Posts Tagged ‘2011’

The Noise Next Door – Their Finest Hour **** Edinburgh Spotlight

Thursday, August 11th, 2011 by andy

2011 Show Review

The beauty of the show is that, no two performances are the same, which keeps bringing people back **** Edinburgh Spotlight

Date of live review: Tuesday 9th Aug, ‘11

As the room gradually fills, and people take their seats, they are serenaded by two of the members from the group. Also up in the corner of the room, there are two puppets similar to Statler and Waldorf (from the Muppets) messing around with each other, and also anyone else that gets too close to them.

The light’s go down and instantly the 5 of them burst onto stage, with a cloud of white dust accompanying them – which hangs in the air for the first few minutes, leaving the place smelling of talcum powder. Dressed in their trademark attire of all black, each with different coloured ties. They start the show with a song about 5 of the audience members Perfect Partner’s, singing about random characters to a well choreographed dance routine. The song at the start gives the room a vibe and everyone is eager to see what’s next.

Suggestions from the crowd help them to carry out a rather strange mission to and from the moon to save Carol Vordermon, and then destroy her using avocado oil – yes it does get as crazy as this. A txt from a borrowed mobile phone acts as the conversation between an audience member (played by Tom) and in this show a suggested Charles Dickens. This left the audience asking ‘please sir, can we have some more’ – with this theme recurring throughout. Sound effects and spotlights are used very well to add to the txt message theme.

With lots of side games between members, with an indie song about a relationship with a robot to an encounter between Harry Potter and Voldermort talking about Barack Obama, the audience is kept entertained for the full hour – and it is definitely their finest. It is easy to see that they have been performing together for 6 years, as they bounce off each other, with small comments like “You know far too much about (Harry Potter) that topic” and have the audience laughing throughout.

The simple-ness of the 5 members standing in a lift, acting as 5 random fictional/ non-fictional characters at the end is a brilliant finale. The beauty of the show is that, no two performances are the same, which keeps bringing people back.

Review by Elliot Bibby

Imran Yusuf – Telegraph Interview

Tuesday, August 9th, 2011 by andy

Interview by Dominic Cavendish | Telegraph.co.uk | 9:25AM BST 09 Aug 2011

“Yusuf is one of the best things to have happened to British comedy in ages.” Telegraph

Spending an hour in the company of Imran Yusuf – whether on stage or in person – can achieve the near-impossible in these dark days of riots, double-dip recessions, terrorism and global unrest: it can make you feel happy, positive, and ready to face the future.

Yusuf is one of the best things to have happened to British comedy in ages. Fast-talking and funny, this skinny London geezer bathes whoever he’s addressing in a feelgood aura without any recourse to simple-minded escapism. He may leaven his stand-up with cheesy chat-up lines, confessions about his disastrous love-life and the odd dinosaur impression, but he doesn’t stray far from the main topic at hand – being Muslim in Britain today, and why, for all the pessimism, he thinks we’re going to be OK.

Born in Kenya to parents of Asian descent but raised in Hackney Downs after the family fled Uganda, Yusuf, 31, was such a breath of fresh air at the white-dominated Fringe last year that he went from being an unknown, performing for free in a tiny venue, to one of the hottest tickets in town – with queues round the block and even extra volunteers drafted in to cope with demand.

In swift succession, he was nominated for Best Newcomer at the Edinburgh Comedy Awards, stormed an appearance on Michael McIntyre’s Roadshow and bagged a BBC3 sketch-show pilot, so all eyes will be on his follow-up show this year, Bring the Thunder. It promises to develop the themes of last year’s set – and in particular tackle David Cameron’s contentious and dispiriting line that multiculturalism in the UK has failed.

“It does feel like I’ve been tarred with this brush,” he says. “My perceived value is that I come from a group of people who aren’t very nice, that’s the way it can feel sometimes. But at the end of the day, pointing fingers and trying to blame people is never going to be the best thing. For me, growing up as a Muslim in Britain has been a positive experience. Most of my friends aren’t Muslims, they have all kinds of faiths and backgrounds.”

hat diversity is reflected in the make-up of his audiences: he attracts, he says, “the lightest of the light to the darkest of the dark, the youngest of the young to the oldest of the old – I get girls in hijabs and guys with tattoos all over them.”

