Joel Dommett is the first in the Soho Theatre Live series to take to the stage and the hilarious episode sees Joel at his funniest as he discusses the fails and mishaps of his dating life, the infamous catfishing scandal and the pranks he used to play on his Grandad. Joel, as a child, used to pretend to smoke with a breadstick. He is now addicted to breadsticks. Join Joel Bring The Noise (Sky 1), Reality Bites (ITV2), Russell Howard’s Good News and Impractical Jokers (BBC3) for an unmissable hour of stand up. By ‘unmissable’ we mean you will be frustrated if you miss it. It is actually very missable with the sheer volume of shows. So make sure you don’t accidentally watch something else.
2015 & 2016 Edinburgh Comedy Award nominee and Best Radio Comedy Rose d’Or winner Nish Kumar is back at Soho Theatre with a very special one off greatest hits performance. A stand-up comedy show for people who like stand-up comedy shows by a man that does stand-up comedy. As seen on Live at the Apollo and Have I Got News for You.
The multi award nominated comedian Dane Baptiste presents an exclusive collection of his favourite, previously unseen material spanning the last five years. As seen on Tonight at the London Palladium (ITV1), Mock the Week (BBC Two), Live from the BBC (BBC Two), The News Quiz (BBC Radio 4), Sweat the Small Stuff (BBC Three), and Virtually Famous (E4). Star of Live at the Apollo (BBC Two) and his own BBC sitcom Sunny D.
Richard Gadd: Monkey See Monkey Do What kind of monkey you ask? Is it real? Is it metaphorical? A mere comic device? A poor attempt to fill space in this blurb? A sexual fantasy? Gareth Bale? A snappy title decided before the brochure deadline that later hindered the creative process when monkeys had to be incorporated into the show somehow? Only time will tell…* *It’s metaphorical.
Following a hugely successful run at Edinburgh Fringe and the Melbourne Comedy Festival, two-time Canadian Comedy Award nominee Mae Martin performs her smash hit show ‘Us’. As seen on Russell Howard’s Good News and heard on BBC Radio 4, Mae comes of age in a new hour where she will consider the labels projected onto us, and those we give ourselves.
Don’t worry about it. Honestly, it’s fine. Just tune in to see Rhys James bash out another hour of splash-hit, classic stand-up and definitely cool and not pretentious poetry and all will be forgiven. As seen on Mock The Week and Russell Howard’s Stand Up Central.
Nina and her uncensorable sidekick Monkey are back live with an all-new, all-improvised show. Strap into the mask as Nina gets in your face.
Loving your spouse and children is hard work. Rewarding, intense, and sometimes it just straight-up sucks. But who wants to live without love?
Janine's father is a New Yorker, son of Arab immigrants and an avid Donald Trump supporter. Reconciling those things makes for one tense Sunday dinner. The critically acclaimed debut hour from Janine Harouni.
In Kai's critically acclaimed debut show he hilariously and poignantly dissects life as a young, working class, British-Asian in modern day Britain.
Catherine is the bisexual, OCD daughter of an Irish Catholic Deacon and she’s got a hell of a lot to say about it.
No tricks. No gimmicks. No plan. Just an hour in Jordan’s company as we reach the end. In this 2019 Edinburgh Comedy Award winning show, Brookes makes one last attempt to find connection and any remaining joy in this rapidly crumbling world, before it’s too late.
Absolute powershed and regular host of The Guilty Feminist, Jessica explores her big strong strength.
Triple Edinburgh Comedy Award nominee Kieran's character comedy show about music, falling in love and attempting something far beyond your abilities.
Join Sarah as she tells you about her battle against every expectation of what being a girl means. Think Girls Just Wanna Have Fun but British, funny and in no way similar.
A raw and raucous comedy show from virtuoso storyteller Desiree. From sex, to work, to adventures in sex work, UnF*cklable investigates the drives women have to stop sex from becoming work.
Dane is at his brilliant best in bringing you some of his favourite, previously unseen material (you lucky thing you).
Jen’s the best at a hilarious rant and she uses her skills to rail against period poverty, the perimenopause and why her Mum needs to get out of her bloody house.
Nish discusses the woes of his pun-able name, that awkward time he saw a film with his father that featured some pretty graphic sex scenes, and his innate inability to do sports as a kid.
Lazy Susan bring you their brand of laidback, inventive sketch comedy. Forgive Me, Mother! is mostly about what it means to be a woman these days, but some of it is about dogs etc.
Jessie opens up her DIY heart and explains in definitely too much detail her insecurities, jealousies, fantasies and her exact current relationship status.
Rhys’ show Forgives is another stellar mix of gags, stories and poetry (which is cool and definitely not pretentious).
Panti’s inviting you into her gender-discombobulating, stiletto-shaped world to tell the story of ‘Pantigate’ – how a speech went viral, was remixed by the Pet Shops Boys, and caused a parliamentary meltdown.
Shappi talks about what it means to be addicted to stand-up, having a father who is more controversial than her, and that time she brought a pudding to a red-carpet event.
Josie’s a cult optimist and she’s bringing you a little bit of sunshine in one of her most personal shows to date – about love and being as outdoorsy as a bear.
Aditi explores what it means to be a trailblazer and to win awards for ‘Fempowerment’ in this bumbling love letter/confessional to the original ‘fempowered’ woman in her life: her mother.
Joel’s got a lot of brilliantly ridiculous stories to tell, from the mishaps of his dating life, the pranks he used to play on his Grandad, and that infamous catfishing scandal.