I always love performing at the Glasgow International Comedy Festival. It’s the best comedy-only festival in the world. If you can’t afford to go to Melbourne. And you don’t get invited to Montreal. It’s definitely better than the one in Kirkcaldy.
Sure, in Melbourne you can sunbathe at the beach before your show, but can you get a roll and square sausage? No you can’t. And you certainly can’t get it from a woman who looks like one.
There is definitely something about inclement weather and artery-choking food that increases the predilection for hearty laughter. Granted, it might be mental illness, but if that’s the case, I’ll take a room full of Seasonally Affected Drunks any day, over the silent stares of the sushi-nibbling moccachino-sipping bores at comedy festivals in sunnier and more cosmopolitan climes. There is nothing more depressing than being heckled by froth.
Seriously though, Glasgow audiences are nothing if not receptive.
English comics have this weird obsession with the dangers of being English in Glasgow. I always point out to them that Glaswegians hate each other far more than they hate the English. I tend not to point out that even rival Glaswegians will collaborate to beat an Englishman dead before getting back to slashing each other in the face again. But seriously, I’ve never found Glasgow crowds to be anything but extremely generous. Even if they don’t like you, they will still buy you drinks and patiently explain why they don’t like you. Even if you beg them to leave you alone.
Now I should point out here that I’m originally from Australia. But in a lot of ways Glasgow always feels like a hometown gig to me. I tend to think anywhere you've racked up a 5 figure drug debt pretty much qualifies as a “Hometown”. My show is guaranteed to sell out, largely thanks to dealers I owe money to from the late nineties and women seeking paternity tests for strangely familiar looking children. It’s an unconventional marketing strategy, but one that unfailingly works.
I started my stand-up comedy career right here in Scotland back in 2005. From the very beginning of my stand-up experience, I’ve had to perform with regularity in this city, and as a consequence I have many fond memories associated with the place. I also have some I'd rather forget, and 18 electric shock treatments later I still waking up screaming about those. Many of those memories hark from my early days storming the comedy trenches of Glesga. Not every one survived that ruthless battlefield. But some more than merely survived. They thrived. Back then I used to regularly gig with the now very famous television comic Kevin Bridges. At the time, he was just a fresh faced, well-spoken young lad, straight out of Fettes College in Edinburgh, where he’d come up with the idea of an endearing working-class Glaswegian character during a Drama Class workshop. I told him it would never work. But he kept at it and finally got the accent right. Have a look at him now! What a gifted actor!
Yes, I’ve done hundreds of shows in Glasgow over the years, in every manner of venue, from the Carling Academy to the Crime Academy. Yes, I actually played a comedy gig at Barlinnie prison recently. I learnt an important lesson that night. Never go on stage with an ounce of heroin up your arse.
A few years back I was asked to do workshops with juvenile delinquents in Easterhouse, teaching them stand up comedy skills as a way of boosting self confidence and morale. Seriously. I did. It was one of many spectacularly ill-conceived things I’ve been involved in in my life. But I’m proud to say those kids turned out to be the funniest hecklers in Barlinnie prison.
If there’s one accusation that will never be levelled at Glasgow, it is pretentiousness. There is a sort of spit and sawdust civic pride in Glasgow that stems I think from a kind of deep underlying self confidence. Willing to laugh at itself but also assured that there is actually a lot more to the place than the negative stereotypes people around the world associate with the city. Sometimes I think all the bad stories about Glasgow are a clever diversion designed to make sure you are never colonised by English people and American tourists in the way Edinburgh has been. Stupid Edinburgh, always telling everyone how good they are.
The negative stereotypes really do affect the outside world's view of Glasgow, and to be fair, I have seen every single one of them unfold before my eyes at one point or other. In fact, I’ve seen them all unfold simultaneously in the space of 20 minutes, on the walk from Buchanan Street Bus station to The Stand Comedy Club, checking them off like some kind of sick back-seat car journey game where the highest points are awarded for the greatest scenes of human degradation and violence. Man injecting heroin thru a hollowed out ball point pen? Check. Teenager screaming “I’ll rip yer coupon aff ya wee prick!” Check. Woman instructing child what to steal from Poundstretchers. Bonus points!
But the negative stereotypes are hardly the full picture. I like to think of Glasgow as a bit like the guy in the pub who always plays the drunken fool, but then can randomly quote Nietzsche and Kierkegaard in the midst of a heated argument. On the surface a dangerous looking drunken maniac, but underneath,a reservoir of rich socio-political and cultural passions. Basically I’m saying Glasgow is Raymond Mearns. If you do not know who Raymond Mearns is, then I put it to you that you do not know Glasgow.
One of my favourite aspects of Glasgow is the Cab Ride. In a Glasgow Cab you can drive for 20 minutes listening to a continuous and amusing monologue from the driver which will simultaneously cover 400 years of sectarian bigotry, the industrial revolution, the decline of British Industry, the sins of Margaret Thatcher, the idiocy of Allied involvement in Afghanistan, the injustice of TV talent shows, before finally bringing everything into a spectacular conclusion with a tale about the time Tommy Sheridan and Gerry Adams spit roasted Michelle McManus in the back of the very cab you are riding in. And at the end of this seemingly never ending journey and speech, he turns to you and says “that will be 4 pound 40 pal.” And you’re like “that can’t be right”. So you go “Here mate call it a fiver”. And he thanks you profusely, through streaming tears, never before having experienced such generosity from the natives.
Yes, the negative stereotypes about Glesga have been much covered in stand-up comedy, including my own. Crime, poverty, violence. Men who take their porridge with a spoonful of crushed glass and women who think methadone was invented to help babies sleep. But Glasgow has a much deeper soul than that. The 18th and 19th century merchants of Glasgow built fine buildings, parks, galleries and museums. Just to rub it in to all the poor cunts toiling in their factories probably. But they remain as an impressive reminder of Glasgow’s important role in the empire of old. And to culturally enrich the citizens of today.
The denizens of Glasgow have a saying, “if you want to really appreciate Glasgow, just look up”. And it’s true, when you do, you will see just how beautiful the architecture in this town really is. Quite often you will see a teenage girl is about to lob an empty bottle on your head too.
But for all the jokes about the less fortunate aspects of the city, Working class people in Glasgow have a history of being very self-educated, aware of social justice issues, prepared to fight for their rights. Much of what we associate with the modern labour movement had its origins in the weaving villages and shipyard’s of Glasgow. In particular the love of Swingers clubs and Sado-Masochistic sexual role play.
And I don’t think that this heritage of grassroots-driven activism can be underestimated in forging the unique and formidable comedic tradition in this town. Maybe it’s the sheer amount of negative social aspects the city has seen over the years, combined with this intelligent sense of social and political justice that makes the comedy that springs from here so prolific and funny. Fuck me. I might have just started to take this blog too seriously.
Anyway, as it happens, I recently discovered that after all the years I’ve been performing in Glasgow I actually have some Glasgow familial connections myself, albeit a long time ago. Earlier in the year I took part in a BBC Radio Scotland programme called “Digging Up Your Roots”, (which would mean something far more disturbing in Australia I might add!! Haha!) where I learned some interesting shit about one of my forefathers.