Has he encountered hostility on the circuit? For sure, he answers: “Once in a blue moon, by the time I’ve got on-stage someone has shouted ’suicide bomber’ or ‘check what’s in his shoes’, so you have to address that perception. But I’ve also had people come up and tell me how they love what I’m doing and that I’m helping to defuse some of the tension that exists. There’s a lot of hate out there and a feeling that ‘only what looks and sounds like me is for me’. That’s why I want my comedy to have a broad appeal.”

Having come adrift in a career in the video games industry during his twenties, Yusuf’s dedication to his newly discovered vocation is inspiring. He wasn’t even aware of stand-up in his teens and only made a serious attempt to be a comic in 2007.

“I’ve turned my life around,” he says, radiating can-do energy. “A few years ago, I was broke and things were hopeless. When I first came to Edinburgh in 2008, I remember thinking, ‘I don’t belong here – I’m never going to be one of these big festival comedians.’ I quite can’t believe where I am now.

“And I want to tell people that that kind of change is possible for them, too. You shouldn’t be defeatist. I know it sounds schmaltzy and American, but life is an amazing opportunity. It’s how you choose to look at things that counts.”

‘Bring the Thunder’ is at Pleasance Courtyard (0131 556 6550), until Aug 29

TAKE ME TO COMEDIAN IMRAN YUSUF’S PAGE ON COMICVOICE.COM

The Noise Next Door – Their Finest Hour **** Chortle Review

Friday, August 5th, 2011 by andy

2011 Show Review

“sublime comedy” **** Chortle

Date of live review: Friday 5th Aug, ‘11

“It can be difficult reviewing shows on the first day of Fringe previews. Technically anyone who has said they are happy to be reviewed should be ready… but how many really are?

But if you’re using suggestions from the crowd as the basis of your show then every day is a first day. The only thing that improv troupe The Noise Next Door need to do by way of rehearsal is a bit of warming up, and on this opening afternoon they’re showing no signs of rust. The fact that they’ve been working as a team for six years shows they’re a tight group without a weak link.

They appear on stage in their trademark garb: all black but for a different coloured tie each. And though I say there are five members, there are technically seven this year; as the audience enter the room a Statler-and-Waldorf-style puppet duo wearing the same look banter with each other and anyone who might come too close while two of the full size members of the troop serenade us.

They kick off proper with a song, a fitting display of their talents as each one adopts an attribute of the audience’s ‘perfect partner’ – on this occasion that turns out to be a female spy with four legs who likes Pokemon and can pull a condom over her head. The routine is perfectly choreographed and expertly sung and though some of the impromptu lyrics are a touch predictable, the strained exclamation, ‘I can’t breathe!’ from Charlie as the personification of ‘pulled-condom-over-head’ is simple but effective. Of course a song is an effective and dynamic way to get the energy up from the start in a typical Fringe sweat box of a venue on an unusually sunny day.

The key improv games are familiar ones, suggestions from the crowd inform a scene and, on occasion, audience members are plucked out of their seats to help out. But Noise differ in that they have created their own games from the premise. An early game sees not one scene but five (though I may have lost count) cutting across each other thick and fast. A borrowed mobile phone from the crowd begins the story of Winnie the Pooh entering into a text exchange and a subsequent trip to Berlin and audience drawings inspire a whole ballet.

There are plenty of endearing asides between the players drawing you into their world; they good naturedly pull each other up commenting, ‘can’t believe you got away with that joke’ and purple-tie Tom self referentially comments that ‘I know way too much about this for a 26-year-old man’ as he displays an impressive knowledge of A.A. Milne’s most famous creation.

Throughout the show some of the off-the-cuff quips are obvious – an indie song about a relationship with a gruff lady fire fighter includes a fair few gags about sliding down poles – but the acting, musical and choreography skills more than make up for it.

Plus there are plenty of moments of sublime comedy in the show; the improvised ballet imprints a mental image of two of the players in leotards that you’re not likely to forget in a hurry, a ’serious’ scene policed by the crowd armed with water pistols ordered to shoot when they spot inevitable corpsing from the performers is great fun and the final skit featuring Obama in a lift with some magical characters from myth is as fantastic as it is simple.”

