Shows (J)
Jaik Campbell: The Audacity Of Hopelessness
Jake Yapp's Bum Notes
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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
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Jesus: The Guantanamo Years [2008]
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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
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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
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Joke-E-Oke
Jollie: John and Ollie Stuck Together
Jon Richardson: Dogmatic
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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
Juliet Meyers: Strange Ears
Show type: Edinburgh Fringe 2008
Starring Comic:
Juliet Meyers

Juliet Meyers: Strange Ears


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Description

Ever traced your family... then regretted it? Meyers’ whimsical kaleidoscopic comedy returns to Edinburgh. Confessions, deformed ears and feisty gags woven into an embarrassing family history. Contains traces of Jews.

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Reviews

Original Review:

Show Rating:Juliet Meyers: Strange Ears rated 3/5

An audience of just three people could potentially be uncomfortable for all concerned, but in Juliet Meyers’ show that’s not the case. She’s welcoming, asking the name of each one of us, making us all feel at home without a hint of awkwardness.

She is a jovial host and an engaging storyteller as she takes us on her personal odyssey to discover her father’s origins. An Iraqi Jew – not an anoraky Jew as one posh guest at a dinner party in Fulham misheard - who grew up in India, Meyers had tired of having people ask her where she was from. On replying Putney, they would ask again: ‘But where are you REALLY from?’

With the added impetus of a possible history of bowel cancer in the family, and the mystery of the extra tiny holes in her ears, she decided to travel to India to find out her background. More specifically to Mumbai where she sought out her grandparents’ graves.

It’s an interesting tale of self-discovery and a moving attempt to understand her cantankerous father. Along the way she touches on her background growing up in Chiswick, reveals her lapses in her veganism as now, in her mid-thirties, she realises that’s life’s too short to go without cheese and describes her consequent feud with a former friend and sanctimonious vegan.

The show isn’t laugh a minute, it’s more likely to elicit gentle chuckles ,but her self-effacing persona and openness more than make for it.

Reviewed by: Marissa Burgess

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