It turned out to be a fairly straight hour-long strip show. I must have not paid attention when The Illicit Thrill was recommended to me. I laughed Loads!” ( Rather Redundant Mag) The quotes include: “A true talent!” ( Just One Person’s Opinion) and “Funny. “People,” I said, “talk about all the performers’ egos but I suppose all the vulnerabilities are feeding on each other too.”Ībigoliah Schamaun poster. “I suppose we’re all very vulnerable,” Kate explained. I do feel a little bit mad in Edinburgh, but maybe you need to. “It is very good,” I said. “What sort of madness?” So, by the time I was getting towards the end of my show today, I could feel the madness setting in.
I can’t eat just before a show and I ate too early this morning. “Yes,” admitted Kate, “but somehow you really notice it is working as fuel here. I said: “It’s fairly essential everywhere.” “Food is essential here in Edinburgh,” she started. Tim hugged me as I left and I went to have a chat with Kate Cook, who had asked to meet up so she could plug her show Invisible Woman. Then I went to see Tim Renkow’s show Kim Jong-Un, Muhammad, Jesus and Other Power Hungry Maniacs. Highly intelligent. This gave me time to go and record a Grouchy Club Podcast with Kate Copstick.
7 DAYS TO DIE BLUNDERBUSS FREE
When I got to the Laughing Horse Free Comedy Selection show it was, unlike Bob Slayer’ blocked toilet, filled to the brim and overflowing. I tried to console him but it proved impossible. I continued walking along with Mr Twonkey, who told me he had been unable to think up a decent idea to win an increasingly prestigious Malcolm Hardee Cunning Stunt Award. John and I then bumped into eccentric performer Mr Twonkey. Sure enough, Patrick spread his arms wide, said nothing, hugged us both simultaneously and then continued along the Cowgate. “Oh dear,” I said to John, “he is going to, isn’t he?” “Bob’s toilets,” said John Robertson, “are the only venues on the Fringe you don’t want to have full.”Īs John Robertson and I walked along the Cowgate, we saw comedian Patrick Monahan coming towards us.
7 DAYS TO DIE BLUNDERBUSS TV
(I used to work for a Scandinavian TV company.) Inexplicable but true.īob Slayer and John Robertson at the BlundaBus yesterday The two people behind me started talking in Norwegian. I went and joined the Noise Next Door queue.
It sounded like they were different groups of Norwegians. I told her comic Lindsay Sharman had had five Norwegians in her show the previous day. She told me she had had ten Norwegians in her Power Tool audience the previous day. Later, waiting to go into the Noise Next Door’s Really, Really Good Afternoon Show, I bumped into comedian Diane Spencer. When he left, I checked and, sure enough, we were Facebook Friends. He handed me a flyer and pitched his show. It was a comedian whom I had seen in clubs a few times. There I was, sitting in Cowgate typing a text message, when I heard a voice say: “Are you interested in comedy shows?” I was sitting in Cowgate waiting to go into Jo Romero’s Scenes of a Sensual Nature – four playlets with Jo in various states of undress, Mick Ferry stripped to the waist, Gary Colman doing a sex tape, James Dowdeswell looking nervous and David Mills in a vest. Jo Romero – Scenes of a Sensual Nature with comic actors