"My main focus straight after the festival will be to get my sitcom pilot into production" The Edinburgh Fringe Festival is by far one of the most popular and excitable events to happen in the the comedy, theatre and arts annual calendar. Not only does it host established acts but it offers a unique opportunity for uprising talent to showcase their material and garner a wider audience whilst developing their underlying talent. Imran Yusuf became the first comedian to achieve the Edinburgh Comedy Award Best Newcomer nomination from the Free Festival in 2010 and the champion of the egalitarian revolution of the free scene. Here he shares his thoughts:- "Everyone is offended, everyone is a victim, no one is happy. Having made a career from challenging prejudice with witty rebuttals to humanise myself to my adopted countryfolk, I became bored of the assembly line nature of profiteering from victimisation. Is the problem of society really the right-wing media? Is it really the opportunistic demagogues seeking fame and fortune from the throngs of disaffected mouth-breathing underclass ignoramuses? Or is it the wanton disregard to take ownership of my own prejudices and admit that I have been as racist, sexist and homophobic as those I accuse of discriminating against me whilst screaming 'Woe is me, the pariah! I am not to blame; that is the fault of others whom serve me to overlook my own faults'. This is a no-nonsense show deeply cognisant of the shared human experience, of taking ownership of my own hypocrisy, realising that we become who we judge and accepting the bitter-sweet truth that from our tragic history has emerged an opportunity to embrace a greater potential. The Saint is all things Godly and good, The Sinner is all things devilish and bad. Between these two impostors, delicately oscillates the wandering, wondering path of masterful surrender…" Born in Kenya of Indian descent, Imran was raised in London by a family expelled from Uganda and yet became an original voice that embodies the multi-cultural wealth of modern Britain. After making his debut to critical acclaim and an award nomination in 2010, he went on to appear on Michael McIntyre’s Comedy Roadshow (BBC1), completed two nationwide tours and fronted his own TV pilot The Imran Yusuf Show (BBC3) before starring as ‘Ed’ in sitcom Fried (BBC3) that began his entry into the acting world. In 2015, Imran hosted the first ever HaLOL comedy night which celebrates the growing talent of British Muslim comedy in the UK before becoming Director of HaLOL Entertainment, a role in which he aspires to create a more accessible road for minorities in the industry and to champion a more humanizing narrative amidst the sensationalist hysteria. GMA spoke to Imran to find out more about his choice of comedy topics, his forthcoming gig slot and his relentless travelling. VENUE: Studio - The Stand’s New Town Theatre, Freemason’s Hall, 96 George St, EH2 3DH TIME: 5:30pm DATES & PRICES: Thurs 2nd- Sun 26th August @ £10-£8 DAYS OFF: Mon 6th, Mon 13th, Tues 14th August TICKETS: 0131 558 9005 / www.thestand.co.uk _____________ So Imran, how does it feel to be appearing at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival once again? "I’m excited to do a full run again with a brand new show. As I’ve grown up, I now know how best to navigate the tempestuous emotional roller-coaster that the festival can be. I’m going up this year with a better balanced internal game so that I can endure it all and still thrive." What for you makes the festival special? Aside from your gig will you be checking out other performers? "It’s a bizarre world of dreams and art, just walking around the city for a month in this bubble of performances is a weird experience. I’m keen to see Gamarjobat, I love what they do. No doubt I’ll find some gems too from random encounters." Back in 2010 you performed on 'Michael McIntyre's Comedy Roadshow', what was it like performing in the presence of McIntyre himself? How were you approached for it? "Michael was really kind and encouraging. I never thought that someone like me would ever be considered for a show like that, and whilst just hustling for club work I was seen hosting a small gig and off the back of it I was offered an audition." You’ve travelled the world quite a bit since birth - UK & USA most recently, would it be fair to say that comedy has reached greater international heights over the last few decades? "English speaking stand up is booming in India, Malaysia and Singapore and their scenes are becoming bonkers now. South Africa is another country where stand-up is booming. It’s fascinating watching local comics satirise their lives and politics with such passion rooted in both privilege and apartheid. I’ve heard the scene in West Africa, particularly