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Jaik Campbell: The Audacity Of Hopelessness
Jake Yapp's Bum Notes
James Dowdeswell: No More Mr Nice Guy
James Hately & Friends: Stubble Busting
James Mason Is Not Bill Hicks & Bobby Carroll Ain't No Richard Pryor
James Sherwood's Songs of Music
Jamie Kilstein: There Is No God And That's OK
Janey Godley: Domestic Godley
Jarlath Regan: Relax The Cax
Jason Byrne: Cats Under Mats Having Chats With Bats
Jason Cook: Joy
Jason John Whitehead: The Joker
Jason Kavan: Tough Crowd
Jeff Green: Life Ache
Jeff Kreisler 08
Jenni Byrne
Jeremy Leverton: iStandup
Jerry Sadowitz: Comedian, Magician, Psychopath II
Jesus: The Guantanamo Years [2008]
Jim Bowen: Look At What You Could Have Won [2008]
Jim Jeffries: Hammered
Jimeoin On Ice
Jimmy Carr: Joke Technician
JL Roberts and Nadia Kamil Present Wisecrackin' Midsqueezin' Behemoth
Jo Caulfield: Two-Faced Bitch?
Joan Rivers Stand-up
Joan Rivers: A Work in Progress By a Life in Progress
Joanna Neary's Magic Hole
Jody Kamali: Backpacker 2
Joe Levi's Short Stories
Joey Page and Rich Brophy: The After Dinner Society
John Bishop: Cultural Ambassador
John Cooper : The 30 Year Itch
John Gordillo: Divide & Conga
John Hegley: Beyond Our Kennel
John Pinette: I Say Nay Nay
John Ryan: Hurt Until It Laughs
John Ryan: Those Young Minds
John Smith Free In Sick And Twisted
John Wheeler aka Barley Scotch
Johnny Candon: One Careless Lady Owner
Joke-E-Oke
Jollie: John and Ollie Stuck Together
Jon Richardson: Dogmatic
Jonathan Mayor: Glitter on the Dirt Road
Jonathan Prager's Comedy Free Festival Encore
The Jonny & Joe Show
Josh Howie: Chosen
Josie Long And Special Guests Mucking About
Josie Long: All Of The Planet’s Wonders (Shown In Detail)
Journey Central Comedy Hour @ Meridian
Juliet Meyers: Strange Ears
Junk Band Story... Uh?!
Just A Minute [2008]
Justin Moorhouse’s Ever Decreasing Social Circle
Show Details

Janey Godley: Domestic Godley


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Description

Bestselling author, multi award winning comic and "Just a Minute" regular tells extraordinary home truths about family, friends and her lack of domestic skills, she cant make soup, she cant sew and she ain't a Stepford Wife- but has amazing top hints and tales worth noting to get you through the dull days.

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Reviews

Original Review:

Show Rating:Janey Godley: Domestic Godley rated 3/5

Over the years, Janey Godley’s told us so much about her family, through Fringe shows, newspaper columns and her misery memoir, that you almost feel you should put her relatives on your Christmas card list.

The same cast are here in this show: the mother murdered at 47, the husband with Asperger Syndrome autism, and the daughter she spent a fortune educating only for her to ponce around trying to be an actor. The setting, too, is the same as always – the rough East End of Glasgow.

This time, Godley’s going back to her own childhood memories, and she could give Monty Python’s Four Yorkshiremen a run for their money in the ‘we were poor, but we were happy’ stakes – but with a side order of sectarianism, for good measure.

The hour is topped and tailed with these evocative stories – but in between, she loses her way. Perhaps wary that she’s told us all there is to know about her tragic family history, she indulges in some fairly standard stand-up fare.

The most ordinary of the lot is that men and women are different. Apparently – get this! – women are very good at recalling old arguments, while men like barbecues and Sky+. She’ll be telling us about the difference between cats and dogs next… well, blow me, she nearly does, covering the feline side of the equation at least.

Elsewhere, there’s some more generic nostalgia of the ‘Do you remember Teasmade? Do you remember hostess trollies?’ type. Peter Kay’s proved how lucrative this can be, but exciting, it isn’t.

The predominantly middle-aged and middle-class audience, perhaps attracted by Godley’s status as a Scotsman columnist, recognise the references, and shriek whenever she says a naughty word (which is quite often), especially when she’s being grumpily derisory about children.

Her gossipy sarcasm proves engaging as always, and gets her through the thinner patches, but this is probably her least assured show to date – her Funny Women award notwithstanding – because of its over-reliance on familiar comic territory.

Reviewed by: Steve Bennett

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