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Latitude 2008
Laughing Horse New Act Final 2004
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Laughter In Odd Places
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Lenny Beige Is Alive And Well
Lenny Beige: Once In A Lifetime - A Tribute To Anthony Newley
Liz Carr: It Hasn't Happened Yet
Luke Wright: Cynical Ballads
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Show type: Misc live shows
Starring Comics: Adam Bloom Andre Vincent Andy Robinson Arnab Chanda Ben Norris Bill Bailey Carey Marx Dan Atkinson Jeremy Hardy Jon Richardson Lee Mack Lucy Porter Marcus Brigstocke Miles Jupp Phil Kay Rich Hall Robin Ince Ross Noble Russell Howard Simon Day Stephen Grant Tim Minchin |
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Latitude 2008
Music and arts festival at Henham Park, Suffolk, July 17 to 20, 2008
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Original Review: DAY ONE: FridayLatitude has always strived to be more than your normal beer-soaked, mud-splattered music festival, boasting a packed theatre, dance, poetry and literary programme alongside the music and, of course, the comedy. It really is the poshest of festivals. Robin Ince kicked off the day off in suitably erudite spirit, combining the human genome and a Muppet Show singalong. Ince is what the Latitude clientele look for in a comedian: intelligent, biting humour that packs a punch. The now-weary topic of the evil of the Daily Mail takes new life in Ince’s passionate and unashamedly clever rant against its content and its columnists. Not many people can match Ince for pace of delivery but Adam Bloom stepped up to the mic with an apparent determination to give the audience at least an hour’s worth of jokes in the 30 minutes stage time he had. Bloom’s material is skillfully crafted, taking the audience on a ride through giggles and groans and always landing on a killer punchline. He even managed to persuade the most politically correct members of the crowd that an inflatable bouncy mosque may be the path to world peace. The pace and atmosphere in the tent was sadly deflated by Simon Day who was appearing as his misguided daft-lad persona Billy Bleach. This one-dimensional character only had to sustain 30-second bursts in The Fast Show. But 30 minutes in front of a demanding audience left Day stumbling for words and apologising for his material. The second section of the afternoon soon found the atmosphere back on track as Ben Norris treated the festival-goers to some urban beat poetry, which is about as hip as it gets for a 40-year-old father of triplets. Norris explores the topics of fatherhood, lad culture and cockneys with a genuine sense of angry joy, taking particular delight in some brilliantly crafted wordplay with the East London accent. The bill indicated that the next act up would be Dave Fulton but we were treated to a couple of special guests instead. Marcus Brigstocke and Andre Vincent told us that Fulton’s homemade motorbike had broken down on the M25 and the best way to console him would be for the audience to leave a cheering message of “your bike’s shit” on his voicemail. Sadly this prank took too long to set up and the atmosphere dipped again, making it difficult for Brigstocke and Vincent to engage the crowd with some Early Edition banter from the day’s papers. This let to some very uninspired heckling, which luckily gave Vincent the opportunity to get the tent back onside with some ruthless putdowns. After this, one of the highlights of the day. Russell Howard received a rousing welcome and quickly proved why he deserved it. Every word that left his mouth led to a laugh and his warm, friendly persona had the audience hooked. Not only is Howard an exceptionally skilled writer he has a real magic in his delivery that kept more than 2,000 people rapt and shouting for more when he left the stage. He met with an early playful heckle when talking about his recent introduction to Stephen Fry, which resulted in some beautiful ad-libbing and a hilarious and