Review by Marissa Burgess. Chortle

TAKE ME TO THE NOISE NEXT DOOR’s PAGE ON WWW.COMICVOICE.COM

The Noise Next Door – Their Finest Hour – Edinburgh 2011

Wednesday, June 22nd, 2011 by andy

Noise Next Door (Page 1)THE NOISE NEXT DOOR:

THEIR FINEST HOUR

AS PART OF THE EDINBURGH FESTIVAL FRINGE 2011

Venue:             Pleasance – Beneath (Venue 33)

Dates:              3rd to 29th August 2011 (not 10th or 17th)

Time:               4.30pm (5.30pm)

Box office:       0131 556 6550

Internet:           www.pleasance.co.uk

www.edfringe.co.uk

“RIOTOUSLY ENJOYABLE” **** Telegraph

Following the four-star critical acclaim of their 2010 show, Chaos Control, The Noise Next Door return to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe this year with another dose of white-hot comedy that’ll leave you gasping in amazement.

With each show a totally unique comedy experience, audiences return again and again for a dose of The Noise Next Door’s unique cutting edge brand of off-the-cuff humour.

This year they are setting out to push the boundaries of instant Comedy even further by energising and reinventing improvised comedy formats to their utmost limits.

This is comedy at its purest and instantaneous best.

Edinburgh Show Reviews

“a delight to watch” ***** Three Weeks

Date of live review: Saturday 20th Aug, ‘11

The Noise Next Door is a high-energy improv troupe whose talents are impressively varied; ‘Their Finest Hour’ combines comic songs, sketch and even ballet, along with a healthy dose of cheesy puns. Even the methods by which they glean audience suggestions are assorted and ingenious; in addition to the usual calling-out of words, the audience is asked to draw pictures and, at one point, donate a text message as inspiration for the next routine. The collective is witty and sharp throughout, and a delight to watch. Its members clearly enjoy being on stage and their marvellously self-conscious style, which consists largely in taking the piss out of each other, has the audience in stitches. A very fine hour indeed.

Review by Lisa McNally. Fringe Guru. Saturday 20th August

Edinburgh Show Reviews

“The beauty of the show is that, no two performances are the same, which keeps bringing people back **** Edinburgh Spotlight

Date of live review: Tuesday 9th Aug, ‘11

As the room gradually fills, and people take their seats, they are serenaded by two of the members from the group. Also up in the corner of the room, there are two puppets similar to Statler and Waldorf (from the Muppets) messing around with each other, and also anyone else that gets too close to them.

The light’s go down and instantly the 5 of them burst onto stage, with a cloud of white dust accompanying them – which hangs in the air for the first few minutes, leaving the place smelling of talcum powder. Dressed in their trademark attire of all black, each with different coloured ties. They start the show with a song about 5 of the audience members Perfect Partner’s, singing about random characters to a well choreographed dance routine. The song at the start gives the room a vibe and everyone is eager to see what’s next.

Suggestions from the crowd help them to carry out a rather strange mission to and from the moon to save Carol Vordermon, and then destroy her using avocado oil – yes it does get as crazy as this. A txt from a borrowed mobile phone acts as the conversation between an audience member (played by Tom) and in this show a suggested Charles Dickens. This left the audience asking ‘please sir, can we have some more’ – with this theme recurring throughout. Sound effects and spotlights are used very well to add to the txt message theme.

With lots of side games between members, with an indie song about a relationship with a robot to an encounter between Harry Potter and Voldermort talking about Barack Obama, the audience is kept entertained for the full hour – and it is definitely their finest. It is easy to see that they have been performing together for 6 years, as they bounce off each other, with small comments like “You know far too much about (Harry Potter) that topic” and have the audience laughing throughout.

The simple-ness of the 5 members standing in a lift, acting as 5 random fictional/ non-fictional characters at the end is a brilliant finale. The beauty of the show is that, no two performances are the same, which keeps bringing people back.

Review by Elliot Bibby

Edinburgh Show Reviews“sublime comedy” **** Chortle

Date of live review: Friday 5th Aug, ‘11

“It can be difficult reviewing shows on the first day of Fringe previews. Technically anyone who has said they are happy to be reviewed should be ready… but how many really are?