Nigeria, is exciting now, although that’s one place I’ve yet to visit." Being a Muslim, is it a bit touchy to pick Islamophobia and racism as topics for your stand-up routine? "A real stand up talks about what they know. Although I face prejudices in my life, I am also privileged in many ways too. My new show explores both my challenges and privileges." Do you have fellow Muslims comment on your material? Any negative criticisms (from anyone)? "Most Muslims like what I do, a few don’t. Some people write comments on my YouTube channel but I rarely have time to read them as I’m busy living my life and developing the next project." Aside from the Fringe, what are your plans for the year ahead? "After the festival, I’ll prep a tour for 2019, but my main focus straight after the festival will be to get my sitcom pilot into production. I want to make my sitcom and short films over the next couple of years and so am learning how to write, direct and produce by going through the process by collaborating with film-making friends." Imran Yusuf is at the stand Newtown Theatre, 5:30pm, throughout August. http://www.imranyusuf.com / TWITTER: @imranyusuf / INSTAGRAM: @imranyusufcomedy
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"I will always be grateful that I got to see Joan Rivers perform live in NYC before she passed away. What a legend!" The Edinburgh Fringe Festival is by far one of the most popular and excitable events to happen in the the comedy, theatre and arts annual calendar. Not only does it host established acts but it offers a unique opportunity for uprising talent to showcase their material and garner a wider audience whilst developing their underlying talent. If it's one thing the festival is mighty good at, it's bringing and showcasing the talent overseas. Heading to Edinburgh is America's own Tori Scott and her band The Shame Spirals, they come with credentials having sold out shows across the world, from her native USA to England and Mexico. She now comes armed and ready to conquer Scotland through celebrating her poor-life choices and unquestionably unconditional love for vodka. Through the use of music and comedy, Tori will set out to self-deprecates her way through an hour of sassy political commentary and shameless personal adventures. Through the music of Queen, Lady Gaga, Edith Piaf, Pink and more, she shares her own self-coping mechanism in dealing with her home-country’s ‘life crisis’ and being a female navigating her own way in New York. All of this, with a dirty vodka martini in hand. The Time Out New York’s ‘Top 10 Cabaret Performer’ has performed several times in London to critical acclaim and has graced the stage of the prestigious New York institute Joe’s Pub at The Public, who are co-producing this show alongside Robin Rayner (producer of Fringe First Award-winning Fabric), for the past five years. On television, she's counted to 20 as a singing garbage woman on Sesame Street and dubbed the vocals of a singing hooker on HBO's Cathouse: The Musical. Her debut album Plan B! was recorded live at Joe’s Pub and released on Chicken Ranch Records last December. VENUE: The Dairy Room - Underbelly, Bristo Square, Teviot Place, EH8 9AG TIME: 10:15pm DATES: Weds 1st August – Mon 27th August (not 8th, 15th & 22nd August) PRICES: Previews £6.50 / Weekdays £9.50 (£8.50) / Weekends £10.50 (£9.50) TICKETS: 0131 510 0395 / www.underbelly.co.uk GMA caught up with Tori to discuss the difference in attitude towards heckling in the USA and England, her upcoming slot at the festival and other 2018 plans. __________________________________ So Tori, how does it feel to be appearing at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival? "I’m so excited!! I feel really prepared regarding my show, but I’m truly going into the unknown which is a suitable Fringe theme this year. I’ve never been to the Fringe and I’ve never even been to Scotland so I’m heading there thrilled for an adventure." What for you makes the festival special? Aside from your gig will you be checking out other performers? "The fact that this is the biggest arts festival in the world makes this a special and incredible festival! I will definitely be seeing other shows. How can you be surrounded by thousands of shows and not see anything? I will probably get my show off the ground and in a groove first and then start seeing things throughout the day and on my days off. I’m actually overwhelmed with how many shows I want to try to catch." Mixing comedy, acting and music together must be tricky at times? But it seems you nailed it well with your 'Tori Scott: Thirsty!' tour, what was the reception like? "This is a formula that I’m very comfortable with having grown up performing in musicals. I’ve been working with my New York based musical