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Pam Ford: All Legs and Ladders
Papa CJ: Kama Sutra - From India With Love
Paper Monkeys: Legends
Pappy's Fun Club [2007]
Patrick Monahan: Feel The Love
Paul Betney: Unshakeable
Paul Chowdhry: Lost in Confusion
Paul Foot's Comedy for Connoisseurs
Paul Kerensa: Genesis
Paul Merton's Impro Chums [2007]
Paul Sinha: King Of The World
Pear Shaped Afternoons
Pear Tree Outside Stage
Peeled Over
Pegabovine: Coat Of Arms
Pete Firman: Hokum
Pete Gold: Something To Crow About
Peter Buckley Hill And Some Comedians XI
Peter Buckley Hill: The 2006 Show
Phat Cave [2007]
Phil Buckley: Stroke The Panda
Phil Kay [2007]
Phil Kay: Justice
Phil Nichol: Hiro Worship
Phil Nichol: The Naked Racist [2007]
Phill Jupitus and Andre Vincent: Waiting For Alice
Phill Jupitus Reads Dickens
Phone Book Live
Please Hold, Chris Brooker Knows You Are Waiting
Plested and Brown: Minor Spectacular
Political Animal [2007]
Potato: A Show That Will Save The World
Pretty Dirty Things
Professor Bumm's Story Machine
Punt & Dennis: Stuff and Nonsense
Puppetry Of The Penis [2007]
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Phil Nichol: Hiro Worship
The 2006 winner of the If.comedy Award, Phil Nichol, returns to the Edinburgh Festival this year with a brand new show.
Legendary for his freewheeling picaresque romps that are, frankly, confessional to the point of deranged, you may wonder what Phil still has left to explore. With potential homosexuality, nude bigots, jazz ballet and substance-fuelled lost weekends ticked off the checklist, what will Phil expose his audiences to in 2007?
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Original Review:
Long before he won last year’s if.comedy award, Phil Nichol had his devotees. Hiro was one of them, a fan despite the slight hindrance that he spoke rarely a word of English except for Rolling Stones lyrics. It was at London’s 100 Club they met: Hiro in misguided search of Mick Jagger, Nichol on stage. And, on some ill-advised whim, Nichol invited this Japanese visitor to stay with him and his housemates. That’s the simple set-up to another hugely entertaining tale from the Canadian livewire; the first half of which, admittedly, doesn’t really amount to all that much. But it’s testament to Nichol’s storytelling skills that we stick with him, even when describing Hiro’s annoyingly repetitive behaviour. He is the very stereotype of a Japanese tourist, relentlessly snapping photographs and becoming insanely excited at everything he encounters in the capital. Insane excitement also just happens to be Nichol’s stand-up style of choice, too – so it all makes for an utterly manic hour. Some of his old tricks are reprised, clambering into the audience (but clothed this time, those who saw last year’s show will be pleased to hear) or slipping his T-shirt over his head to become a hooded, retarded hillbilly. He’s also joined by a band - featuring The Distractions’ Kirsty Newton and Fringe stalwart Mick Moriarty – to further manipulate the audience’s energy. No one can possibly be grumpy when a Stones classic is playing, and the live soundtrack is guaranteed to give the story a sense of occasion a solo comic can never achieve. As Nichol’s flatmates become increasingly impatient with their unwelcome guest, they issue an ultimatum, which is where the story starts to get interesting. It’s told with typical Nichol verve, even if the subject matter is a lot more restrained than his previous tales of ribald excess. There’s no great message here. You’ll possibly find something on the nature of fame if you look hard enough, as groupies, obsessives and supermodels all make their appearance, but any points are slight. It is, in essence, a whole bunch of unimportant events that just happen to have a convenient payoff. But the joy is in the telling, and with Nichol’s high-energy theatricals, a cracking band and a sense of unpredictability, a good time is guaranteed. Reviewed by: Steve Bennett |
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Phil Nichol: Nearly Gay
The Odd Couple
Phil Nichol: The Naked Racist
Talk Radio
True West
Freedumb
One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest
Phil Nichol
Twelve Angry Men
Phil Nichol: Things I Like, I Lick Perrier nominee
Phil Nichol
A Seriously Funny Attempt To Get The SFO in The Dock
BBC London Children in Need benefit
Brighton Comedy Festival 2010 opening gala
Comedy Store's 30th Anniversary Charity Gala
One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest, understudy show
Killer Joe
Phil Nichol [2008]
Gagarin Way
Phil Nichol: A Deadpan Poet Sings Quiet Songs Quietly
School For Scandal
Stand Up For Freedom [2009]
Old Rope In The Balloon
Phil Nichol: Welcome To Crazytown
Itch: A Scratch Event [2011]
Phil Nichol: The Simple Hour
The Intervention
Phil Nichol Rants!
Phil Nichol: The Weary Land