impressive impression of Fry himself. Howard projects a real sense of genuine and endearing childlike naivety and wonder, his playfulness reflected in his energetic stage presence. This was a faultless set which proved there is much more to him than Mock The Week. An ill-timed comfort break left me outside the comedy tent for Arnab Chanda’s entertaining but uninspiring set. Chanda’s workmanlike approach to gag-writing achieves the chuckles and laughs that it deserves but it failed to set the tent alight – unlike the next man, Ross Noble. By this time, the tent was stretched beyond capacity with a few hundred more crowded round the outside. Noble thrilled the crowd with his trademark tangents and surreal fancies, inspired by banter with his audience. After raiding the backstage supply of Red Bull to distribute through the marquee, Noble led the audience in a rendition of Bohemian Rhapsody, with the ‘insiders’ singing one line and the ‘outsiders’ singing the next, followed by a massive conga down to a vegan food stall where 3,000 people were to ask for sausage rolls. Only a Noble mind could form such a ludicrous idea, and only Noble - or maybe Mark Watson – could lead and control such a gathering. He truly is the people’s comedian. He makes the audience become the show, for which he earns their respect and their trust, until they have utter faith that the madcap plans he comes up with will work. And they did. He created a moment that people will talk about, and the few thousand of us that screamed ‘sausage roll’ in the face of a very confused vegan while Noble crowd surfed to safety will be able to say ‘I was there.’ Compere Andy Robinson then had the difficult task of refilling the now empty comedy tent. A mission made harder by the fact that he had been making a very good job of losing the audience for most of the day. Robinson was a late addition to the bill and it was clear why he had not been first choice. His material is weak, his interactions with the audience were repeatedly unnecessarily aggressive, and although he was only onstage for mere minutes between acts, he managed to repeat most of his jokes a couple of times. After failing to recreate the Queen singalong that Noble had accomplished ten minutes before he introduced Lee Mack to a subdued audience. Despite his best attempts Mack struggled to lift the atmosphere. Although he is a known name and an accomplished comedian Mack failed to bring any excitement to a flagging and thinning crowd. He relied heavily on his tried and tested mainstream material, some of which got a good response. But he missed it, because of noise from other tents, so got antsy with the audience. Awkward. The tension escalated when he forced a young lad to part with his cap, which was then tossed around the tent, leading to a fairly hostile exchange. There was little Mack could do to lift spirits - either his or the audience’s - and the set petered out with an ill-advised Q&A session. Lucy Porter wisely started her set with some yogic relaxation exercises with a twist. Her charm and whimsy calmed the audience, and with gentle and cheeky tales from her single life, Porter and her imaginary dog brought the laughs back to the comedy tent. These laughs dissipated, just like the audience, when Phil Kay started his improvised and seemingly never-ending festival song to close the gig. His rambling mess of poorly constructed and ill-conceived surrealism, delivered as he strummed on a guitar, as enough to drive most of the audience to the stages where real music was available – with lyrics more meaningful than a list of the food stalls at the festival. There were few discernible jokes amid the desperate padding. A very disappointing end to a gig that had climaxed two hours earlier, with a bewildered vegan. DAY TWO: Saturday Day two at Latitude is smellier, damper and with a more musical feel to the comedy tent, with all manner of equipment and instruments caging compere Stephen Grant to a small section of the stage. Nonetheless, he bounded on with unshakable enthusiasm,full of guarantees