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Tales From The Unaccepted
Tania Edwards: Killer Instinct
Tartan Ribbon Comedy Benefit 2012
Taylor Glenn: Reverse Psycomedy
Tea With Terrorists
Ted & Co The Dinner Show
Teddy: Priceless
Teeth In Eggcups
The Temps
Tennyson Hanbury's Condensed Cabaret
Terry Alderton [2012]
Test Tube Comedy [2012]
Thatcher's Death Party
The Mysterious World of Clovis Van Darkhelm »
Thea-Skot's Miss Adventures
They Came With Outer Script [2012]
The Thinking Drinker's Guide To Alcohol [2012]
This Arthur's Seat Belongs To Lionel Richie [2012]
This Arthur's Seat Gala Belongs To Lionel Richie
This Audio Tour Belongs To Lionel Richie
This Barry Ferns Belongs To Lionel Richie
This Comedy Mob Belongs To Lionel Richie
This Is Soap [2012]
Thom Tuck Flips Out
Thomas Hardie Presents: Where's Thomas, Hardie?
Thomas Nelstrop: Great(ish) Hits
Three Days Off Jesus
Three Englishmen: Squares
Three For Free
The Three Half Pints
Through The Looking Screen
Tiffany Stevenson: Uncomfortably Numb
The Tim and Pat Show
Tim Fitzhigham: Stop The Pigeon
Tim Honnef: Life
Tim Key: Masterslut [2012]
Tim Roast: Animals
The Tim Vine Chat Show [2012]
Toby Hadoke: My Stepson Stole My Sonic Screwdriver
Tom Binns as Ian D. Montfort: Unbelievable
Tom Cottle's These Twisted Folk
Tom Deacon: Deaconator
Tom Goodliffe: All in Good Time
Tom Lauri: Good With His Fingers
Tom Stade Totally Rocks!
Tommy Holgate: Tommy Talks
Tony Jameson and Katie Mulgrew Tell Tales
Tony Law: Maximum Nonsense
Top Secret Comedy Club [2012]
Totally Tom [2012]
Totally Wired! A Sperms Tale & Other Tails
The Tourists [2012]
Trevor Browne: I Think... I Am
Trevor Lock's Amateur Sex Tape Theory
Trevor Noah: The Racist
Trodd En Bratt: Well Done You
Truth
The Turkish Prison
The Two O'Clock Show
Twonkey's Kingdom
Show Details
Tea With Terrorists
Show type: Edinburgh Fringe 2012

Tea With Terrorists


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Description

A 'splendidly un-pc romp through Sameena's multicultural mash-up world' (Fenella Fudge, BBC radio 2), where fear is redundant, joy is essential and terrorists can be a real hoot.

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Reviews

Brighton Fringe: Tea With Terrorists
Live Review
Brighton Quadrant

Brighton Fringe: Tea With Terrorists

With kidnaps, armed robberies and insurgent firefights, it is a story guaranteed to be interesting. Though born in South London, Sameena Zehra grew up in the troubled Kashmir region – while her subsequent life has seen her visit the badlands of Kabul, Sri Lanka and other parts of remote India, thanks to various humanitarian missions that are never properly explained.

Not that the exact details are crucial; this is a story of how ordinary people react to extraordinary events – herself included, And the truth is a lot more prosaic than you might expect.

The matter-of-fact approach to peril also applies to Zehra’s delivery of her engrossing anecdotes, which leads to a emotive distance. There are stand-ups who would inject more passion into buying the wrong kind of jam than she does into a roadblock encounter with armed militia. While there’s a clear argument that real-life dramas have no need of being inflated by a comic’s trickery, she is a little too controlled and detached in her perfectly enunciated delivery of a carefully written script.

By then she’s no stand-up – or a rookie at best. Although this is a humorous slice of easy-going storytelling, for the comedy section of a festival programme, though, it needs more laughs to reinforce the wryness.

Still, it’s an engrossing tale, with highlights including the casual wisecracks of a UN pilot giving a mordant new twist to the familiar safety instructions and her viciously cursing grandmother, a recurring character worthy of her own sitcom – and someone more than a match for anything Al Qaeda could ever muster.

Date of live review: Tuesday 8th May, '12
Review by Steve Bennett
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Related News

The nominee who wasn't nominated...

Comic blasts 'cruel' awards chiefs

An awards ceremony for the Brighton Fringe has been branded ‘cruel’ and ‘unprofessional’ after telling a comedian she’d been nominated for an award, when she hadn’t.

Sameena Zehra had been told her storytelling show Tea With Terrorists had been nominated for one of the Latest Festival Awards, which were handed out by city listings magazine Latest 7 last night.

However, despite making a trip to the ceremony with two guests, she was stunned to find that she was not on the shortlist at all.

And Zehra – who also complained about the shoddy production of the awards show – claims the same thing happened to other supposed nominees, too.

She told Chortle: ‘The awards seem to have been designed and executed by Heath Robinson...a boiling basement.... a copiously sweating host.. a microphone that alternately blared, crackled, and then turned itself off... award winners' speeches lit from the nipples down, though their heads were in total darkness.

‘Imagine my surprise when i sat through the whole evening only to learn I had not be nominated at all. And I wasn’t the only person to whom this happened; apparently several people had been told they had been nominated, only to find that they hadn’t.’

In an email of complaint to event organisers at Latest 7, she added: ‘It seems an incredibly unprofessional and slightly cruel thing to do.’

The magazine said the confusion arose because around five acts in each category made a ‘longlist’ of nominees on Friday, based on a public vote, which were whittled down by a panel of judges to three over the weekend, when they had the chance to see the final shows in the festival. But the invitation went out to all on the longlist, without explaining that they might not make the final three.

On the Latest 7’s website, each category lists two runners-up as the ‘top nominees’.

The Latest director Angi Mariani apologised to Zehra and told Chortle: ‘In retrospect we should have made this clearer; this is something we should look at for next year.’

And magazine editor Bill Smith, who was filming the event, said he found no problems with sound or light on the night,

Zehra, who is also an actress and a blues singer, said the ceremony marred what had otherwise been a ‘fabulous’ first experience with the Brighton Fringe, which she said was ‘well-organised and with helpful staff’.

Julian Caddy, managing director of the Fringe pointed out that anyone could run awards shows, and that if any such ceremony was badly-organised, ‘it mainly reflects badly on the people running it, rather than the Fringe.’

But he added: ‘It is a pity if it's found to have been badly run. ‘

In what might be seen as another strange decision, the Latest gave their award for innovation was given to theatre writer Brian Mitchell for the Brighton Five Pound Fringe.... which was so innovative it took its name and £5-a-ticket ethos from the FIve Pound Fringe set up by comedy promoter Lisa Keddie in 2010.

However, the new Five Pound Fringe l also claimed to be Britain's first "’brochure-less fringe’, run entirely through social media.

At the ceremony, the play Cock & Tail Inn: The 80s won the best comedy prize, mind reader Doug Seagal won the cabaret award for his show How To Read Minds And Influence People, and Canadian comic Mae Martin won the international prize.

29/05/2012 Permanent link