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Mackenzie Taylor: Joy
Mackenzie Taylor: No Straightjacket Required [2010]
Maeve Higgins: Personal Best
Maff Brown: Looking After Lesal
Mages Thru The Ages
The Magic Faraway Cabaret
The Magical Faraway Tree
Magicians! Behind The Magic
Magnus Betnér: Cum all ye Faithful!
Magpie & Stump On Loliday
Making Faces
Mandy Muden: Sleight Of Tongue
Manga: The Body Tights Man
Manos The Greek: Everything You Wanted To Know About Greece (But Were Afraid To Ask)
Manslag
Marc Salem's Mind Games [2010]
Marcel Lucont: Encore
Marcello al Dente Relives A Catastrophic Moment In His Life
Mark Allen's Go Slow
Mark Nelson: Offending The Senses
Mark Watson's Unusually Enjoyable Book Launch
Mark Watson: Do I Know You?
The Marvellous Dorians Present ... Bare Dollar
Mary Barrel Is Really Good At Things
Mary's Extraordinary Story Club
Mat Ricardo: Three Balls And A Good Suit
Matt Green: Bleeding Funny
Matt Tiller's Awkward Situation
Matt Tiller's Reasons Not to Kill
Matthew Hardy: Willy Wonka Explained - The Veruca Salt Sessions
Matthew Highton: Incidental Combobulations
Max And Ivan
Maxie
Maxwell's Fullmooners
McNeil & Pamphilon: Addicted To Danger
Me! Me! Me!
Meet Chloe And Dave
Men of the Hour
Mervyn Stutter's Pick Of The Fringe 2010
Michael Fabbri: Fabrications
Michael Piper: The Ping Pong Years
Michael Topping: Heels Over Head In Love!
Mick Ferry: The Missing Chippendale (Body Issues)
Micky Flanagan
The Midnight Hour [2010]
Midnight Matinee
Mike Keat: The Lyin’ Bitch & The Wardrobe
Mike Newall: Mr Famous
Mike Wozniak and Henry Paker: The Golden Lizard
Mike Wozniak: Egg and Spoon
Miles Jupp: Fibber In The Heat (A Cricket Tale)
The Mime Who Wouldn't Shut Up!
Mind-Reading For Breakfast
Minority Retort
Mirth of Forth Comedy's Packed Lunch at The Free Fringe
Misconception by Bill Dare
The Missy Malone & Friends Burlesque Revue
Molly Naylor: Whenever I Get Blown Up I Think Of You
Monkey Poet's Welcome To The UK!
Monsters Of The Deep 3D
The Monumental Joke Disco
Morgan & West Are Time-Travelling Magicians
Morningside Malcolm (Meets The Weegies)
Morris & Vyse: Daylords
Mostly Comedy Club
Mould & Arrowsmith In 3D
Mrs. Bang: A Series of Seductions in 55 Minutes
Mugging Chickens [2010]
Musical Comedy Awards 2010 Showcase
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Maff Brown: Looking After Lesal
With a wealth of talent, charm and particularly curly hair, outstanding stand-up Maff Brown presents his first full show at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. Maff shares the moving yet brilliantly funny story of his father’s attempts at re-invention following his mother’s death. With photos, film footage and surprising tales, the show is a exquisitely formed portrait of a family’s struggle to not fall apart when it loses the glue that kept it together.
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Maff Brown: Looking After Lesal |
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![]() With Des Bishop and Russell Kane earning plaudits for their emotional renderings of their relationship with their fathers elsewhere on the Fringe, Maff Brown’s more light-hearted account of reconnecting with his dad Leslie (his family all go by variations on their actual names) in the wake of his mother’s death still has its moments. Not that you’d immediately intuit this was his aim, as the seasoned compere flits from subject to subject, his father one of many topics he alights on, alongside anecdotes from his time in professional football and warming up for ITV’s Loose Women, the pattern of his old man’s approval or otherwise emerging over time. Featuring the delightful, self-penned eulogy of his mother performed by an actress and dialogue between himself and an angry South African dwarf conducted at his Outside the Box comedy club, Brown’s solo debut finds him on assured form, totally at ease. The downside to this is that he coasts a little. Mention of famous acquaintances such as Keith Chegwin and Gary Lineker lends his stories an air of authenticity, but he undermines this with elements that are simply too perfect or too pat, alongside a few too many deliberate malapropisms, cheap tricks detracting from the poignancy he would have you take from his performance. Moving en masse to his brother’s place in Australia after the funeral, his family has to realign itself, his father developing the maverick notion to shack up with a 23-year-old Ukrainian girl in Korea. There’s appeal in the fond mockery that now develops within the Browns, but if you’re looking for more profound familial insight you’re advised to look elsewhere. |
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| Date of live review: Monday 30th Aug, '10 | |
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Review by Jay Richardson |
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I could not disagree more with the idiot Paul that wrote that ill informed comment above. Paul clearly wasn't at the same show I was! I found Maff's 40 min set, hugely entertaining, touching and above all damn right funny! Sorry Paul, you are very wrong. I cant wait to see more from Maff. Graham McGrath, October 2010 |
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Clearly a man who thinks his life is a comedy waiting to be written. I saw his 40 min set last night and struggled to raise a laugh, some embarrassing silences from the audience throughout, plenty of stories about his family but without any humorous endings. Sorry Maff. Paul, September 2010 |