But if you’re using suggestions from the crowd as the basis of your show then every day is a first day. The only thing that improv troupe The Noise Next Door need to do by way of rehearsal is a bit of warming up, and on this opening afternoon they’re showing no signs of rust. The fact that they’ve been working as a team for six years shows they’re a tight group without a weak link.

They appear on stage in their trademark garb: all black but for a different coloured tie each. And though I say there are five members, there are technically seven this year; as the audience enter the room a Statler-and-Waldorf-style puppet duo wearing the same look banter with each other and anyone who might come too close while two of the full size members of the troop serenade us.

They kick off proper with a song, a fitting display of their talents as each one adopts an attribute of the audience’s ‘perfect partner’ – on this occasion that turns out to be a female spy with four legs who likes Pokemon and can pull a condom over her head. The routine is perfectly choreographed and expertly sung and though some of the impromptu lyrics are a touch predictable, the strained exclamation, ‘I can’t breathe!’ from Charlie as the personification of ‘pulled-condom-over-head’ is simple but effective. Of course a song is an effective and dynamic way to get the energy up from the start in a typical Fringe sweat box of a venue on an unusually sunny day.

The key improv games are familiar ones, suggestions from the crowd inform a scene and, on occasion, audience members are plucked out of their seats to help out. But Noise differ in that they have created their own games from the premise. An early game sees not one scene but five (though I may have lost count) cutting across each other thick and fast. A borrowed mobile phone from the crowd begins the story of Winnie the Pooh entering into a text exchange and a subsequent trip to Berlin and audience drawings inspire a whole ballet.

There are plenty of endearing asides between the players drawing you into their world; they good naturedly pull each other up commenting, ‘can’t believe you got away with that joke’ and purple-tie Tom self referentially comments that ‘I know way too much about this for a 26-year-old man’ as he displays an impressive knowledge of A.A. Milne’s most famous creation.

Throughout the show some of the off-the-cuff quips are obvious – an indie song about a relationship with a gruff lady fire fighter includes a fair few gags about sliding down poles – but the acting, musical and choreography skills more than make up for it.

Plus there are plenty of moments of sublime comedy in the show; the improvised ballet imprints a mental image of two of the players in leotards that you’re not likely to forget in a hurry, a ’serious’ scene policed by the crowd armed with water pistols ordered to shoot when they spot inevitable corpsing from the performers is great fun and the final skit featuring Obama in a lift with some magical characters from myth is as fantastic as it is simple.”

Review by Marissa Burgess. Chortle

Edinburgh Show Reviews

“ludicrously hilarious ***** The Public Reviews

Date of live review: Tuesday 9th Aug, ‘11

I haven’t actually seen every single improvisation comedy show at Edinburgh – there are an awful lot – but I will stick my neck out and say that if a well known brewery made improvisation comedy, it would be ‘The Noise Next Door’, consisting of five outrageously talented and engaging young men. My throat was sore with laughter by the end of the hour, which was certainly exceedingly fine!

As ever, the group improvised sketches, dances and jokes based on suggestions from the audience. As a result, every show is necessarily different but somehow equal. In the show I saw, we perhaps predictably met Harry Potter and Voldemort; observed a love triangle played out via text messages between Charles Dickens, William Shakespeare and Hannah, an audience member; saw the entire crew of Apollo 11 digging on the moon for cheese; found an ideal partner who was a seven feet tall, hunchbacked fishmonger with a liking for chicken goujons; and enjoyed a ludicrously hilarious ballet based on drawings from the audience involving dinosaurs, stick men, hot air balloons and castles. We also discovered that there are very few jokes about squirrels.

The five are talented songsmiths. Their songs are made up on the spot from ridiculous audience suggestions and not only scan and rhyme but also make a twisted sort of sense. I have seen several of their performances in the past and never cease to marvel at this skill. In this colour-coded, close-knit troupe, there simply is no weak link.

I can’t recommend them highly enough – but would suggest you take throat pastilles with you!

Review by Selwyn Knight

Edinburgh Show Reviews

“The Noise Next Door are attractive, talented, quick-witted and quick-thinking…astonishing talent **** SG Fringe

Date of live review: Tuesday 9th Aug, ‘11

Improvised comedy, like anything, is not everyone’s cup of tea, although credit must be given to the pure skill, inventiveness and genius of those who manage to pull it off successfully. The Noise Next Door are in this improvisation elite, and their show this year really is their finest hour.

