire, but he remains a prodigious talent and a perennial highlight of the fringe. |
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Ross Noble is pure hilarity. What more could you ask for? Lizzy, October 2002 |
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Funny. Bert, September 2002 |
Ross Noble: Mindblender
Ross Noble: Nobleism
Ross Noble: Nonsensory Overload
Ross Noble: Noodlemeister tour
Ross Noble: Things
Ross Noble: Unrealtime tour
Ross Noble: Noodlemeister
Ross Noble: Unrealtime
Fringe Cuts
Ross Noble: Slackers' Playtime
Stand Up For Freedom
Ross Noble: Chickenmaster
Latitude 2008
Ross Noble: Nobleism Larger Than Live
Britcom gala 2009
Ross Noble Live