about how good today’s show would be. How right he was. First up was Dan Atkinson, whose shambolic appearance belies his sharp mind. Atkinson embellishes his jokes with so many levels that some of his most subtle lines were lost on an audience who were still laughing at the previous gag. This is not to say that his material is over-intellectualised, but that it is written with such care as to squeeze every ounce of humour from each topic he touches on, from free-range bees to Torquay nightclubs. Each line just takes you to another level of silly, creating a joyful start to the day. In stark contrast with Atkinson’s playful observations Carey Marx launched straight into hard-hitting tales of fucking snowmen, drug-addled debauchery and possibly the best rape joke ever written. This may seem like a dangerous selection of topics for a midday slot at a middle-class festival but Marx is smart, with writing that is well structured, clever and slickly delivered. So rather than cause offensive, he is actually charming and very, very funny. The first musical interlude of the day came from Aussie piano maestro Tim Minchin. Initially the audience were led to believe that Marx’s dark humour would continue, as Minchin opened with his new song, Racist. The atmosphere was decidedly tense as the lyrics explored the power of language to hurt. This tension fuelled the eventual laughter when the brilliantly placed twist in the song was revealed. Minchin wowed the crowd with his exceptional piano playing, but he is so much more than a standard ‘musical comedian’. His music is inspired and original, a welcome relief from the ‘take a pop tune and replace the lyrics’ approach. His lyrics would be as funny without the musical backing. Plus his stints of straight stand-up between songs are strong, well written and damn funny. His rousing and much loved eco-friendly song Canvas Bag was my highlight of the day, an environmentally friendly singalong with added light show and wind machine. What more would anyone want from a festival comic? Having missed Scott Capurro I returned to the tent to see Jon Richardson battle against sound problems, a worrying crunch from the framework and a biblical downpour which led the seated audience to spontaneously stand up mid-punchline to make more room for the drenched crowd waiting outside. A weaker comedian would have struggled to retain attention facing just one of these obstacles but Richardson is made of stronger stuff and presented an impressive set. His self-deprecating humour and astute observations distracted the audience from the conditions, and resulted in one of the best received sets of the day. Undoubtably the man everyone was here to see was Bill Bailey. His arrival on stage was met with a wall of sound, the audience responding as they would to their rock heroes a few stages over. Some people had specifically bought festival tickets just to see this man perform, and in their eyes he could do no wrong. There is no doubting Bailey’s comedy pedigree, but this seems to be making him lazy. This set was disappointing and messy, with a lack of opportunities for genuine belly laughs. These low points were highlighted when Bailey relied on well-worn old classics like his masterful love ballad and the audio clips of George Bush being typically George Bushy to get the laughs. It was still a pleasure to watch the man perform, but tinged with some anti-climax. Jeremy Hardy is a festival favourite with a sharp eye for political observation. But he’s far from arrogant in his delivery, displaying a genuine respect for the intelligence of his audience, who he guided around politics, religion and fatherhood with skill and a poetical and hilarious turn of phrase. This smart approach doesn’t deter Hardy from frivolity, however, which he displayed beautifully with a finale impersonating comedy chums, from Norman Lovett to Barry Cryer and Humphrey Lyttelton. Miles Jupp has honed arrogance to an art, and it took the audience a few minutes to see beyond his bragging introduction to the irony beneath his uber-posh