The pre-choreographed routines and song templates had the audience in stitches which is encouraging as these are some of the very few fixed features of the show which won’t change with each performance. Equally though, the excitement of improvised comedy such as this is that each performance will be different based on audience suggestions, and The Noise Next Door make the most of the bizarre suggestions thrown at them. The downside to this unpredictability is that during some of the more challenging and unusual scenes the performers have a tendency to break focus and laugh at themselves, although in one scene they go through intensive conditioning to beat this lack of control out of them! The only other negatives surrounding this show was that one or two sketches/songs perhaps went on a bit too long; and a couple of minor technical errors distracted from the astonishing talent being presented on stage.

The five boys of The Noise Next Door are attractive, talented, quick-witted and quick-thinking, and I don’t doubt that they have an extremely promising future both here at the Fringe and out on the wider circuit.

Review by Angus Wyatt. SG Fringe

———————————————————————————

2011 Show Promo Continued

“IT IS EXTREMELY UNLIKELY YOU WILL SEE FUNNIER OR A MORE PURELY ENJOYABLE SHOW THAN THE NOISE NEXT DOOR…THE SHEER VOLUME OF LAUGHTER THIS SHOW PRODUCED WAS ASTONISHING”

**** Edinburgh Evening News

The Noise Next Door are Charlie Granville, Matt Grant, Tom Houghton, Tom Livingstone and Sam Pacelli. Since 2005, when they first started performing together, they have been astonishing audiences with their own distinctive brand of improvised comedy. With no rehearsal or script between them they have an uncanny knack of transforming audience suggestions into surreally entertaining scenes and songs in the blink of an eye. Their perfect blend of ludicrous characters, witty one-liners, epic stories and musical mayhem have left audiences everywhere in awe of their lightening fast imaginations and totally original comedic talents.

“IT’S VERY RARE TO SEE IMPROV COMEDY SO CONSISTENTLY HIT THE MARK”

**** The List

Since they first began performing together they have drawn a loyal fanbase and regularly headline to sell-out audiences at many of the top clubs on the UK Comedy Circuit. They have also supported some of the biggest names in contemporary comedy including Harry Hill, Ed Bryne and Lucy Porter and are the first international group to have performed at FRACAS improvisation festival in Los Angeles.

www.comicvoice.com

www.thenoisenextdoor.co.uk

For further information and images please contact:

Andrew Dingley on 0845 459 56 56 ext.227 or by email at andrew@hahaheehee.com

Comic Voice Management is part of The Comedy Club Ltd Group of Companies.

TAKE ME BACK TO THE NOISE NEXT DOOR’S OFFICIAL MANAGEMENT PAGE

Simon Feilder – AAA Stand-up – Edinburgh 2011

Thursday, June 16th, 2011 by andy

Simon Feilder - AAA Stand-up - Edinburgh 2011SIMON FEILDER

AAA STAND-UP

AS PART OF THE EDINBURGH FESTIVAL FRINGE 2011

Venue:             Pleasance – (Venue 33)

Dates:              3rd to 29th August 2011

Time:               7.15pm (8.15pm)

Box office:       0131 556 6550

Internet:           www.pleasance.co.uk

www.edfringe.co.uk

Show Summary: An in-demand stand-up, voiceover artist and presenter, Simon is a beacon of wit and banter shining through in the AAA Stand-up show, a total sell out 2005-2010.

“Highly Entertaining” TimeOut | “Compelling to watch” Chortle.co.uk

www.comicvoice.com

For further information and images please contact:

Andrew Dingley on 0845 459 56 56 ext.227 or by email at andrew@hahaheehee.com

Comic Voice Management is part of The Comedy Club Ltd Group of Companies.