Turns out my Gt-Gt-Gt Grandfather was a Glasgow weaver. Unfortunately the 1840’s weren’t great times for weavers, so he actually spent more time breaking into wealthy people’s houses than at the spinning wheel. I can’t help but see his chosen targets as being a deliberate act of class warfare. But in reality, his fellow slum dwellers probably had nothing worth stealing.
One day, shortly after robbing a farm house near Helensburgh, he was stopped by the Polis as he walked up Broomielaw, having just disembarked from a steamship on the Clyde. Over his shoulder was a sack of stolen kitchenware and bed linen pinched from the Old Drumfork farmhouse in Cardross. It included six pairs of blankets, two bedcovers, seven sheets, six cups, six saucers, a tea pot, a crystal decanter, and a brass jelly-pan. He was essentially a mobile 1840’s stolen-goods version of IKEA. The Polis didn’t buy his story that he had happened upon the goods in a field, and he was sent to prison, where he was given the nickname “Jelly-Pan Campbell” and ridiculed him for ignoring the old-school criminal code that dictates “never go back for the jelly-pan”. Alright, I made the last bit up, but lets face it, it probably did happen.
I’ve now romanticised my ancestral heritage to the point that My Gt-Gt-Gt Grandfather is no longer a simple and impoverished housebreaker living off crime due to industrial turmoil in the 19th century weaving industry. He was a political activist courageously waging a one man war on the privileged establishment. While they slept. Or were at church.
Anyway, he got transported to Tasmania for that. Van Diemans land as it was known then. Well actually, he spent 500 days incarcerated on a festering prison hulk first, before almost dying on the five month voyage Down Under. I know this because of surviving surgeons’ records in the convict archives. I imagine by the time he disembarked in the strange and foreign land on the other side of the world, he really was regretting going back for the Jelly Pan. But also really in the mood for stealing land from indigenous people.
One thing is for sure. I doubt he ever thought he’d see Glasgow again. And he was right. He never did. I wonder how he’d feel if he knew one of his descendants had made it back here 160 years later to do a comedy show? Well I imagine that would be too much to compute and his head would explode. But not before one final chilling scream of “Don’t go back for the Jelly Pan!!!”
See Ro Campbell's solo show Alibi at Capitol on Sunday 10 April 2011. Find out more about the show here.
Blog
Thursday, 7 April 2011
Monday, 4 April 2011
Janey Godley Guest Blog
Glasgow is funny and so are the folk.
‘So there I was waiting for my kidney to get taken out of me and an Alsatian dog peed on my leg’, is one conversation from a bus stop in Glasgow by a wee man called Tam with a bunnet and penchant for calling Polish people ‘The Migrant Workers’.
You see Glasgow people are angry, bitter and as soft as fondue inside, we tell it like it is and that’s why my fair city bred some of the world’s best comics, from Chic Murray, Billy Connolly to latest comedy kid of the moment Tam at the 62 bus stop going to Shettleston.
We are funny people, we are Celtic (spoken with a hard C, anything else would divide the city) and Celtic people are inherent story tellers. The women that come out of the comedy circuit in Glasgow aren’t all cakes, cats and cushions nor do they bang on about being fat – they usually have stuff to say and they say with aplomb.
Glasgow has comedy ingrained into its very fabric, the people here laugh out loud at funerals and see the funny side of being under Tory rule again by snickering at the London anarchists who up-end litter bins and call it a demonstration. The Glasgow people threw cans of Irn Bru at Sheena Easton for affecting a Los Angeles twang at a Glasgow green concert and the old women of the council houses threatened to stab Maggie Thatcher with their knitting needles when she came to their community centre.
We are Glasgow, we are funny. Now go away before I set ma dog on ye!
See Janey Godley's show The Godley Hour at Oran Mor on Sunday 10 April. Click here for more show information.
Find out more about Janey at www.janeygodley.com.
‘So there I was waiting for my kidney to get taken out of me and an Alsatian dog peed on my leg’, is one conversation from a bus stop in Glasgow by a wee man called Tam with a bunnet and penchant for calling Polish people ‘The Migrant Workers’.
You see Glasgow people are angry, bitter and as soft as fondue inside, we tell it like it is and that’s why my fair city bred some of the world’s best comics, from Chic Murray, Billy Connolly to latest comedy kid of the moment Tam at the 62 bus stop going to Shettleston.
We are funny people, we are Celtic (spoken with a hard C, anything else would divide the city) and Celtic people are inherent story tellers. The women that come out of the comedy circuit in Glasgow aren’t all cakes, cats and cushions nor do they bang on about being fat – they usually have stuff to say and they say with aplomb.
Glasgow has comedy ingrained into its very fabric, the people here laugh out loud at funerals and see the funny side of being under Tory rule again by snickering at the London anarchists who up-end litter bins and call it a demonstration. The Glasgow people threw cans of Irn Bru at Sheena Easton for affecting a Los Angeles twang at a Glasgow green concert and the old women of the council houses threatened to stab Maggie Thatcher with their knitting needles when she came to their community centre.
We are Glasgow, we are funny. Now go away before I set ma dog on ye!
See Janey Godley's show The Godley Hour at Oran Mor on Sunday 10 April. Click here for more show information.
Find out more about Janey at www.janeygodley.com.
Friday, 1 April 2011
John Gavin Guest Blog
Whenever I talk to English comedians about gigging in Glasgow the same things always seem to crop up. A misconception that comes up is that performing to a Glasgow audience is something akin to performing to a bunch of homicidal maniacs. Glasgow is not really like that. Sure, in some audiences there is a good chance that a homicidal maniac may just be there lurking amongst the audience, but you can usually spot them. I remember being confronted by an audience member once after a show who I’d managed to annoy. After I’d apologised she offered the reply, “Och, its awright pal. If I’d really been offended I’d have had yer kneecaps. Can I buy you a beer?”
That’s the kind of maniac that Glasgow can offer. One who can threaten to ruin your dancing career forever, but in the same breath will buy you a drink. Top tip in this situation: don’t let them buy you a drink. This is called danger avoidance.
There is no such thing as a typical Glasgow audience. The only thing you have to do is make them laugh, same as in any other town in the world. There is one thing that sets aside a Glasgow audience aside from most others, but I’ll come back to that.
Last year’s Glasgow comedy festival nearly destroyed me. In a good way though. I felt like I was living a double life. I worked full time in my office job during the day. I’d go home, be a dad and husband. Then at night I’d run around the city like a very low budget Challenge Anneka going from gig to gig.
It’s pretty hard to keep it together during that type of thing. At points you will be sitting on a train/taxi/bus/car going to another gig and think “I really just want to sit on my couch and have a shout of my xbox”. Then you get the thing keeps you going. It’s the thing that sets Glasgow aside. The audience reaction. If they like you, you will know.
Before I go I should really plug my show. My solo show is Work Life Balance,and it’s really all about the stuff I’d mentioned in this blog about trying to keep it together while my life seemed to be 100 miles an hour. Last years show got four stars, so hopefully I can better that.
As you can see self promotion is not one of my skills. See you soon!
See John Gavin's solo show Work Life Balance tonight, Friday 1 April at 8.30pm at Capitol. Find out more about this show here.
That’s the kind of maniac that Glasgow can offer. One who can threaten to ruin your dancing career forever, but in the same breath will buy you a drink. Top tip in this situation: don’t let them buy you a drink. This is called danger avoidance.