persona, which cleverly mocks the upper classes. Jupp is still a using a couple of lines as old as his comedy career, but they are great lines. Thankfully, his newer material is just as good, and he employs some fantastic storytelling skills to keep the audience hooked. Rich Hall may display some of the outwardly stereotypical traits of an American abroad, loud, opinionated and brash. But he is apologetic, well travelled and all too aware of European attitudes to his country’s politics. In his a hard-hitting set, Hall spews more than a stomach’s worth of bile over the American political animal, with high-energy and high-impact rants. His set ended in a hostage stand-off where Hall refused to leave the stage until all the audience had gone. Eventually the comic had to admit defeat when faced with a huge standing ovation. Yet again, Latitude provided a great day of comedy to entertain the muddied masses.Reviewed by: Corry Shaw |
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Carey Marx: Marry Me
Edinburgh and Beyond
Lucy Porter: Happiness
Miles Jupp: Young Man In A Huff
Phil Kay
Robin Ince is as Dumb as You
Russell Howard: Skylarking
Stand Up For Freedom
The Book Club
The Lost And Lonely Rebels
The Odd Couple
Tim Minchin: Dark Side
Bill Bailey: Bewilderness
Bill Bailey: Dandelion Mind
Bill Bailey: Qualmpeddler
Bill Bailey: Tinselworm
I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue 2009-10
I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue Tour
Jon Richardson: It's Not Me, It's You
Lee Mack: Going Out
Marcus Brigstocke: Your Time Is Up
Robin Ince's Bad Book Club autumn 2010 tour
Robin Ince: Happiness Through Science
Robin Ince: The Importance Of Being Interested
Ross Noble: Fizzy Logic
Ross Noble: Mindblender
Ross Noble: Nobleism
Ross Noble: Nonsensory Overload
Ross Noble: Noodlemeister tour
Ross Noble: Things
Ross Noble: Unrealtime tour
Russell Howard: Right Here, Right Now
Russell Howard: Big Rooms & Belly Laughs
Russell Howard: Wonderbox
Simon Day: What A Fool Believes
Tim Minchin And His Orchestra
The Crack
Tim Minchin
Not Going Out
Andre Vincent
Bernie Clifton
Bill Bailey: Steampunk
Carey Marx: White Night
Comedy Bucket
Cutlery Wars
Dirty Book Club
Doing Nothing Greatly Benefits Creativity
Levelland by Rich Hall
Lucy Porter: The Good Life
Marcus Brigstocke
Phil Kay
Rich Hall
Robin Ince Isn't Waving
Russell Howard: Wandering
Stand Up For Freedom
Stephen Grant: Life's Too Short
The Book Club
The Comedy Zone
The Early Edition
Tim Minchin: So Rock
Adam Bloom: Entertaining The Thought
Lee Mack
Lucy Porter: Lady Luck
Marcus Brigstocke: Planet Corduroy
Miles Jupp Presents The Lost And Lonely Rebels
One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest
Otis Lee Crenshaw: Bourbonitis
Ross Noble: Noodlemeister
Russell Howard
Stephen Grant
The Award Winning Robin Ince Star Of The Off
Bill Bailey: Part Troll
Cary Marx: Albino Hunter
Express Excess
Live (Original) Floorshow - Live!
Lucy Porter: Live At The Underbelly
Miles Jupp: Gentlemen Prefer Brogues
Phil Kay
Rich Hall: Without Roy Chubby Brown
Ross Noble: Unrealtime
Stephen Grant: Route 1
The Comedy Zone
Twelve Angry Men
Andre Vincent Is Unwell
BBC Scotland Live Floor Show
Club Seals: The Museum of Everything
Ebony and Irony
Express Excess
Fringe Cuts
Lucy Porter
Marcus Brigstocke: The Award-Winning Show
Phil Kay: Branding The Ass Of A Heckler
Pretzel Logic
Ross Noble: Sonic Waffle
The Stonewall Gala
Adam Bloom: And God Created Adam
BBC New Comedy Awards Final
Edinburgh and Beyond FHM Comedy Tour 2001
Fish Supper
Goose Nights
Otis Lee Crenshaw
Phil Kay
Rich Hall and Dave Fulton Present Terry Dullum App
Ross Noble: Slackers' Playtime
Rubbernecker
Stand Up For Freedom
Three Fat Ladies
Bill Bailey
Lee Mack's New Bits
Ross Noble: Chickenmaster
A Seriously Funny Attempt To Get The SFO in The Dock
BBC London Children in Need benefit
Bill Bailey’s Remarkable Guide To The Orchestra
Book Club At The British Library
Channel 4 Comedy Gala 2011
Comedy Store's 30th Anniversary Charity Gala
Fast Show Live: Shamelessly Plugging The DVD
Funny Women gala 2005
