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Karl Spain: Love... Whatever That Is
Kate Smurthwaite: Adrenaline
Kate Smurthwaite: Adrenaline
Keith Carter's The Fall Of The House Of Frazer
Kevin McAleer: Chalk & Cheese
Kevin McCarron: Nuclear War! Followed By The Complete Destruction Of Every Living Organism On The Planet
Kevin Shepherd: Comics Die In Hot Cars
Kevin Tomlinson: Seven Ages
Kieran Butler in Che Guevara on the Fringe 2
Kill The Monster
Kim Hope: Rollercoaster
Kit & The Widow: A Barely Civil Partnership
Kockov's Free Mind Show
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Karl Spain: Love... Whatever That Is
Irish comedian Karl Spain took a break from the Fringe last year to look for a woman. A search that was documented in the hit RTE series Karl Spain Wants a Woman. Now he's back and this time he's looking for an audience.
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Original Review:
There's little to dislike about Karl Spain. He's fat, he's Irish, so it's pretty much mandatory that he has to be genial, or the stereotype police would be on to him. But there's little 'wow' factor, either. It's more about having a relaxed, witty chat than nailing sharp gag, and he's too unfocussed in the material to build up an irresistible momentum. That's not to say he's not entertaining company, a man able to spin a good yarn with the best of them. But it's a simple pleasure, so set your expectations accordingly. He starts especially slowly. In fact, he starts from the stalls, if that's not too grand a term for a row of chairs in a student union games room. He seems to personally know several members of the audience, and says his hellos to them making the rest of us seem excluded, and defeating the object of such banter in the first place. Even before he starts delivering material, he is deconstructing it, fretting that he'll get distracted by so many digressions he'll overrun. Getting sidetracked before he's even begun is not a good sign. But this preamble is possibly to warm him up, more than us, and once he gets properly under way, all is well. The show is a series of anecdotes, most of which seek to portray him as some kind of lumbering dopey eejit even if he is sometimes surround by people even more dumb than himself. He says the wrong thing when receiving his first blow job, he has an uncomfortable, stilted encounter with the teenagers who stole his PlayStation, and has to deal with idiotic American tourists while working in Shannon airport. For all his fears about digression, he can make up pretty decent gags on the spur of the moment but then he apologies and laughs far too much at his own joke, dissipating much of the effect. But I guess it's only fair to expect a show based on a shambolic life would itself be ever so slightly shambolic itself. Overall, though, this isn't a bad way to spend an hour. Steve Bennett
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