There is no such thing as a typical Glasgow audience. The only thing you have to do is make them laugh, same as in any other town in the world. There is one thing that sets aside a Glasgow audience aside from most others, but I’ll come back to that.
Last year’s Glasgow comedy festival nearly destroyed me. In a good way though. I felt like I was living a double life. I worked full time in my office job during the day. I’d go home, be a dad and husband. Then at night I’d run around the city like a very low budget Challenge Anneka going from gig to gig.
It’s pretty hard to keep it together during that type of thing. At points you will be sitting on a train/taxi/bus/car going to another gig and think “I really just want to sit on my couch and have a shout of my xbox”. Then you get the thing keeps you going. It’s the thing that sets Glasgow aside. The audience reaction. If they like you, you will know.
Before I go I should really plug my show. My solo show is Work Life Balance,and it’s really all about the stuff I’d mentioned in this blog about trying to keep it together while my life seemed to be 100 miles an hour. Last years show got four stars, so hopefully I can better that.
As you can see self promotion is not one of my skills. See you soon!
See John Gavin's solo show Work Life Balance tonight, Friday 1 April at 8.30pm at Capitol. Find out more about this show here.
Tuesday, 29 March 2011
Daniel Sloss Guest Blog
I love Glasgow. I love Glasgow in the way that most people not from Glasgow love Glasgow. I love it the way that the little nerdy kid loves his girlfriend despite the fact that he knows she is sleeping with absolutely everyone else, because it doesn't matter as long as he gets the occasional hand-job. It's a tough love, a love that I know that I give to the city, but that the city is never likely to return that love... Until the Glasgow Comedy Festival. It's at this time of year that Glasgow makes me feel like a pimp. Sure, I don't have a cane or a cool hat with feathers in it, but I still feel that cool (side note: I want a cane.).
I love gigging in Glasgow because it's just mental. Most other cities tone down their mentalness when guests come to visit: like a mum who is frantically cleaning the house before the guests arrive. Glasgow takes a shit on the coffee table lets the guests look at it, and they don't have the courage to ask why. One time I was gigging in Glasgow and I got heckled by a man, I put him down, he heckled again, I put him down again. Victory to me... Or so I thought. He piped up again, and before I could put him down with my hilarious comeback ("So's your mum") a very drunk woman from a hen party leaned over and smacked him with her "L" plate (not a euphemism) and yelled "You leave that wee boy alone!". It was like my own herpes ridden bodyguard. It was lovely.
Thats why I always go back to Glasgow. That's why everyone goes back. It has the "treat 'em mean, keep em keen" and it works. I'm bloody keen. I'm a whore for Glasgow, I'm not the pimp. Glasgow is the pimp. And I will swallow every metaphorical load it gives me because I know it loves me deep down.
See Daniel Sloss performing his solo show My Generation at the Garage this Friday 1 April. Find out more about the show here.
Find out more about Daniel Sloss at www.danielsloss.co.uk.
I love gigging in Glasgow because it's just mental. Most other cities tone down their mentalness when guests come to visit: like a mum who is frantically cleaning the house before the guests arrive. Glasgow takes a shit on the coffee table lets the guests look at it, and they don't have the courage to ask why. One time I was gigging in Glasgow and I got heckled by a man, I put him down, he heckled again, I put him down again. Victory to me... Or so I thought. He piped up again, and before I could put him down with my hilarious comeback ("So's your mum") a very drunk woman from a hen party leaned over and smacked him with her "L" plate (not a euphemism) and yelled "You leave that wee boy alone!". It was like my own herpes ridden bodyguard. It was lovely.
Thats why I always go back to Glasgow. That's why everyone goes back. It has the "treat 'em mean, keep em keen" and it works. I'm bloody keen. I'm a whore for Glasgow, I'm not the pimp. Glasgow is the pimp. And I will swallow every metaphorical load it gives me because I know it loves me deep down.
See Daniel Sloss performing his solo show My Generation at the Garage this Friday 1 April. Find out more about the show here.
Find out more about Daniel Sloss at www.danielsloss.co.uk.
Monday, 28 March 2011
Photoblog: 28 March 2011
Catch up with what's being going on at the festival so far with our photoblog. You can see all of the festival's photos on our flickr page here.
Greg McHugh performing with Rufus Hound and Smack the Pony's Sally Phillips at Celebrity Autobiography.
Photo credit: Richard Freeman (www.akarichy.com)
Milton Jones at the Magners Festival Club at the Stand.
Photo credit: Richard Freeman (www.akarichy.com)
Richard Herring at the Magners Festival Club at the Stand.
Photo credit: Richard Freeman (www.akarichy.com)
Carla Rhodes with Cecil Sinclair at the Stockholm Syndrome.
Photo credit: Grant Thistle (grant-thistle.tumblr.com)
Phil Nichol at the Magners Festival Club at the Stand.
Photo credit: Grant Thistle (grant-thistle.tumblr.com)
Wednesday, 23 March 2011
Iain Stirling Guest Blog
Ok Glasgow,
I'm doing your comedy festival and it should be a right laugh. It's at Blackfriars, which is lovely, and Davey Connor is also on who is incredibly funny (probably why Russell Kane got him to do some tour support).
We do have a history at the festival. Our last show See Stirling Kane Comedy ended with me, drunkenly, being removed from the stage in front of a world renowned director (whom requested he remain nameless). Hopefully this year the whole thing will entirely more professional. Scrap that, it definitely will!
The last two years I've spent in London doing stand up in all the major clubs, presenting on CBBC (I won't have the dog with me) and was even lucky enough to be nominated for 'Best Newcomer' at the Chortle comedy awards. However, it feels so amazing to be back performing in Glasgow, the city in which a witnessed a man be sick in his own wife's handbag - bliss.
So do come. Me and Davey will be splitting an hour and we are both funny (promise). 8.30pm, 25th March, Blackfriars. It'll be lovely to have you.
See Iain Stirling and Davey Connor inTake Off Your Wristband it's Not That Kind of Festival at Blackfriars Basement this Friday 25 March. Find out more about the show here.
Follow Iain and Davey on twitter @IainDoesJokes and @DaveyConnor.
I'm doing your comedy festival and it should be a right laugh. It's at Blackfriars, which is lovely, and Davey Connor is also on who is incredibly funny (probably why Russell Kane got him to do some tour support).
We do have a history at the festival. Our last show See Stirling Kane Comedy ended with me, drunkenly, being removed from the stage in front of a world renowned director (whom requested he remain nameless). Hopefully this year the whole thing will entirely more professional. Scrap that, it definitely will!
The last two years I've spent in London doing stand up in all the major clubs, presenting on CBBC (I won't have the dog with me) and was even lucky enough to be nominated for 'Best Newcomer' at the Chortle comedy awards. However, it feels so amazing to be back performing in Glasgow, the city in which a witnessed a man be sick in his own wife's handbag - bliss.
So do come. Me and Davey will be splitting an hour and we are both funny (promise). 8.30pm, 25th March, Blackfriars. It'll be lovely to have you.
See Iain Stirling and Davey Connor inTake Off Your Wristband it's Not That Kind of Festival at Blackfriars Basement this Friday 25 March. Find out more about the show here.
