Enjoy Imran Yusuf performing at Edinburgh Festival Hall for Edinburgh Comedy Fest Live 2011.
Posts Tagged ‘imran’
Imram Yusuf – Edinburgh Comedy Festival Live Performance
Tuesday, September 6th, 2011 by andyImran Yusuf Edinburgh Comedy Gala
Tuesday, August 30th, 2011 by andyEdinburgh Comedy Gala 2011 in aid of Waverley Care
The Comedy Gala is always a comedy highlight of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe and with the
Festival Hall selling out again this year, the atmosphere was electric as the festival’s top acts took to the stage. You can catch Imran’s performance THIS WEDNESDAY 31st August on BBC3 @ 9pm.
BBC Comedy Presents: Three@TheFringe
Friday, August 26th, 2011 by andyBBC Comedy Presents: Three@TheFringe gives audiences across the world a taste of the comedy and talent on show at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. In this clip Imran Yusuf talks about world peace and Joel Dommett endures Edinburgh’s cobbled streets. Exclusive Edinburgh comedy filmed live in 2011.
Catch this show’s debut broadcast: Monday 5th September @ 10.30pm on BBC3
Imran Yusuf to Host Chortle Student Awards Final
Thursday, August 25th, 2011 by andyChortle Student Awards Imran Yusuf to Host Finals
Imran Yusuf is to host the final of the Chortle Student Comedy Award at the Edinburgh Fringe on Sunday. The final has a reputation for finding new talent: Previous acts to have taken part include The Inbetweeners’ Simon Bird, his Friday Night Dinner co-star Tom Rosenthal and Radio 1’s Tom Deacon.
Imran Yusuf – The Independant Reviews
Friday, August 19th, 2011 by andyThe buzz surrounding Imran Yusuf as he Brings the Thunder continues and here’s a view from The Independent’s festival critc.
Imran Yusuf – Bring the Thunder
“Bursting with confidence and smooth patter” Independent
Elsewhere, Imran Yusuf, who was nominated for the Best Newcomer Award for his debut last year, cuts a slimline dash in white linen suit and patent black shoes. Born in Mombasa, he grew up in Hackney Downs, or, as he puts it, he was “born in the third world and upgraded to the ghetto”.
Bursting with confidence and smooth patter, “the spirit of Malcolm X in the body of Mahatma Gandhi” has strong words for those who believe that multiculturalism has failed. He points out the advantages of his diverse upbringing (you can swap the teams you support, depending on the sport) while poking fun at the stereotypes. Why do people always insist on asking him what his parents think of his chosen career, he asks. “My Mum doesn’t know I’m a stand-up, because my Dad doesn’t let her out of the house.”
Friday, 19 August 2011. Independent.
BRING THE THUNDER – EXTRA DATE ADDED
Friday, August 12th, 2011 by andyDue to popular demand, an extra date for Bring The Thunder has been added at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe 2011 on Saturday 27th August @ 11pm at The Pleasance Dome, Ace Dome.
BOOK TICKETS FOR THE EXTRA SHOW HERE!
http://www.pleasance.co.uk/edinburgh/events/imran-yusuf—bring-the-thunder-extra-show
Edinburgh 2011: Imran Yusuf on hummus related jokes
Wednesday, August 10th, 2011 by andyImran Yusuf explains his show and tells us an old joke at the Edinburgh Festival.
Video and description courtesy of The Telegraph
Imran Yusuf – Telegraph Interview
Tuesday, August 9th, 2011 by andyInterview 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
Imran Yusuf – Bring the Thunder **** FEST Review
Monday, August 8th, 2011 by andy2011 Show Review
“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
TAKE ME TO IMRAN YUSUF’S OFFICIAL COMIC VOICE MANAGEMENT PAGE
Imran Yusuf ‘Funny As Hell’ for BBC America
Monday, July 25th, 2011 by andy‘Funny As Hell’ – BBC America
Imran’s dream to unite cultures took another step closer last weekend as Imran jetted off to Montreal for filming of ‘Funny As Hell’ for BBC America. The US only stand-up comedy programme showcases the best of UK stand-up with just a handful of British comics being selected for filming. Appearing alongside Greg Davies, Russell Howard, Russell Kane and Terry Alderton, Imran’s reputation as one of the fastest rising stars on the UK comedy circuit caps off an amazing year before he embarks on the Edinburgh Fringe in just a fortnight’s time.
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