Shows (C)
Cab Fare for the Common Man
Cabaret Whore: More! More! More!
The Calpol Flashbacks
Can You Dig It?
Card Ninja
Carey Marx: Laziness & Stuff
Cariad Lloyd: Lady Cariad's Characters
Carl Donnelly 3: Carl Donnelier
Caroline Mabey's One Minute Silence
Casablanca: The Gin Joint Cut
Casual Violence: Choose Death
Catherine Semark: The Truth About Lions
Catie Wilkins: A Chip Off The Odd Block
Catriona Knox: Packed Lunch
Channel Hopping!
Channel The Spaniel
Chaps On Legs
Charlie Chuck's Laughter Lounge
Charmian Hughes: The Ten Charmandments
Chastity Butterworth & The Spanish Hamster
Chat Masala With Hardeep Singh Kohli [2011]
Cheese-Badger Presents... The Epic of Hairy Dave
Chershire Liberation Front's Political Indoctrination Rally
Chimprovisations!
The Choob: Freaks Off Public Transport
Chortle Presents: Fast Fringe 2011
Chortle Student Comedy Award Final 2011
The Chris & Paul Show
Chris Cox: Fatal Distraction
Chris Coxen's Space Clone Audition
Chris Martin: No. Not That One
Chris Mayo's Panic Attack
Chris McCausland: Big Time
Chris Ramsey: Offermation
Christmas For Two: Friends With You
Chronic
Clare Plested: Vegas, Jesus And Me
Claudia O'Doherty: What Is Soil Erosion
The Cloud Girls & Ryan Withers
Colin Hoult's Inferno
Colm O'Regan: Dislike! A Facebook Guide To Crisis
Come Hell Or High Water This Sick World Will Know I Was Here
Comedy 101
Comedy Club 4 Kids 2011
Comedy Countdown 2011
Comedy Dim Sum
Comedy Gala 2011 In Aid Of Waverley Care
Comedy In The Dark 2011
The Comedy Reserve 2011
Comedy Zone 2011
ComedySportz [2011]
Comic Strip
Comx
Conor O'Toole's Manual of Style
Cooking Granny
Couch Impro
Cowboys and Indians: Black Man in the White House
Craig Campbell [2011]
Craig Hill: Blown By A Fan
Croft & Pearce - Funnier Than It Sounds
Cul-De-Sac
Curtains
Show Details
Cariad Lloyd: Lady Cariad's Characters
Show type: Edinburgh Fringe 2011
Starring Comic:
Cariad Lloyd

Cariad Lloyd: Lady Cariad's Characters


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Description

Join Cariad with her hilarious and affectionately drawn cast of characters: Jacque the parkour expert, Andrew the 7-year-old stand up, Judith the happiest cult member and Cockney Sam’s tales of woe, in a debut show from this acclaimed character comic. Directed by Ben Wilson (idiots Of Ants).

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Reviews

Lady Cariad’s Characters
Live Review

Cariad Lloyd: Lady Cariad's Characters rated 3/5
Lady Cariad’s Characters

Best newcomer nominee Cariad Lloyd has clearly put a lot of detailed work into her one-woman character show. Her creations are fully-formed and utterly convincing, and some niftily impressive lines emerge naturally from their only slightly exaggerated personality flaws.

There’s often a payoff between credibility and funny in character sketches, and Lloyd perhaps leans too far towards the former. However, the three-dimensional nature of her alter-egos – and her strong natural talent – mean she’s able to improvise without breaking the mask, which adds an impressive extra dimension. A running joke in today’s show about a bearded punter she dubs Jesus proves particularly fruitful.

Her weakest persona is … well, herself. Introducing herself as an out-of-work actress prompts a long pre-amble about the easily-mocked pretension of the thespian world, in which she never seems entirely comfortable.

She is much more at home as a seven-year-old boy, one of the stand-outs of the show. He’s a budding stand-up, having learned all the tricks from Michael McIntyre, delivering a lecture on the Russian revolution, in which he might just have got one or two facts muddled. And there’s no PowerPoint, either – this is the Free Fringe, after all – but hand-made A4 collages, displayed in a folder.

Another strong creation is ‘Cockerney’ Sam, a classic jolly East End ruffian, who likes nothing better than getting round the old Joanna for knees-up songs about appalling rapes and hideous murder. It’s a menacingly unsettling character – the blood-soaked butcher’s apron helps – with a nice line in dark humour.

An aura-reading hippy seems a more boilerplate character, although the naivety about what’s really going on with her guru sparks some nice lines, and the magician’s daughter stepping in for her mother, the usual assistant, never really sparkles, despite the daddy issues she displays. In Jacques Le Coq, Lloyd takes the usual cocky urban yoof stereotype but gives it several twists by making him French and a free runner as well as a wannabe gangsta rapper.

Lloyd has great warmth as a performer, making all the characters endearing – yes, even the murderous Cockney rapist – despite their flaws. Showcase such as this are often thinly-disguised acting audition pieces, and on that count Lloyd proves her skills without question – but she has also gone further and shown a real understanding of complex comic creations. A strong debut indeed.

Date of live review: Friday 26th Aug, '11
Review by Steve Bennett
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Comments

I saw Caraiad Lloyd at the Soho theatre and could see nothing funny about her. Her character cockney Sam - described above as a murderous cockney rapist - was unimaginative and disgustingly offensive. We left after a couple of minutes and I am ashamed that hate filled, brutal and unempathetic "characters" like these are roaming the stages of the UK.

berts, October 2011



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