Follow Iain and Davey on twitter @IainDoesJokes and @DaveyConnor.
Monday, 21 March 2011
Amateur Transplants Guest Blog
Dr Adam R Kay from the Amateur Transplants talks to us before their festival show on Thursday.
Every other comedian’s post on this blog starts, 'My first Glasgow Comedy Festival was in…' and then explores their humorous misconceptions about the city. I’m at a slight loss as this is my first Glasgow Comedy Festival, and because I've watched Supergran episodes since the age of four I know loads about the place. So I’m going to talk about the sleeper train instead.
Last year – due to a logistical problem whereby my boyfriend lived in Glasgow and I lived in London – I took the Caledonian sleeper 22 times. If you've never taken the sleeper service before, it's a cross between a train and the worst hotel in the world. You share a berth with a stranger, who is always either a pervert or has issues with urinary continence (NB. if your berth-mate is neither of these things, then it's probably you).
You climb into your bunk and the motion of the train rocks you gently to sleep. After 5 minutes of sleep you are jolted awake. You are merely awoken and disorientated, but your berth-mate screams, and if he is type B you may feel a few drips. This process repeats itself for the next nine hours before your breakfast is delivered by history's angriest lady. You quite like the idea of a breakfast muffin until you read the words 'contains chemically recovered egg' on the packaging and then you feel confused and unwell. The first time you read the words 'chemically recovered egg' you will text all your friends.
And then suddenly you’re in Glasgow Central station; where I will arrive on the sleeper on Thursday 24th – to sing smutty songs at Oran Mor. And if I look tired, you know why.
See Dr Adam Kay and Dr Suman Biswas in Amateur Transplants in Theatre at Oran Mor this Thursday 24 March. Click here for more show information.
Find out more about the Amateur Transplants at www.livetransplants.com and follow them on twitter @amateuradam and @amateursuman.
Every other comedian’s post on this blog starts, 'My first Glasgow Comedy Festival was in…' and then explores their humorous misconceptions about the city. I’m at a slight loss as this is my first Glasgow Comedy Festival, and because I've watched Supergran episodes since the age of four I know loads about the place. So I’m going to talk about the sleeper train instead.
Last year – due to a logistical problem whereby my boyfriend lived in Glasgow and I lived in London – I took the Caledonian sleeper 22 times. If you've never taken the sleeper service before, it's a cross between a train and the worst hotel in the world. You share a berth with a stranger, who is always either a pervert or has issues with urinary continence (NB. if your berth-mate is neither of these things, then it's probably you).
You climb into your bunk and the motion of the train rocks you gently to sleep. After 5 minutes of sleep you are jolted awake. You are merely awoken and disorientated, but your berth-mate screams, and if he is type B you may feel a few drips. This process repeats itself for the next nine hours before your breakfast is delivered by history's angriest lady. You quite like the idea of a breakfast muffin until you read the words 'contains chemically recovered egg' on the packaging and then you feel confused and unwell. The first time you read the words 'chemically recovered egg' you will text all your friends.
And then suddenly you’re in Glasgow Central station; where I will arrive on the sleeper on Thursday 24th – to sing smutty songs at Oran Mor. And if I look tired, you know why.
See Dr Adam Kay and Dr Suman Biswas in Amateur Transplants in Theatre at Oran Mor this Thursday 24 March. Click here for more show information.
Find out more about the Amateur Transplants at www.livetransplants.com and follow them on twitter @amateuradam and @amateursuman.
Thursday, 17 March 2011
Greg Davies Guest Blog
It took me a long time to not be frightened when coming to Glasgow.
Very early on in my stand up career I was the mc at a large gig and chatted to an Australia tourist in the crowd. I finished our exchange by welcoming the lady to 'England.' The resulting scene was like a much more violent and realistic Braveheart. As I was the MC I had to repeatedly come back on to stage and was hated a little bit more each time. The gig ended with a gentlemen at the back referring to me, entirely correctly on this occasion, as 'a six foot eight tower of pish.'
Mercifully after this hiccup playing Glasgow has always been brilliant fun and I can't wait to perform at the festival. I promise to remember where I am.
Greg will be performing his solo show on Monday28 March at the Garage. Click here for more show information.
Monday, 14 March 2011
Dan Clark Guest Blog
Coming to Glasgow to play the comedy festival is a bit like coming home for me.
I've spent a lot of time in Glasgow over the past three years. You see, I film my BBC3 sitcom How Not To Live Your Life there so I've lived in the city for a two-month period every year since 2008.
I love it there. The place and the people! There are great restaurants and great architecture. And I'm excited that the first show of my tour is there. But I have to admit, I didn't always have this attitude. Not that I ever had negative feelings towards the city, but in 2007 I was on my way up to do the comedy festival for the first time and I'm embarrassed to say that I was a bit nervous about what a Glaswegian audience would be like. Turns out I had a preconceived idea of what Glasgow would be like based on a misconceived reputation from about 20 years ago.
I thought that I'd be met with a 'Glasgow kiss' the minute someone heard my southern accent. And more specifically, I was worried the audience at my show would be aggressive and rowdy. I am ashamed of myself for thinking this, especially as it turns out Glasgow is one of the friendliest places I've ever been too in the UK.
Yes, it has it's fare share of nutters. When we filmed night-scenes for my sitcom in the Merchant City, we were constantly approached by shouty men in the street. In fact, one time a man in a wheelchair hurled abuse at us and not one member of the 25-strong crew, of which a lot were men, stood up to him. That's how frightening he was! But I love the colourful characters of Glasgow. It's what makes it interesting. That show I did in 2007 turned out to be one to the most fun stand-up gigs I've ever done. The crowd were rowdy but very friendly. It was in the Brel bar on Ashton Lane. The back room is like a greenhouse and when it rained during the show it added a strange ambiance. I loved that show. So I'm very excited to play Glasgow again.
Dan will be performing his solo show on Friday 25 March at the Garage. Click here for more show information.
Find out more about Dan at www.danclarkcomedy.co.uk.
Watch a clip of Dan in How Not To Live Your Life:
I've spent a lot of time in Glasgow over the past three years. You see, I film my BBC3 sitcom How Not To Live Your Life there so I've lived in the city for a two-month period every year since 2008.
I love it there. The place and the people! There are great restaurants and great architecture. And I'm excited that the first show of my tour is there. But I have to admit, I didn't always have this attitude. Not that I ever had negative feelings towards the city, but in 2007 I was on my way up to do the comedy festival for the first time and I'm embarrassed to say that I was a bit nervous about what a Glaswegian audience would be like. Turns out I had a preconceived idea of what Glasgow would be like based on a misconceived reputation from about 20 years ago.
I thought that I'd be met with a 'Glasgow kiss' the minute someone heard my southern accent. And more specifically, I was worried the audience at my show would be aggressive and rowdy. I am ashamed of myself for thinking this, especially as it turns out Glasgow is one of the friendliest places I've ever been too in the UK.
Yes, it has it's fare share of nutters. When we filmed night-scenes for my sitcom in the Merchant City, we were constantly approached by shouty men in the street. In fact, one time a man in a wheelchair hurled abuse at us and not one member of the 25-strong crew, of which a lot were men, stood up to him. That's how frightening he was! But I love the colourful characters of Glasgow. It's what makes it interesting. That show I did in 2007 turned out to be one to the most fun stand-up gigs I've ever done. The crowd were rowdy but very friendly. It was in the Brel bar on Ashton Lane. The back room is like a greenhouse and when it rained during the show it added a strange ambiance. I loved that show. So I'm very excited to play Glasgow again.