TAKE ME TO SIMON FEILDER’S OFFICIAL MANAGEMENT PAGE

Jonathan Elston – AAA Stand-up Late – Edinburgh 2011

Thursday, June 16th, 2011 by andy

Jonathan Elston - Edinburgh 2011 - AAA LateJONATHAN ELSTON

AAA STAND-UP LATE

AS PART OF THE EDINBURGH FESTIVAL FRINGE 2011

Venue:             Pleasance – (Venue 33)

Dates:              3rd to 29th August 2011

Time:               11.00pm (12.00am)

Box office:       0131 556 6550

Internet:           www.pleasance.co.uk

www.edfringe.co.uk

Show Summary: At just 22 years of age, Jonathan Elston is a fresh, punchy, gag-driven comic who combines sharp joke writing and quirky observations with a youthful likability that charms his audience and endears him to any room. Enjoy Jonathan Elston as he joins AAA Stand-up Late showcasing the best comedians from the UK comedy circuit.

“A young comic with incredible talent and natural warmth” The Guardian

www.comicvoice.com

For further information and images please contact:

Andrew Dingley on 0845 459 56 56 ext.227 or by email at andrew@hahaheehee.com

Comic Voice Management is part of The Comedy Club Ltd Group of Companies.

TAKE ME TO THE OFFICIAL MANAGEMENT PAGE FOR JONATHAN ELSTON

Imran Yusuf – Bring The Thunder – Edinburgh 2011

Thursday, June 16th, 2011 by andy

Imran Yusuf (Page 1)EDINBURGH COMEDY AWARD 2010 – BEST NEWCOMER nominee

IMRAN YUSUF

BRING THE THUNDER!!

AS PART OF THE EDINBURGH FESTIVAL FRINGE 2011

Venue:             Pleasance – Beneath (Venue 33)

Dates:              3rd to 29th August 2011

Time:               7.00pm (8.00pm)

Box office:       0131 556 6550

Internet:           www.pleasance.co.uk

www.edfringe.co.uk

“BY NOT FOCUSING ON THE OBVIOUS RACIAL STEREOTYPES, HE WINS OVER THE ENTIRE AUDIENCE. HIS HAPPY, POSITIVE PERSONALITY LEAVES THEM FEELING UPLIFTED, ENERGISED AND PRIVILEGED TO HAVE HAD AN AUDIENCE WITH IMRAN YUSUF” ***** Chortle

Join Imran Yusuf for his brand new show Bring The Thunder!! – the sequel to his 2010 Edinburgh Comedy Award Best Newcomer nominated show, An Audience With Imran Yusuf. This is a show about pursuing your dreams with unrelenting enthusiasm and perseverance from the star of Michael McIntyre’s Comedy Roadshow.

Motivating, inspiring and 100% comedy!

Edinburgh Show Reviews

a fresh new comic voice…sharp, passionate and uplifting’ **** The Telegraph

Date of live review: Monday 8th Aug, ‘11

Imran Yusuf’s birthplace was Mombasa, his parents Muslims of Indian descent, but he was raised in Hackney, East London. (“I was born in the Third World, and upgraded to the ghetto.”) He insist that he never fitted in anywhere, yet appears far from bitter. Rather, his complex background here fuels a set that is, above all, an unflinchingly optimistic challenge to David Cameron’s famous assertion earlier this year that “[state] multi-culturalism has failed” – tragically incongruous in this dark week, but arguably all the more necessary too.

A garlanded Fringe newcomer last year, Yusuf is, then, a fellow with serious points to make. But this proud Briton always puts his case playfully, mocking both sides of the religious divide and even drolly fusing the two. His Islamic My Old Man’s a Dustman, for example, is very nicely done.

He wittily riffs on people’s vain attempts to pigeonhole him ethnically, on the lessons we can learn from the Arab spring, on growing up a Muslim in a predominantly white city. He also enjoys upbraiding us for our reactions to his material, twice twinklingly accusing us of racism for laughing at it.

Girls, too, have clearly been a source of angst for Yusuf in the past (join the queue, matey), and Bring the Thunder is also, in part, this nattily dressed but rail-thin fellow’s personally cathartic plee for women to use their “great power” over men with “great responsibility”. If Spider-Man can do it, he suggests, surely they can too – and, if this bid for romantic clemency is a little one-way, his stance is nothing if not humble.

