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Kabarett: Alternative Variety
Kai Humphries: Evolution
Karaoke Circus
Kate Fox News
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Keen & Khan: Starstruck
Keith Anderson: Un-beaten Black And Blue
Keith Farnan: Sex Traffic - How Much Is That Woman In The Window?
Kerry Gilbert Gives Love A Bad Name
Kestrels
Kev Orkian: The Illegal Tour
Kevin Bridges
Kevin Eldon is Titting About
Kingsley And I
Kissing The Goldfish
Kit And The Widow: Oiling Up
Kitty Cointreau's BraHaHa
Kitty Go Miaow Miaow Presents ... Katrina Thompson
Kooky Babooshka
Kunt And The Gang: Complete Kunt
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Kevin Eldon is Titting About
After Big Train, Jam, Nighty Night and Stewart Lee's Comedy Vehicle Eldon has made up his own show. In it he moves about a bit and also talks. Sometimes in a different accent from his own. In one bit he hops up and down. That lasts for about four seconds. Here is what some people have said about him in the past:
'He's over there', 'He's complaining about the missed re-cycling collection again'. Why don't you go and see his show. It's about forty-eight minutes long.
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Kevin Eldon Is Titting About |
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![]() If this is Kevin Eldon titting about, just imagine what he could do if he applied himself. He’s thrown everything at what is – unbelievably – his solo Edinburgh debut: stand-up, characters, poetry, musical comedy, impressions, existential angst, and produced a fast-paced, unrelenting assault of pure comic genius. He has, of course, played supporting roles in just about every TV comedy of note of the past 20 years, from Alan Partridge to Brass Eye, Smack The Pony to Nighty Night – and judging by the impeccable writing and performance on display here, his time centre stage is long overdue. The show opens with the character he occasionally plays on the circuit: the smug, earnest, pedantic poet Paul Hamilton, naďve and appallingly clunky in his work, but arrogantly unaware of the fact. It could be an easy two-dimensional caricature, but Eldon gives him real depth, laughs coming more from his personality traits than the forced verse. His stand-up is insightfully knowing, his obsession with people speaking with rising inflection being the closest thing to straightforward material, as with postmodern brilliance, he unpicks the details of how he got to find himself on the tiny Stand stage, what it feels like to be there, and what he needs to do to be a hugely successful comedian. Yes, that means McIntyre gets skewered again, but with the precision of a master torturer. Brilliant and unique comic ideas cascade from Eldon’s brain like Niagara. What if Hitler spoke like George Martin? How about a rap about pension planning? Carry On Shakespeare? A French punk poet who steadfastly refuses to perform in English? As you might expect from his track record, the performances are faultless, managing to be simultaneously both nuanced and exaggerated, demonstrating a tight control of explosive comic timing. What is a wonderfully pleasant surprise – though it perhaps shouldn’t be – is that the writing is such a riot, too, with inventive punchlines at every turn. The show is performed with as much theatricality as you can fit on a 2ft radius semi-circular stage, while his song about a CD sticking (similar, but several multiples better than the one fellow Fringe performer Kev Orkian performed on Britain’s Got Talent) is a perfect demonstration of how he harness his technical expertise to powerful effect. For the range of styles, sheer number of laughs, and depth of innovation, Eldon has condensed about ten shows into one here. Don’t miss it. |
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| Date of live review: Friday 13th Aug, '10 | |
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Review by Steve Bennett |
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I saw about 12 shows at this year's Fringe. Knowing Eldon not as a stand-up at all, I thought I was taking a chance: how wrong I was...! He blew everyone else away... Richard E, August 2010 |
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The funniest, craziest, most fast-paced, equisitely-timed, perfectly honed and masterful performance you will see this Fringe, or this year, or ever. ********** 10 Stars. Kieran Morris, August 2010 |