Dan will be performing his solo show on Friday 25 March at the Garage. Click here for more show information.
Find out more about Dan at www.danclarkcomedy.co.uk.
Watch a clip of Dan in How Not To Live Your Life:
Thursday, 10 March 2011
Susan Calman Guest Blog
The Glasgow Comedy Festival has very special memories for me. I did my first half hour show in 2006 with Scott Agnew at the 13th Note and then my first ever full length show at Universal in 2007.
Not only has it given me the opportunity to perform when other comedy festivals required things like 'jokes' but it lets me perform in front of my home audience.
Rather oddly, as a Scottish comic I am often criticised for being too Scottish. Really. In fact I was once told if I could just be less Scottish I might do better. Being mischievous whenever anyone says that to me I am tempted to perform drunk, wearing a kilt whilst playing the bagpipes just to ramp up the stereotypes. But the joy of the GICF is that it gives opportunities to all nationalities to perform in front of one of the most appreciative and comedy literate audiences in the world.
Of course it’s not easy making the Scots laugh. I am used to the stares of those who were expecting something else. People who have confused me for Rhona Cameron or who think that I will tell 'jokes'. In no particular order my top three audience incidents are:
In March and April there is so much comedy to see in Glasgow it is almost embarrassing. Go and see the big guns but also support local acts too. Especially the women. Who are on at the Citizens Theatre. On the 6th April.
Susan will be performing her solo show Susan Calman's Happy Place on Wednesday 6 April at the Citizens Theatre. Click here for more show information.
Find out more about Susan at www.susancalman.com.
Watch Susan performing at the festival preview show in January on YouTube here.
Not only has it given me the opportunity to perform when other comedy festivals required things like 'jokes' but it lets me perform in front of my home audience.
Rather oddly, as a Scottish comic I am often criticised for being too Scottish. Really. In fact I was once told if I could just be less Scottish I might do better. Being mischievous whenever anyone says that to me I am tempted to perform drunk, wearing a kilt whilst playing the bagpipes just to ramp up the stereotypes. But the joy of the GICF is that it gives opportunities to all nationalities to perform in front of one of the most appreciative and comedy literate audiences in the world.
Of course it’s not easy making the Scots laugh. I am used to the stares of those who were expecting something else. People who have confused me for Rhona Cameron or who think that I will tell 'jokes'. In no particular order my top three audience incidents are:
- The woman who berated me for an hour last year for pretending to be Glaswegian when I was obviously from Edinburgh. I’m not. I’m from Glasgow. I live with someone from the East (I know, I know) and so have a slightly odd accent. Angry Woman wouldn’t listen to me even when I listed my previous home addresses, school and named all the pubs along Dumbarton Road.
- The woman who sat with her arms folded in the front row of my gig. She would unfold them if she liked a joke, then cross them again when unhappy. It was like having the comedy reviewer from the Scotsman in the front row.
- The man who came to see me, didn’t laugh and then as he left announced loudly 'I knew she was crap, I was just checking'.
- The man who admitted the woman he was with was his mistress.
- The woman who admitted that she had always wanted to sleep with a woman and I was the woman she wanted to kick things off with.
- The man who admitted he had robbed people of millions of pounds. To be fair he worked at RBS.
In March and April there is so much comedy to see in Glasgow it is almost embarrassing. Go and see the big guns but also support local acts too. Especially the women. Who are on at the Citizens Theatre. On the 6th April.
Susan will be performing her solo show Susan Calman's Happy Place on Wednesday 6 April at the Citizens Theatre. Click here for more show information.
Find out more about Susan at www.susancalman.com.
Watch Susan performing at the festival preview show in January on YouTube here.
Monday, 7 March 2011
Lee Camp Guest Blog
WARNING: This blog post contains language which some may find offensive.
American stand-up and contributor to The Onion and The Huffington Post speaks to the festival ahead of his show on Sunday 27 March:
American stand-up and contributor to The Onion and The Huffington Post speaks to the festival ahead of his show on Sunday 27 March:
I’m thrilled to be playing the Glasgow Comedy Festival for many reasons, not the least of which is that audiences in Europe, if I may broadly and spectacularly generalize, seem to still remember how to pay attention and focus on a show. Sounds novel, doesn’t it? In my experience Americans are far more likely to get out their mobile phones during the show and text someone who is apparently FAR more important than the performer they’ve paid money to watch – probably someone like the Pope or Lady Gaga. We Americans think we’re so f**king important that every last school teacher or truck driver or university student has to update his or her Facebook every twelve minutes because the lives of thousands depend on it.
In the average American show at any given time at least two people have the warm glow of a mobile illuminating their crotch or their tits. I’ve been in many a show where someone (often in the front row) actually ANSWERS their f**king mobile during the show. They actually talk on the f**king phone! Unless your child has locked himself in a bank vault with a rattle snake and you’re the only one with the combination, there’s no reason to talk on your phone during a comedy show – and EVEN THEN, you should leave the showroom before telling your babysitter the code to the snake vault.
I’m not saying only Americans are a**holes. There are plenty everywhere around the world. After all, former President Bush has friends in Europe, and they MUST be c**ts. In fact, you reading this right now, you may be an a**hole for all I know. You may come from a long, proud line of a**holes. All I’m saying is that – if I had to blatantly generalize – Americans do not appreciate and focus on a performance, comedy or otherwise, as well as other parts of the world do… I take that back. Out of morbid curiosity I recently went to watch a competitive eating competition, and the audience seemed to give THAT a great deal of reverence.
In case you’re curious – you have not truly lived until you’ve seen a 200kg man with enormous breasts shoving hotdogs down his face hole at a tremendous speed. And yet people have the nerve to say gay marriage is unnatural and not what God intended?? If God exists, there is nothing he intends LESS than for immense human beings who aren’t hungry AT ALL to shove cow parts down their crocodile gullets with people cheering them on!
Anyway, come to my show on Sunday 27 March and we’ll figure this whole world out together.
Lee Camp will be performing his solo show Taking the Piss Out Of America on Sunday 27 March at Blackfriars Basement. Click here for more show information.
Find out more about Lee at leecamp.net.
Thursday, 3 March 2011
Carla Rhodes Guest Blog
The Continuing Story of Carla Rhodes Comes to Glasgow
by Cecil Sinclaire
Greetings and salutations fine Glaswegians! I'm Cecil Sinclaire, vaudeville legend! I perform with a New York City harlot, pardon me, starlet named Carla Rhodes. Our agent Tappy Fleaberg (the world's only tap dancing circus flea) chomped on his cigar and booked us at the glorious Glasgow Comedy Festival. I'll be making my big comeback and tossing saltwater taffies to the adoring masses!
I've decided to question Miss Rhodes about our spectacular show. Tell us a bit about the show and as quickly as possible!
Carla: The Continuing Story Of Carla Rhodes is a mash-up of rock'n'roll ventriloquism, comedy and original music - tied together by the thread of a young gal's dream of hitting the big time in New York City! I'm usually backed by my real live band The Extravaganzas, but in Glasgow I'll be backed by the Paranormals (my invisible ghost band)!
