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Sadie Hasler: Lady Bones
Sam Simmons: Fail
Sammy J: Skinny Man, Modern World
Sanderson Jones: Taking Liberties
Sara Pascoe Vs Her Ego
Sarah Bennetto: The King and I
Sarah Campbell: 27 Up
Sarah Millican: Chatterbox
Sassy Clyde: By Name By Nature
School of Comedy [2010]
The Scot And The Jew: Doubly Cheap
Scott Agnew: Pride (In The Name of Love)
Scottish Falsetto Sock Puppet Theatre: On The Telly
Scraping The Barrel
Sean Hegarty: Don’t Be A Comedian In Northern Ireland While Drinking Your Buckfast Under A Bridge
Sean Hughes: Ducks & Other Mistakes I’ve Made
Sean Lock: Lockipedia [Edinburgh 2010]
Seann Walsh: I’d Happily Punch Myself In The Face
Set To Stun
The Seven Deadly Sings
Sex And Hugs And Forward Rolls
Sex, Drugs And Rock'n'Roll... Please
Sex, Lies And The KKK
Seymour Mace In Hanging Out With Seymour Mace
Seymour Mace In Seymourland
Seymour Mace's Dafternoon Show
Sh!t Theatre Present Sh!t Theatre
Shakespeare's Shorts
The Shambles [2010]
Shappi Khorsandi: The Moon On A Stick
Shazia Mirza: Multiple Choice
She's Black, He's Jewish, They're Still Married, Oy Vey
Shirley & Shirley
Showstopper! The Improvised Musical [2010]
The Shrimps Present: ShrimpTale
Shrink: The Outrageous Hypnotist
Sidos Eklektic Fix
Silence of the Trams II
Simon Donald Is Completely Hatstand
Simon Evans: Fringe Magnet
Simon Munnery: Self-employed
Six And A Half Loves By Terry Saunders
Six Guitars
SJC Lounge
The Sketch Emporium
Sketchatron: Nano [2010]
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Skinny Bitch Jesus Meeting: Daddy's Basement Circus
Slap And Giggle: Reformed
A Slightly Dangerous Comedy Occasion
Smith & Smith: A Matter of Life, Death and Middle-Distance Running
Snigger Happy
So You Think You're Funny? 2010
Some Comedy (In A Horse)
Sophie Black: A Sketch Show
Sound & Fury's Private Dick
Sound and Fury's Testaclese And Ye Sack Of Rome
Spank [2010]
Spank! The Big One
Spanktacular!
The Special Reserve Comedy Benefit
Speed... Mating...
Spring Day: We're Not In Kansas Anymore
Stand Up For Freedom 2010
Stand-Up For African Mothers
Stand-Up Showcase At The Hive
Stephen Carlin: The Podium of Unconditional Surrender
Stephen K Amos: The Best Medicine
Steve Pretty On The Origin Of The Pieces
Stewart Lee: Silver Stewbilee
Stewart Lee: Vegetable Stew
Stockholm Syndrome [Edinburgh 2010]
Stony Broke Fridays' Comedy Showcase
Storm Large
Storytellers' Club 2010
Stranded
Strassman: Duality
Strong & Wrong
Struts And Frets
Stuart Goldsmith: The Reasonable Man
Stuff
Success: A Success Story
The Suitcase Royale: The Ballad of Backbone Joe
The Sunday Defensive: Further Complications
Superhero Impro Show
Susan Calman Chats Up...
Susan Calman: Constantly Seeking Susan
Susan Morrison's F is for...
Susan Murray: The Glottal Stops Here
The Sweeney
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Seymour Mace In Hanging Out With Seymour Mace
I'm Seymour Mace. I'm single, I live alone and I love it! Hang out and hear how I've managed to dodge responsibility and remain as stupid as a bag of dead fish.
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Seymour Mace In Hanging Out With Seymour Mace |
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![]() Not long after Friday Night Live had kicked off my interest in comedy I studied Trevor Griffiths's prescient play Comedians which cemented my fascination with stand-up and the changes it was going through in the early Eighties. A lot of people my age will have followed a similar timeline and identified some of the characters in Comedians with actual comics, but few would ever be able to place the anti-comedy miscreant Gethin Price. Currently there are quite a few pretenders to this 'throne' but Seymour Mace is one of the most likely. The Manchester-based Geordie is not afraid of the sound of tumbleweed, and his previous shows have been so low on energy that this sound has threatened to be the abiding memory from them. Not so this year as Mace kicks things up a notch, so much so that his finale sees him in a ruffled shirt miming the role of backing singer on Gladys Knight and the Pips’ Midnight Train to Georgia. It's not all-singing, all-dancing of course. The trademark meanderings are still there, literally epitomised in a routine that finds Mace wandering out of his house, not sure where he is headed, only to realise that he was meant to be headed into his kitchen to turn an appliance off and not outside after all. Ever downbeat, Mace isn't quite so despondent this year, claiming he is making an effort after criticisms that his work to date has revealed nothing about his personality. He quickly concludes that he is simply a lazy stoner. This would explain the duologue that explores the lure of Button Moon and why the characters would want to go there so much. Here, as elsewhere, he feels his way around to a decent payoff, but you have to be prepared to indulge him the journey. As if to make sure that the jokes-per-minute rate averages out better, Mace uses the familiar ruse of reading a brief salvo of one-liners from a book, a self-conscious back-to-basics approach. Some of the lines are corny but many upstage what's on offer elsewhere. Before I first saw Mace he was being sold to me as a genius, a term one woman utters tonight in response to some opening banter. Mace immediately gives the correct health warning to her – that genius is a much abused word. Is he consciously acknowledging the expectations that have heaped upon him? I don't know. However, I do know that, like Gethin Price, even if you can't always go with him you have to afford him some respect, something that is much easier to do after seeing this show. |
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| Date of live review: Wednesday 25th Aug, '10 | |
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Review by Julian Hall |
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This and Seymour's Seymourland shows were the two I laughed at the most during the fringe - original and absolutely hilarious, should be a regular on TV John S, August 2010 |
Big Value Comedy Show Early
Seymour Mace: Where's Batman? My Life As A Failed Superhero
Seymour Mace: Testamental
Seymour Mace and Peter Slater: Sundayland!
Seymour Mace Presents Funshine!
Seymour Mace In Seymourland
Seymour Mace's Dafternoon Show
Seymour Mace: Happypotamus
Seymour Mace: Squeg!
Seymour Mace Presents, Marmaduke Spatula’s Fuckin’ Spectacular Cabaret of Sunshine Show