So, a fresh new comic voice in a show that’s essentially a sharp, passionate and uplifting bid for people to follow their professional dreams (as he has) and be nicer to each other across all divides. Anything is possible, Yusuf insists. World peace. Even a white guy winning the 100m sprint. Just don’t let him hear you chuckling at such racially unsound material…

Review by Mark Monahan. The Telegraph

Edinburgh Show Reviews

strong, clever material which builds to a thoroughly uplifting finale…fascinating” **** FEST

Date of live review: Sunday 7th Aug, ‘11

Imran Yusuf is by no means short of confidence. It’s perhaps not surprising: the Kenyan-born, Hackney-raised ex-computer games tester played 101 shows in 25 days at the 2010 Fringe. It’s an experience which, clearly, has left its mark. Here Yusuf breezes through a set of strong, clever material which builds to a thoroughly uplifting finale.

It is identity—specifically it’s malleability and ambiguity—which provides Yusuf with his comedic fodder. Undoubtedly, he speaks from a fascinating place on the topic, his mixed heritage providing him with a unique angle on national identity. This is a cultural no man’s land he works to his advantage, allowing him to exercise his knack for taking topics to the bounds of acceptability, digging deeper into uncomfortable territory on race and religion before dropping, erm, the comedic bomb.

This ebb and flow also allows him room to be, for want of a better word, preachy. But Yusuf steers well clear of boorishness, instead crafting a well rounded show whose central message—that it’s totally right-on to be yourself and to let others do the same—comes through gleefully, stripping away our various affiliations rather than asserting a political one of his own.

There’s the odd weak point – Yusuf can do much better than jokes about boobs and Back to the Future, and a recurring theme of him being “gangster” never looks close to sprouting wings. But these are moments of timidity among otherwise braver material. There are few comedians willing to recite the Qur’an as part of their finale – and still fewer who could make it work.

Review by Evan Beswick, FEST Mag

———————————————————————————

2011 Show Promo Continued

“IMRAN YUSUF’S SHOW HERALDS THE BIRTH OF A NEW COMEDY STAR. INTELLIGENT, THOUGHT–PROVOKING AND LAUGH OUT LOUD FUNNY” **** Time Out

An Audience With Imran Yusuf catapulted Imran from a relatively unknown performer to one of the most talked about comedians of The Edinburgh Festival Fringe 2010.

Fast and furious yet charmingly endearing, his is a unique voice with his seemingly light-hearted satire frequently masking hard-hitting topical commentary on contemporary issues such as racism, sexism and religion.

“AN HOUR OF CHEEK AND CHARM” **** Independent

Born in Mombasa, Kenya and raised in the UK with a brief stint at school in the USA, Imran travelled much of the world including Israel/Palestine, Jordan and Saudi Arabia during the Lebanon Crisis in 2006. His work has been inspired by this rich multicultural background, giving him a youthful, energetic and highly original voice that embodies the multi-cultural wealth that exists in modern Britain.

In 2010, Imran presented his debut solo show at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. The show was part of the Laughing Horse Free Festival and it was Imran’s intention to develop his craft and material at the Fringe whilst at the same time keeping under the radar of the UK Comedy Industry and Press. However, word about the show got out and within a week Imran had gained the first of a collection of 5 star reviews, which led to him being nominated for Best Newcomer in the Fosters Edinburgh Comedy Award 2010 (He was the first performer from The Free Festival to be nominated in the history of the Awards).

Imran has also appeared on the Edinburgh Comedy Gala (BBC3) and Michael McIntyre’s Comedy Road Show (BBC1).

www.imranyusuf.com

For further information and images please contact:

Andrew Dingley on 0845 459 56 56 ext.227 or by email at andrew@hahaheehee.com

Comic Voice Management is part of The Comedy Club Ltd Group of Companies.

TAKE ME BACK TO IMRAN YUSUF’S OFFICIAL MANAGEMENT PAGE

Pick of the Fringe: Imran Yusuf by The List

Friday, June 10th, 2011 by andy

Tweeted by The List just yesterday, Imran Yusuf has been hotly tipped in The List’s annual ‘Pick of the Fringe’. As one of the leading voices covering the Edinburgh comedy festival the news points to the hype surrounding comedian Imran Yusuf and his upcoming Edinburgh 2011 show.

thelistmagazine The List
Our pick of this year’s @edfringe comedy: http://ow.ly/5dOBU includes @tapefaceboy, @gimpfight, @imranyusuf, @MorningNantwich, @DaveGorman

Take a look at Imran’s biog and enjoy stand-up comedy clips here.