Cecil: The show is filled with wild jungle musics, which I don't approve of, but I believe it promises to be a rollicking good time! I'm the star and the whole show rests on my laurels, but what other inferior creatures are in the show?
Carla: Legendary rockers Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. A pigeon named Herschel Ragbottoms, who lives under the newspapers in the East Village. Under Bed Alligator pops up when I least expect it, manipulating me with his fear mongering tactics! Last but not least, you (Cecil) play a mysterious vaudeville legend who's been locked away in a trunk for over 80 years! Exactly like your real life persona!
Cecil: If only you could be locked away for 80 years! Ladies and Gents and folks in-between, do come and see us at the vaudeville palace known as Capitol on 19 March. Delight and revel in astonishment at The Continuing Story Of Carla Rhodes!
Carla and Cecil will be performing The Continuing Story of Carla Rhodes at Capitol on Saturday 19 March at 8.30pm. Click here for more show information.
Find out more about Carla at www.carlarhodes.net
Photo credit: Hanna Toresson
Monday, 28 February 2011
Stephen Callaghan Guest Blog
What does the Glasgow Comedy Festival mean to me? In a word – everything. This festival is stitched so tightly into my life that without it I’m sure I would fall apart like a pair of Primark leggings.
It was at the festival that I cemented my marriage to my long-suffering comedy husband Davey Connor, and we gave birth to our first child, The Stockholm Syndrome (Capitol, 10pm every Saturday night throughout the comedy festival - plug number 1). It was at the festival that I met the first boyfriend I ever wanted to introduce to my wonderful mother (Janet Callaghan, check her out, she’s awesome – plug number 2). And this year it will be the place that I perform my debut solo show (Stephen Callaghan’s Memory Box, Capitol, Sunday 3 April, 8pm – plug number 3).
But what’s in it for me? I hear you cry. Glasgow is a ridiculously understated, fantastic city. It tingles with a beautiful self-deprecating wit. It is cool, but doesn’t feel the need to rub your nose in it (not like flashy Edinburgh). At times it will show you its hard side, but that is for your own good, and it will always give you a wee cuddle after it. The people of Glasgow, performers, organisers and audiences, harbour a burning love for their city that oozes out of everything they do.
It’s this passion that makes the Glasgow Comedy Festival one of the best in the world. Step into any show (especially The Stockholm Syndrome or Stephen Callaghan’s Memory Box – quick replug) and you will find it incredibly difficult not to be swept up in the passion that us Glaswegians feel for the place we live.
If it’s your first time attending the festival then I’m incredibly jealous. You are about to fall in love in a way that you have not experienced since you were 14 and pissed off Diamond White, or your strong cider of choice. There is nothing you can do. Don’t try to fight it, you would only be doing yourself a disservice. My advice: book some tickets, sit back and prepare to laugh your sexual organs off.
Stephen will be performing his debut solo show Stephen Callaghan's Memory Box at Capitol on Sunday 3 April at 8pm. Click here for more show information.
You can also see him in The Stockholm Syndrome every Saturday during the festival at 10pm (19, 26 March and 2, 9 April). Click here for more show information.
Thursday, 24 February 2011
Giggle Beats Guest Blog
North East comedy is experiencing somewhat of a renaissance at the moment. The emergence of comedy clubs such as The Grinning Idiot, The Laughing Penguin, Hilarity Bites and the forthcoming Stand Comedy Club in Newcastle provide up and coming comics with many a platform to showcase and develop their material in the region; the result is a plethora of young, talented comedians from the North East, and some of those acts, like Kai Humphries, Carl Hutchinson and John Whale, will be travelling to Scotland next month for the annual Glasgow Comedy Festival.
Andrew Dipper, editor of comedy website GiggleBeats.co.uk, guides you through some of the best Northern acts on offer this spring:
SARAH MILLICAN
Tuesday 5 April, 8pm, Old Fruitmarket.
Perhaps the most successful Northern comedian in the country at the moment, South Shields born Sarah Millican has sold out her show faster than anyone else at this year’s festival and it’s easy to see why. Thanks largely to her cult following and the everywoman feel to her humour, Millican’s now a regular fixture on comedy programmes such as Michael McIntyre’s Comedy Roadshow, and those of you lucky enough to see her on 5 April are in for a real treat.
KAI HUMPHRIES
Sunday 10 April, 8.30pm, Blackfriars Basement
Like Millican, Kai Humphries has experienced an astounding amount of success in such a short space of time. Humphries recently turned professional after just under two years in comedy and runs the monthly Punch-Drunk Comedy Club in Cramlington. He’s a natural entertainer who has a clear passion for his comedy and his debut solo show, Evolution, garnered mainly positive reviews at last year’s Fringe. Kai Humphries joins Sean Grant for one night only on 10 April.
JASON COOK
Wednesday 30 March, 9.30pm, Stand Comedy Club
Jason Cook has been one of my favourite comedians for a long time now. Recently nominated for best compere in the Chortle awards, Cook is at ease with audience interaction but is also a superb storyteller. If you like your comedy with charm, poignancy and a little bit of silliness then Jason Cook is your man, and you can see him for an hour at the Stand Comedy Club on 30 March.
CARL HUTCHINSON & JOHN WHALE
The Triumphant Return of Jimmy & Jackie, Friday 25 March, 7.30pm, West
I watched Carl Hutchinson perform quite recently and he’s came such a long way over the past few years. Hutchinson began comedy in 2006 and since then has won countless competitions and awards – he’s another of my favourite comedians, and you can read my interview with Carl here too if you like.
A lot of up and coming comedians try their hand at deadpan comedy but very few enjoy the success John Whale has experienced. Naturally Whale’s been likened to Stewart Lee in the past, but you can see why – his material is well-carved, dark and there’s a confidence to his act that’s simply infectious. He’s one of the less experienced Northern acts on offer at this year’s festival, but he and Carl Hutchinson are more than worth your time and money.
CHRIS RAMSEY
Sunday 20 March, 8.30pm, Blackfriars Basement
Perhaps 2011 is Chris Ramsey’s year. Having recently toured with both Al Murray and fellow 2011 festival star Russell Kane, South Shields comedian Ramsey is a man in demand; so much so his website even crashed after his recent appearance on Comedy Rocks alongside Jason Manford. If you missed him on TV he's performing alongside Gareth Richards on 20 March, and you'll probably be seeing a lot more of him in the near future.
THE GINGE, THE GEORDIE & THE GEEK
Sunday 27 March, 8pm, Tron Theatre
Sketch comedy troupe The Ginge, The Geordie & The Geek had a very successful Fringe and recently supported Michael McIntyre at the Childish Things charity gig. You can read my interview with them here, and catch them in Glasgow on 27 March.
Giggle Beats was founded by Andrew Dipper and Richard Milburn in June 2010 as a means of promoting comedy talent performing in the North of England. On www.gigglebeats.co.uk you’ll find reviews of some of the best (and worst!) acts working the circuit from their team of comedy enthusiasts, interviews with some of the top comics in the country and everything you need to know about the region’s comedy scene.