Ha Ha Hammersmith II
Just for Laughs: Montreal Festival Showcase 2009
Leicester Comedy Festival 2007 Preview Show
Leicester Comedy Festival Preview Show 2009
Malcolm Hardee Charity Cabaret 2007
Marcus Brigstocke: Live At The Menier Chocolate Factory
Nine Lessons and Carols for Godless People
Phil Kay: Feral Will
Pimm's Summerfest
Robin Ince: Dancing Idiotically Towards An Apocalypse Of Our Own Making
Robin Ince's Christmas Book Club 2006
Ross Noble: Nobleism Larger Than Live
School For Gifted Children
Secret Policeman's Ball 2008
Stand Up For Palestine
Stephen Grant: Up Front, Theatre Royal Brighton
Black Pond
Huge
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Adam Bloom: Look At Me, Anybody
Arnab Chanda & Greg McHugh: Tickets Still Available
Best Western
Book Club: All-New Fighting Years
Carey Marx: Sincerity Aside
Comedy Gala 2007
Dan Atkinson Knows That He Knows Nothing
Early Edition [2007]
Johnson and Boswell: Late But Live
Jon Richardson: Spatula Pad
Lucy Porter's Love In
Marcus Brigstocke [2007 Fringe]
Miles Jupp: Everyday Rage And Dinner Party Chit-Chat
Onomatopoeia Society III
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Phil Kay: Justice
Phill Jupitus and Andre Vincent: Waiting For Alice
Rich Hall [2007 Fringe]
Robin Ince Knew This Would Happen
Russell Howard: Adventures
Spinistry of Moonerism
Stand Up For Animals
Stephen Grant: Taken For Granted
Laughapoolooza [Adelaide 07]
Phil Kay: Give Me Your Left Shoe
Tim Minchin: Dark Side [Melbourne]
Bill Bailey: Tinselworm [Fringe 2008]
Book Club [2008]
Carey Marx: Careyness
Dan Atkinson: The Credit Crunch And Other Biscuits
Edinburgh and Beyond 2008
Elizabeth And Raleigh: Late But Live
Guardian at the Gilded Balloon
Jon Richardson: Dogmatic
Lucy And Des Show Off
Lucy Porter: The Bare Necessities
Miles Jupp: Drifting
Otis Lee Crenshaw [2008]
Phil Kay [2008]
Phil Kay: Greatest Hits
Rich Hall: Fifty Cent Words
Robin Ince: Propaganda and Tittletattle
Robin Ince: Things I Like About Carl Sagan And Others
Russell Howard: Dingledodies
Stand Up For Freedom [2008]
Stephen Grant: Second
Tim Minchin: Ready For This?
Britcom 2006
Comedy Showdown
Late Nite Down Under
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Carey Marx: The Doom Gloom Boom
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Comedy Countdown 2009
Dan Atkinson: Death by a Thousand Pricks
The Early Edition [2009]
The Guardian Live at the Gilded Balloon [2009]
Jon Richardson: This Guy At Night
Lucy Porter: Fool's Gold
Marcus Brigstocke: God Collar
Miles Jupp: Telling It Like It Might Be
A Night of Comedy for Ray - Hosted by Michael McIntyre
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Rich Hall [2009]
Rich Hall's Campfire Stories
Robin Ince Versus The Moral Majority
Robin Ince: Bleeding Heart Liberal
School For Scandal
Stephen Grant: One Week Only
Britcom gala 2009
Ross Noble Live
Cammy And Phil's Late Night Nonsense
Carey Marx: Scoundrel
GIT
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Miles Jupp: Fibber In The Heat (A Cricket Tale)
Phil Kay's Gimmeyourleftshoe
Phil Kay: In Tweed
Phil Kay: RadioFree
Rachel Bridge: How To Make A Million Before Lunch
Robin Ince And Michael Legge: Pointless Anger, Righteous Ire
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Robin Ince: Carl Sagan Is Still My God
Stand-Up For African Mothers
Carey Marx: Laziness & Stuff
Comedy Gala 2011 In Aid Of Waverley Care
Phil Kay: Free Hash
Pointless Anger, Righteous Ire 2: Back in the Habit
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Rich Hall's Hoedown
Robin Ince's Struggle for Existence
Robin Ince: Carl Sagan is My God, Oh and Richard Feyman Too
Robin Ince: Star Corpse Apple Child
The Early Edition
Heroes of Alternative Fringe
Lucy Porter: People Person
Marcus Brigstocke: The Brig Society
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Carey Marx: Intensive Carey
Lucy Porter: Northern Soul
Marcus Brigstocke Presents Unavailable for Comment
Marcus Brigstocke: 'Je m'accuse - I am Marcus'
Phil Kay: Verbal Diary
Rich Hall [2013]
Rich Hall's Hoedown [2013]
Rich Hall [Melbourne 2013]
