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Sam 'n' Emma: Pop Tarts
Sarah Kendall
Screaming Queens
Seducing the Audience
Set For Fame
Sex, Lies and Surgical Tape
Shappi Khorsandi
Shazia Mirza and Patrick Monahan
Shelley Cooper: Growing Pains
Shortfuse
Simon Evans
Simon Munnery: Trilogy
Sketch Show
Skitzaphrantic
Slaughterhouse Live
Slaves of Starbucks
So You Think You're Funny? heats
So You Think You're Funny? The Final
Social Anthropology
Soft Toys
Sol Bernstein: Almost Alive
Something To Remember Me By
Son Of A Bush
Special Needs, Fishpaste and the God Principle
Spinning Wheel
Stags and Hens
Stand and Deliver Award Final
Stand Players: Completely Made Up
Stand Up For Freedom
Stand-Up: The Musical
Stephen Frost\'s Impro All Stars
Stephen Grant: Route 1
Stephen K Amos
Steve Furst on Canvas 2003
Steve Rawlings Is Insured
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Simon Evans
Following Simon's sell out run at the Edinburgh Festival in 2000 he returns this year with a brand new show. Expect a performance of singular vision from this deadpan mirth merchant.
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Original Review:
Immaculately dressed in sharp suit and tie, Evans is a man who likes everything to be 'just so', and as such feels he should set out some ground rules out before we start. Paramount among them is 'no whooping', an overexuberant outburst this laconic stand-up feels has no place in comedy. Not that you would get any such emotion from him as he stands, rigidly rooted to the spot for the entire hour, using not so much as an accent or gesture to make his points. Such minimal performance means the writing has to stand on its own terms, and mostly it does, thanks to Evans's wry turn of phrase and incisive angle. Drier than the Kalahari, he employs the classic aloof, disdainful posture that's becoming increasingly prevalent among his contemporaries. Looking down his cultured nose at anything he considers inferior - which doesn't exclude much - he delights in sneering at their shortcomings. His hates have an irrationality and vengeance that would do a Nazi proud, ranging from children to evergreen trees (though deciduous ones are all right). And he's not shy of expressing it. But with no narrative or big personality to drive things along, the show can seem a little unsatisfying as a whole. And a political angle introduced late in his set - which reveals Evans is neither as right-wing nor middle-class as his outward appearance may suggest - is opinionated and well-put, but lacking the necessary jokes. Evans is one of the better gimmick-free stand-ups at the Fringe, but there's something missing that would elevate this show into a must-see, rather than being simply a fine craftsman plying his trade. |
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Utterly brilliant. This was the funniest performance of the festival- I could barely breathe. Clever, incisive and perfectly timed. Genius Paul, August 2003 |