Monday, 21 February 2011
Des McLean Guest Blog
Ah Glaswegians! They are self-deprecating, don't suffer fools gladly, but like a right good laugh. That's why the Glasgow Comedy Festival is now in its ninth year, and I've been lucky enough to be part of it from the start.
Well, when I say lucky, I didn't feel that way the first time I was asked to be involved. I still remember lying in bed, awake at 3am saying to myself 'bloody train station, oh no, why?' I had to get up at 5.30am ready to perform to bunch of bewildered commuters at Glasgow Central Station running late for their train. It was like a sadder and lonelier version of the T-Mobile flashmob advert.
Well, when I say lucky, I didn't feel that way the first time I was asked to be involved. I still remember lying in bed, awake at 3am saying to myself 'bloody train station, oh no, why?' I had to get up at 5.30am ready to perform to bunch of bewildered commuters at Glasgow Central Station running late for their train. It was like a sadder and lonelier version of the T-Mobile flashmob advert.
My comedy busking continued the next year when it was 'on the buses', performing stand up to a bunch of bleary-eyed passengers from Glasgow's Buchanan Street Bus Station all the way to Edinburgh and back. The ones who weren't listening to their iPods were staring out the window or pretending to read their free newspaper upside down, It was on the BBC News so the viewers at home could witness my struggle. The following year was on the trains, then it was shopping malls then the Glasgow Underground - all nice and scary PR stunts to get punters in the mood for the festival and give me more sleepless nights! But it was exciting fun and stood me in good stead for the shows coming up.
I can't complain about my shows at the comedy festival. I started out in the Thirteenth Note - a basement bar in the Trongate, then moved on to the Arches, the Old Fruitmarket, Glasgow City Halls, the Theatre Royal, The King's Theatre, and last year, the amazing Clyde auditorium. This was a very effective laxative which was filmed for TV, and DVD. Also along the way I loved taking comedy to the communities around Glasgow, including Easterhouse, Drumchapel, Castlemilk.
This year I am honoured to be the opening headline act at the festival. I will be playing the King's Theatre on the Thursday 17 March, and what was my stategy for choosing this date? Well, my wife Alison and I are due our first baby at the end of March. Alison asked, 'When's the first available date.......?'
Des McLean will be performing his solo show Live at the King's 2011 on Thursday 17 March at the King's Theatre. Click here for more show information.
Find out more about Des McLean at www.desmclean.com.
Thursday, 17 February 2011
Craig Hill Guest Blog
It's already been quite a busy start to the year! After heading down to Cardiff and Birmingham to perform at The Glee Club (no Sue Sylvester- how disappointing!) I've also done two solo shows on my tour -one at Macrobert Arts Centre in Stirling and another at a particularly mental Dundee Rep gig where a man confessed to having a fetish for his wife dressing as a penguin! I asked where she was tonight and someone shouted 'Edinburgh Zoo!'
I also had a great night in London at the launch of the Glasgow Comedy Festival at the Leicester Square Theatre with a fab line up of comedians who are appearing.
For the first time at the Glasgow Comedy Festival this year I'm doing two nights! How exciting. Last year at Oran Mor loads of lovely Glesga folk couldnae get in so we decided to do another show this year which I'm now thinking I should have entitled 'Oran Mor and more'!
I still talk about last year's show even now, where a wummin from Mull of Kintyre with a home perm shaved at the sides was renamed 'Mullet Kintyre', and the gayest guy on earth worked for a roofing company called 'Ruby Roofing!' - precious! That's the thing about performing my show in Glasgow - the gigs throw up these real gems of characters that I don't think you'd find everywhere else. Glaswegians have real balls and are generally inherently funny and so want to really join in with the show and give you the quality of banter that makes for totally one-off moments that you couldn't plan.
So needless to say I'm wetting myself to go back (in a kilt that could really be disastrous!) So bring yer da, yer maw, yer granny, yer granda and 'Why Don't You Come Down The Front?' See you there guys! X
Craig Hill will be performing his solo show Why Don't You Come Down the Front? at Oran Mor on Friday 1 and Saturday 2 April. Click here for show information.
Find out more about Craig at mrcraighill.com including his blog.
Craig Hill will be performing his solo show Why Don't You Come Down the Front? at Oran Mor on Friday 1 and Saturday 2 April. Click here for show information.
Find out more about Craig at mrcraighill.com including his blog.
Monday, 14 February 2011
Nick Revell Guest Blog
I was gigging in Glasgow the summer before last; I opened with a little comment about the weather - It was a beautiful weekend; hot, sunny, people walking round in tee shirts and shades; so different from the previous time I’d been there - January, freezing cold, driving rain, arctic winds; people walking round in tee shirts, shades….Not a great joke but a nice one to open with (obvously you don’t get my elegant delivery off the page, so do come and see me at The Stand on March 27th) and it did its job.
Point is though, afterwards, I’m having a quiet pint in a quiet corner of the club, (too much of a grown-up now to seek post-gig attention. Don’t need it. Sad really.) A girl comes up and says - “Very funny set, by the way, but it should be: in the winter, folk had on tee shirts, shades…and a wee scarf.” She has this little gesture to go with ‘wee scarf,’ and then she’s away on the back of my appreciative laughter.
Point is though, afterwards, I’m having a quiet pint in a quiet corner of the club, (too much of a grown-up now to seek post-gig attention. Don’t need it. Sad really.) A girl comes up and says - “Very funny set, by the way, but it should be: in the winter, folk had on tee shirts, shades…and a wee scarf.” She has this little gesture to go with ‘wee scarf,’ and then she’s away on the back of my appreciative laughter.
Next night ‘wee scarf’ was in. And the gesture. And it killed. Perfect.
So thank you, whoever you were. Attentive, sharp, generous and poetic. What more could you want from an audience?
That’s why I love Glasgow.
See Nick's festival show Revell Yell on Sunday 27 March 2011 at the Stand Comedy Club. Click here for show information.
Find out more about Nick at www.nickrevell.com.
See Nick's festival show Revell Yell on Sunday 27 March 2011 at the Stand Comedy Club. Click here for show information.
Find out more about Nick at www.nickrevell.com.
Thursday, 10 February 2011
Zombie Science 1Z Guest Blog
Hello there Zombiology Students,
My name is Doctor Austin, Theoretical Zombiologist and Head of the Zombie Institute for Theoretical Studies (ZITS) at the University of Glasgow.
Many people are unaware that the world’s leading Zombieism research facility is based right here in Scotland’s biggest city. The Institute has existed since the early 19th Century before Glasgow even had a comedy festival. It was a dark time. Imagine being forced to go to Edinburgh to attend a comedy festival,
not pleasant at all.
This year I’m very excited to be taking part in the MGICF with my lecture Zombie Science 1Z. They say that laughter is the best medicine, and although my patients prefer drugs & surgery, a wee joke here and there often helps.
In Zombie Science 1Z we aim to increase awareness of the Zombieism condition, dispel misconceptions about zombies perpetrated by popular culture and inspire the public about biological sciences. There will of course be live science demonstrations. In fact I’ve just finished turning my nephew’s tennis racquet into a crossbow for one of them. He did try to complain, but obviously I had a crossbow.
