Lara's a small Latin American girl (woman?) who won the Funny Women 2021 (right, 'woman') Stage Award and is now doing her first hour about what it's like to be Latin and deaf and a girl who's now a woman at the same time. This show won best newcomer at the ed fringe 2022 if that means something to you. It starts kinda bad but it gets better as it goes along SO JUST give it a little bit of time!!!
Joyelle Nicole Johnson: Love Joy (2021)
Addressing relationship issues from the familial to the familiar, Joyelle Nicole Johnson states her case for why everyone needs to get therapy.
Hal Cruttenden: Chubster (2020)
His daughters chose the title of his new stand-up show but don’t let it fool you - Hal’s no softie as he tackles subjects like suicide, obesity, and celebrity deaths. With top notch observational humour, cheeky gags and some of the most phenomenal dad dancing you’ll ever see, this set will satisfy your comedic hunger, and then some.
Rob Beckett: Wallop (2022)
Rob Beckett is back - the Mouth of the South has had a busy few years and now returns to tour to fill audiences in.
Greg Fitzsimmons: You Know Me (2024)
Greg’s new stand-up comedy special, Greg Fitzsimmons: You Know Me, was recorded on November 18, 2023 at The Comedy Mothership in Austin, TX. After 35 years performing stand-up, You Know Me, finds Greg hilariously reflecting on 34 years of sobriety, sex with a 57-year-old woman, convincing your children that you’re cool, and combating loneliness on the road. And he realizes, he’s happy where he is.
Sergey Orlov: Genetic Province (2020)
The first solo stand-up special of Russian comedian Sergey Orlov. He had been preparing this concert for a whole year, running it all over the country, twice a night he performed with this at the Cinema House in Moscow, and for the next 7 months it edited, re-edited, laid back and finally got out!
Bo Burnham: Make Happy (2016)
Combining his trademark wit and self-deprecating humor with original music, Bo Burnham offers up his unique twist on life in this stand-up special about life, death, sexuality, hypocrisy, mental illness and Pringles cans.
Micha Wertheim: Someone Else (2017)
This comedy/theatre show is the sequel to 'Micha Wertheim: Somewhere Else'. This second show starts exactly where the first show ended: in the same theatrical scenery, with the same robot. But this time Wertheim surprises his audience by showing up. He tells about how the first experimental comedy show was received and contemplates about the magic of theatre and art in a society about the right to exist of art in a society that allows less and less doubt and confusion. When Robot falls into a depression, the boundaries between theater and reality begin to blur.
You are being listened to (2019)
Award-winning artist Wim Helsen proves in his fifth theater performance that he not only has deep, absurd thoughts, but is also a good listener.
Steve Byrne: The Last Late Night (2022)
Steve Byrne bucks the traditional stand up special by delivering a set on his own late night talk show. From a monologue of one liners, to storytelling and stand up that pushes the boundaries of jokes in these socially sensitive times.
Xander De Rycke: His third show (2014)
We arrived at the end of Xander De Rycke's unholy stand-up comedy trilogy. The last thing we can do is finish it with a big bang. Lot's of drama, debris and some dirty jokes. Fasten your seatbelts, get ready for Xanders "dénouement"!
Jeff Dunham: Unhinged in Hollywood (2015)
Previously unseen stand-up comedy by Jeff Dunham. Sketches include popular characters. Brad Paisley performs too! Special appearances by comic Chris Parnell and former UFC champion Chuck Liddell.
Your Friend, Nate Bargatze (2024)
In his third Netflix special, Nate Bargatze tackles pizza-ordering strategies for guys' night, wanting a second dog and relying on his responsible wife.
Just Another Immigrant: Romesh at the Greek (2018)
Romesh Ranganathan, a successful comedian in England, moves his entire family to Los Angeles to pursue his lifelong dream of making it as a stand-up comedian in America. He then takes the drastic, and possibly foolish, step of performing his first ever U.S. stand-up show at the six-thousand seat historic Greek Theater.
Richard Herring: Lord of the Dance Settee (2015)
After covering weighty issues like death, love, religion and spam javelins, the 'King of Edinburgh' (6 Music) is in a frivolous mood with this show about daftness, whether the term cool comedian is an oxymoron, bouncing joyously on the sofa and how Herring's whole career is a failed attempt to top a piece of visual slapstick comedy he came up with at 16. Can he revisit the joke thirty years on, or will it smash his old bones?