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A British Guide to World Religions
A Can Of Worms
A Little Lady Presents Jest
A.L. Kennedy
AAA Stand-Up
About As Funny As It Gets
About Comedy: Stand-Up Courses
About Tam O'Shanter
Absolute & Almost Beginners comedy course
According To Jesus
Acts Of Depravity
Adam Hills: Characterful
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Alex Lasarev: Illegal Import
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Alfred Williams Tells A Joke
All In The Timing
All Two Girlie
Allen and Wrigglesworth
Alun Cochrane: Introducing An Introduction to Alun Cochrane's Imagination
Alyssa Kyria: A Spark In The Dark
Amazing Adventures of Her Majesty At 80
Amused Moose Comedy's Hot Starlets 2006
AmusedMoose Laugh Off 06 final
Amy Lamé's Mama Cass Family Singers
Andre Vincent
Andrew J. Lederer's Anthology
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Andrew O'Neill: Winston Churchill Was Jack The Ripper
Andrew Roper: Cos I'm Free
Andy Parsons: International Indoor Championship Moaning
Andy Zaltzman Detonates 70 Minutes Of Unbridled Afternoon
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Arthur Smith: That Which Is Not Said
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Asian Invasion
Automated Housewives
Ava Vidal: Responsible
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Alun Cochrane: Introducing An Introduction to Alun Cochrane's Imagination
No 'real life' stories this year. Just silliness from his
stupid mind. Words you'll hear muttered as people leave (probably
at the end): "Annoying" "Postmodern" "Annoyingly
postmodern" "Career suicide"
"Brilliantly funny". This show premieres at the festival
after a period of Top Secret Preparation. As such it is shrouded
in mystery. Alun has always wanted a show shrouded in something
but he is
particularly pleased that it is mystery.
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Original Review:
This is a lovely show, free of tricks and gimmickry or cobbled together big ideas. The only clunking note is the title, and you're not sitting and watching that, so no problem. Even before the show starts you enter Alun Cochrane's world as the walk-in music is his sotto voce humming and tiddly-pomming of a number of songs and film themes. It's surprisingly relaxing and in retrospect feels like a bit of human dog-training we're already used to the master's voice before he starts. Alun's approach is deceptively simple. He's not over eager and bouncy (well, he's from Yorkshire), he chats off-mic for a few minutes, indicating he's not yet started, with a couple of spiky observations about the Fringe and the lust for merchandise subtext being if you've got a good show, you don't need the CD, DVD, T-shirt etc. Then we're off and his approach is to dissect the mundane and the incidentals of life. He cites three aims for the show. The first is not wanting to be bogged down in real life, but then cleverly plays at going for a microscopic examination of the relative slipperiness of banana versus orange skin on a varnished cork tile. There's a cartoonish, hyper-reality conjured here. He's not doing ordinary observational work, it's getting into the matter that's normally squashed underfoot. In other hands it would feel like bog-standard stoner comedy, but here it is weirdly, freshly vibrant. Goal number two is to change the meaning of some standard analogies, where context is all and watching paint dry becomes an expression of value and thirdly he wants to introduce us his imagination, which he then disingenuously claims to lack. But then you couldn't create this linguistic tour de force without it. There's a great sense of progression and control in this show. He's constantly exposing the tools of comedy preamble, compering, usable punchlines, catchphrases, mottos, building suspense and expectation and a good solid Butlin's training. It's verbal sleight of hand, the equivalent of Penn and Teller
showing you how a trick is done, but without making you any more
capable of doing it yourself. It's a clever show without being
smarmy or self-congratulatory. Very funny and stimulating, like
acupuncture for the brain. Julia Chamberlain
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Did I miss something? After the bold claim of an epidemic of "broken imaginations" resulting from his show, this guy simply didn't deliver. Mildly entertaining anecdotes and a repeatedly promised 'unicorn sketch' which came to a horribly predictable conclusion, combined with a total lack of any stage props or visual stimulation (something which most superior standups can't even pull off) meant I couldn't help but think he clearly had some potential but his show lacked any sense of ambition. Yuseke Moritaka, September 2006 |
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An inspired silly show full of inane ramblings about anything and everything. Alun comes across initially as a shy performer but the confidence grows as the hour goes on. His imagination knows no bounds and keeps you listening and laughing. This is a funny show. Richard Gill, August 2006 |
Alun Cochrane: Things That Have Happened To Me In Life, Or In Cafes
Alun Cochrane: My Favourite Words In My Best Stori
Big Value Comedy Show... Early
Alun Cochrane. Owner of a shed. And a son. Thinks the world is wonky.Think
Honourable Men Of Art 2008
Alun Cochrane Is A Daydreamer (At Night)
Alun Cochrane: Jokes. Life. And Jokes About Life
Alun Cochrane: Moments Of Alun