All the best and don’t let the fear of Zombieism stop you enjoying all the brilliant acts at this year’s festival,
Doctor Austin ZITS MSz BSz DPep
Our research is generously supported by the Wellcome Trust & University of Glasgow - www.zombiescience.co.uk
Doctor Austin will be giving his lecture Zombie Science 1Z at the Queen Margaret Union on Thursday’s 17th, 24th, 31st March and 7th April at 8.00pm. Click here for show information.
Thursday, 3 February 2011
Jena Friedman Guest Blog
This week's guest blogger, American comic Jena Friedman, tells us about making her festival debut back in 2010:
The last and only other time I was in Scotland was to visit (I think in Glasgow the term is peg) my ex-insignificant other who was working at a crusty youth hostel in Edinburgh. I backpacked around a bit, stopped by Lock Ness and Stirling (where I saw the Braveheart statue modeled after my sixth favorite* anti-semite Mel Gibson) but never quite made it to Glasgow... until 2010.
The last and only other time I was in Scotland was to visit (I think in Glasgow the term is peg) my ex-insignificant other who was working at a crusty youth hostel in Edinburgh. I backpacked around a bit, stopped by Lock Ness and Stirling (where I saw the Braveheart statue modeled after my sixth favorite* anti-semite Mel Gibson) but never quite made it to Glasgow... until 2010.
Through divine intervention, I landed a spot in the Glasgow International Comedy Festival to wow local lads and lassies with my comedy vomit.
Glaswegians have really dark comedic sensibilities. Prior to the festival, I had never heard an audience laugh at an AIDS joke before I even got the punch line. They also REALLY like to get mutted (which is awesome because alcohol pairs well with comedy). During one show at Maggie Mays, I accidentally repeated a joke onstage - first time ever - because it was my third show of the night and I too was slightly dunted (from all the free cheeky water courtesy of festival organizers). The audience was so supportive of my gaffe that they laughed even louder when they heard it the second time!
During another show at the Stand, a burd fell off her chair, took two glasses down with her and landed on her coupon. I was frichted (thinking she may be deed), while her trippen troopettes and the rest of the audience cheered on before anyone could even measure her pulse. Turns out the swamp donkey was just really charred and apparently Glaswegians are that accustomed to public displays of inebriation to think anything else of it.
* My top five favorite anti-semites, in no particular order, are Roald Dahl, Immanuel Kant, Edgar Degas, T.S Eliot and Mrs. Rochna, my rock sculpture teacher in Chile who gifted me the only slab of marble in her studio to work with because I had tendonitis in my wrists and she had bad Jew-dar.
Jena will be performing at the festival with Elaine Malcolmson on Friday 8 April at the Griffin. Click here for show information.
Jena will be performing at the festival with Elaine Malcolmson on Friday 8 April at the Griffin. Click here for show information.
Find out more about Jena at jenafriedman.com, including her blog.
Friday, 28 January 2011
The Ginge, the Geordie and the Geek Guest Blog
The festival is delighted to present the first guest blog of 2011 from the "three Messiahs of comedy", The Ginge the Geordie and the Geek:
Ginge: Boys, listen up. We’re writing a blog.
Ginge: Boys, listen up. We’re writing a blog.
Geek: About what?
Ginge: I dunno, our insane lives since, for some reason, we decided to spend every waking hour together for two and a half years in order to get people to laugh at us.
Geordie: When you put it like that it doesn’t seem such a great idea.
Ginge: So we’re gonna write something personal and heart felt, but we’re not gonna mention our show at the Tron theatre on March 27th.
Geek: Yeah that would be a cheap publicity trick!
Geordie: So what do we write?
PAUSE. THEY ALL THINK VERY VERY HARD…
Ginge: I’m just gonna start and see what happens.
Geek: But that’s madness!!!
Ginge: There comes a time in every comedian’s life where they have to step up to the blog.
Geordie: Be careful Ginge. May the comedy God be with you.
Geek: We’ll jump in and help if we can!
Ginge: So… it’s that time of year again folks. I’m writing this blog at 2am traveling back from doing a show in London. We’re in the Geordie’s tiny Daihatsu Charade with 42 props. two large flats, six shots of coffee each and a dream. I can’t wait to get back home though. My maw’ll be waiting with open arms.
Geek: My dad’s waiting for me.
Geordie: I just get a cuddle off a jakey and a swig of his Buckfast.
Ginge: Which is quite a difference from being on the BBC’s Dick and Dom show with Catherine Tate.
Geek: Which, by March, will probably be available to watch on BBC iplayer through a link on our website. Just thought I’d point that out.
Geordie: What a mad twelve months it’s been! Before the Magners Glasgow International Comedy Festival last year we didn’t even have clothes!
Geek: We had to do a photo shoot in just our y-fronts for the poster. Luckily both it and the Edinburgh festival show sold out though and so with money not being an obstacle, we got new ones from Primark for this year.
Ginge: And then we went on the world tour……performing to packed houses in
Preston, Newcastle and Nottingham - supporting Johnny Vegas in Nottingham was very surreal for a number of reasons.
Geek: We got to stay in top hotels.
Ginge: Like the Travelodge next to the red light district.
Geek: We even got to share a bed.
Geordie: I’ve got to admit that wasn’t one of my highlights.
Ginge: And then on to the bright lights of London. Showing the southerners how to have a laugh and shooting our pilot.
Geek: Are we gonna write anything meaningful?
Ginge: I’m not sure we have it in us to be honest. Best stick to the silly stuff.
Geordie: Aye, good idea. I don’t think this blog is gonna win us any awards for literature.
Ginge: So… after all that, it’s great to come back to perform our best of 2009/10 show to our home crowd. Especially at such a great venue like the Tron.
Geordie: Which is handy for me as I only live down the road.
Geek: You don’t live there, you squat in your girlfriend’s flat.
Ginge: And gets nagged 24/7 so he says.
Geordie: It’s the price I pay for following my dream and not paying rent apparently.
Ginge: Anyway, on that note, I’d just like to ask the kind readers to come and see our show to ease the burden on the Geordie’s girlfriend. In fact, you could say that by coming to our show, you’ll actually be helping save his relationship! Now that’s meaningful!!!
Help save the Geordie's relationship with his girlfriend and see The Ginge, the Geordie and the Geek at the Tron Theatre on Sunday 27 March at 8pm. Click here for show information.
You can also find out more at www.gingegeordiegeek.com including the GGG blog.
Thursday, 20 January 2011
The festival blog is back!
Thursday 17 March - Sunday 10 April:
400 shows. 51 venues. 25 days.
Today we launched the 2011 Magners Glasgow International Comedy Festival programme, and the festival blog is back to give you a taste of some of the comedy coming your way!
400 shows. 51 venues. 25 days.
Today we launched the 2011 Magners Glasgow International Comedy Festival programme, and the festival blog is back to give you a taste of some of the comedy coming your way!
This year we've got stand-up, sketch, film, cabaret, music, theatre, workshops, children’s and (for the first year) opera performances on the programme, from international stars and homegrown talent.
In case March 17 seems too far away, we've invited some of our acts to guest blog for us over the next few weeks to keep us going!
In the meantime, check out the programme at www.glasgowcomedyfestival.com, pick up a copy at one of the 51 festival venues across the city, or it will be included in the Sunday Herald on 30 January.
Tickets are available from the ticketSOUP.com festival hotline on 0844 395 4005 or www.ticketSOUP.com
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