All posts tagged Jack Whitehall

Winter Gig Guide #Manchester

Glenn Wool

Last week we let you know what was going on in the capital over the festive period. Here’s our Manchester reporter Jonny Dean with his comedy gig guide, giving some geographical balance to proceedings. 

Jack Whitehall, star of Channel 4’s comedy-drama ‘Fresh Meat’ and ‘8 Out Of 10 Cats’ regular performs his “Let’s Not Speak of this Again” show at Salford’s Lowry Theatre on Thursday, December 8th. The British Comedy Award-nominated ‘posh boy’ comedian has received praise for his comedic style from both the Telegraph and the Metro.

http://www.thelowry.com/event/Jack-Whitehall-Lets-Not-Speak-Of-This-Again

Greg Davies brings his Edinburgh Comedy Award-nominated “Firing Cheeseballs at a Dog” Edinburgh Festival show to Salford’s Lowry Theatre on Sun 11th December. The comedic giant (at an impressive 6’ 8”), regular ‘Mock the Week’ panellist and ‘Inbetweeners’ Head of Sixth Form comes with an array of five-star reviews and promises to be a fantastic show.

http://www.thelowry.com/event/greg-davies1

Russell Howard arrives at the MEN Arena on the second run of shows following his sellout “Right Here, Right Now” arena tour on Thurs 15th December. The star of ‘Russell Howard’s Good News’ and numerous panel shows, with his incredible ability to say even the most appalling things while still making your gran want to adopt him, it is sure to be an amazing night.

http://www.men-arena.com/events/?page_id=1858

New Year’s Eve Stand Up at Manchester’s Comedy Store. A night of comedy to ring in 2012, compered by Phoenix Nights’ Justin Moorhouse (sans tiger facepaint), and featuring acts from top-rated comics Phil Nichol, Andrew Ryan, Alex Boardman and ‘Mock the Week’s Alun Cochrane.

https://etickets.thecomedystore.co.uk/choose-tickets.aspx

Glenn Wool, the self-confessedly scruffy Canadian, brings his show “No Man’s Land” to the Frog and Bucket comedy club on Wednesday, January 18th 2012. The comic somehow manages to mix extreme silliness and deep political insights without it ever seeming out of place.

http://www.frogandbucket.com/2011/11/29/glenn-wool-mans-land/

 

XS Malarkey Comedy Club #Manchester

XS Marakey Banner

Introducing the first of many Manchester comedy updates from Jonathon Dean, the latest addition to the Crispy Comedy Cuts blogging team. He dives straight in with this review of the critically acclaimed XS Malarkey Comedy Club.

Celebrating its 14th birthday this year, Manchester’s award-winning XS Malarkey recently made its triumphant return after a long summer hiatus. Despite its new home at Platt Chapel, Fallowfield, and some new faces in its student-heavy audience, it manages to retain that wonderful niceness that separates XS Malarkey from your everyday comedy club.

Your host, as ever, is the loveable Toby Hadoke, who is regarded as something of a national treasure by the club’s regulars. His friendly, often bewildered demeanour and self-deprecating remarks about his own fashion faux-pas and personal eccentricities help to underline Malarkey’s down-to-earth feel and eschewing of the bland, scathing corporate slickness to which many other comedy clubs aspire.

The club’s determination to offer the opening slots to acts that are new to the circuit has plenty of advantages; as well as injecting new blood into the circuit, it helps to keep the door costs down (£3 for members, £5 for non-members, with a lifetime membership costing a scant £8!), and also means that established acts remember the club from their early days and are happy to return the favour. Regular patrons have been treated to acts like John Bishop, Jason Manford and Jack Whitehall, for the same door price as any other comic.

Platt Chapel and XS Malarkey seem to be a match made in heaven. The self-confessed “community hub” of Platt Chapel, with its volunteer staff and “everyone pitch-in together” approach suits XS Malarkey’s non-profit, newcomer-friendly and fan-loyal ethos down to the ground, bending over backwards to accommodate the club’s many supporters.

It’s a far cry from the pub-venues the club has previously had, who seemingly cared little about the evening as anything other than a device for bringing in punters to the bar – to the point where the previous venue, the (now defunct) Queen of Hearts, didn’t so much as provide heating during last year’s frostbitten winter months. The new venue is a little pricier behind the bar (as many of the student patrons have remarked) but with all the effort and enthusiasm the Chapel’s team bring to the evening, and the sense that the revenue is doing something other than lining a manager’s pockets, it feels somehow better that way.