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Sam Simmons' Tales From The Erotic Cat
Sarah Coomes: Big Bend National Park
Sarah Kendall
Scott Capurro: Yankee Dog Pig
Sean Collins: Mid-Life Crisis
Sean Collins: Vent
Set Your Comedy Free
Shamwagon
Shappi Khorsandi: Asylum Speaker
Shazia Mirza: Fun!
Shelley Cooper Rewrites History
Simon Amstell
Simon Brodkin - Everyone But Himself
Simon Munnery's Annual General Meeting
Sin!
Sister Mary McArthur: Celebrity Nun!
Skin Of The Moon
Skinner & Bell: The Men Who Killed Death
Slaughterhouse Live: TV Spazzatura
Slippery Soapbox
Smug Roberts: Me Dad's Dead
So You Think You're Funny
Songs My Granny Frowned At
Songs Of The Unhinged
Soup
Spank!
Spymonkey: Cooped
Squared
Stand Up For Freedom
Star Trip
Stephen Carlin: Fantastic Voyage
Stephen Grant: Life's Too Short
Stephen K Amos & Guests: It Might Just Happen
Stephen K Amos: All Of Me
Steve Hughes: Storm
Steve Parry: Ginge on the Fringe
Steve Williams: Excitable
Steven Davidson: The World Is Mine
Steven Young: A Failure On Two Continents
Stone And Stone
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Stephen K Amos: All Of Me
Stephen K Amos is supremely warm and wickedly funny with the ability to charm onlookers' right into the palm of his hand.
He creates weird and wonderful connections within his audience who are drawn into his personal world and thoughts brought to life by his chatty delivery, his ability to become the characters he's talking about and his fantastic energy.
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Original Review:
Stephen K Amos has so much ebullient, effervescent good cheer, he has to get it out of his system somehow. All Of Me is supposed to be about Amos laying himself bare hence the rather cheeky posters around Edinburgh. But in true schizophrenic style, he has to separate the real him from the outrageous, charismatic and playfully mocking stage character. So he comes on as an exaggerated version of that already over-the-top persona an arrogant, wisecracking African prince who relentlessly taunts the audience with a barrage of banter and put-downs. It's all standard compering fare, about where the punters are from, what they are wearing, how posh they are with more than its fair share of bog-standard lines but a hell of a lot of energy. He gets to build up the audience's emotions for himself, rather than giving it away to someone else, as is the usual lot of the MC. In this character, which does go on a bit too long, Amos forcefully pushes himself at the crowd, who are impotent against the strength of his personally. When he returns as himself, there's a complete volte-face in his style. Now he's quieter, more subdued, drawing the audience in to him, but still with that tongue-in-cheek wit that serves him so well. Amos is a real charmer, there's no denying that, setting up the perfect mood for his fairly straightforward autobiographical story. Poor upbringing. Only black kid at school, other than his twin sister. Demanding mother. Went back to stay with relatives Nigeria, didn't fit in there either. Then back to the UK to be a law student. Discovered stand-up in New York. And here he is now. The tale might not unique, but he does tell it in a compelling, always amusing way, with strong jokes lining the route. And he also reveals something important about himself that he's never publicly acknowledged before, even though it's been an open secret in comedy circles for a while. We won't mention it out of context here for fear of spoiling the moment, but it happens to provide a lovely payoff to the show, too. There's no such thing as a bad hour in Amos's company, and
this has some substantial material to match. Steve Bennett |
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Stephen K Amos was so funny last year at the Comedy Festival that we had to see him again only to discover that his material was around 90 per cent the same. Very dissappointed! Anita, April 2007 |
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Bloody hell! I went to the Comedy Store for the first time and I am still laughing at this guy's jokes. He was the best thing there – just too funny how he can relate to everyone and take the piss out of absolutely anyone in the audience with such excellence shaz, January 2007 |
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Oh my god this man is so funny. My face ached from laughing so much. We were at the Soho Theatre first night - brilliant observations,warm, wicked,and thought provoking. He made our night beth,david ,ross,jordan,tarik,dan,craig,fel,mark,, November 2006 |
Stephen K Amos & Guests: It Might Just Happen
Talk Radio
AmusedMooseComedy Star Search Final
One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest
Stephen K Amos
Stephen K Amos
Stephen K Amos
Comedy Store's 30th Anniversary Charity Gala
Stephen K Amos: More Of Me
Stephen K Amos: Weekend Talk Show
Britcom 2007
Stephen K Amos: Find The Funny
Stephen K Amos: Weekend Chat Show
Amused Moose Laugh-Off Final 2009
The Odd Half Hour
School For Scandal
Stephen K Amos: The Feelgood Factor
Stephen K Amos: The Best Medicine
BBC: Life: An Idiot's Guide with Stephen K Amos
Stephen K Amos: Laughter Is My Agenda
Stephen K Amos: Work In Progress
Comedy Gala In Aid Of Waverley Care 2013
Stephen K Amos Talk Show
Stephen K Amos: Work In Progress [Edinburgh 2013]
Stephen K Amos: The Spokesman