supervisor and arranger, Jesse Kissel, for 10 years now and we have a really nice method to our madness mixing comedy and the music together. Because we trust each other so much, we know when things are being forced versus when it will be a nice unexpected surprise for the audience. The first Thirsty tour I did was a great success, but I still felt like it needed some tweaking. So #Thirsty that is playing at the Fringe is a fun, updated version. We’ve cut some stories that started to feel dated and gave it a bit of a face lift. I’m really happy with it and I’m so thrilled to perform for the Edinburgh audiences and see what they think!" Is it true that in America, heckling is frowned upon whilst a performance is going on? If so what was your thoughts when coming to the UK for the first time? "I think heckling is just different in the US. Why would you want to go to a show just to then scream things at the person performing? I’ve performed in a lot of bars in New York and have had plenty of drunk people scream at me while on stage. But, it’s never been vicious which I feel heckling tends to be. They just want to be a part of the show. They sing along to the songs loudly. It’s annoying as a performer, but you also like that they are having such a good time. The problem I have had lately at shows are people getting really drunk and just TALKING LOUDLY to their friends while I’m performing. I’ve actually been to other shows where people have had to call out audience members for having loud conversations during the show. I mean, it’s like they are watching TV in their living room and there isn’t an actual person on stage?? But, regarding the UK, I’ve performed quite a bit in London over the past year and have had wonderful experiences. I actually did have one issue where it ended up being a table of Scottish guys. But, they weren’t heckling, they were loudly conversing about how they were enjoying the show…which was really hilarious. I can’t wait for more of that!" Would you agree that comedy and music are ways to escape the crazy world we live in? When you're not on the road, what do you do to keep yourself busy? Any hobbies? "I think comedy, music, and theatre are not only ways to escape the crazy world, but a great way to observe and comment on the crazy world. Hobbies?? I’m just trying to hustle and pay the bills! But, when I do have time to sort of relax, I love reading and cuddling with my cat. I get really obsessed with documentaries on Netflix…especially murder mystery ones. I have a lot of great friends in New York that I try to catch up with when in town and make them cook for me. I did try to get into cooking, but that didn’t last long. I hate following recipes and I don’t find it relaxing. Maybe I should take up knitting?" When growing up were there any musicians and / or comedians you looked up to? How did you get into music, comedy and acting? "As a kid, I loved musicals. I was a big Patti LuPone fan! I loved Judy Garland in the Wizard of Oz and then as I got older I loved Judy Garland in everything. I’ve always been obsessed with Bette Midler and Carol Burnett. When I was in high school and then college, I got into comedy. I became a big fan of Margaret Cho and Sarah Silverman. And I will always be grateful that I got to see Joan Rivers perform live in NYC before she passed away. What a legend!" Aside from the Fringe, what are your plans for the year ahead? "I’ve got a fall residency ahead at Joe’s Pub at The Public in NYC and will also be taking #Thirsty to a couple cities in the US like Boston. I have a Christmas tour in the UK for my show “Vodka is the Reason for the Season” and hopefully a tour for #Thirsty in 2019! And at some point in between all of that, I hope to have a personal life!!" Tori Scott Is #Thirsty is at the Underbelly, Bristo Square, 10:15pm throughout August http://itstoriscott.com / TWITTER: @ItsToriScott Ed Byrne has been an acclaimed stand-up (with audiences and critics alike) for 20 years now. His success with shows such as the Roaring Forties, Different Class and the 1998 Perrier-nominated A Night At The Opera led to him appearing on the box in the diverse likes of Mock The Week, Father Ted, The One Show and All Star Mr & Mrs, while his love of hillwalking resulted in him writing a regular column for The Great Outdoors magazine. In fact, his love of natural history has crossed into television with appearances on The One Show (abseiling in Snowdonia), Countryfile (climbing Sgùrr Dearg, the ‘inaccessible pinnacle’ on Skye) and presenting items on Volcano Live (BBC). He is also co-host of the highly acclaimed Dara & Ed’s Big Adventure and follow up Dara & Ed’s Road To Mandalay, both on BBC 2. As he prepares to launch himself upon the nation with another touring show, the Irish comic is firmly of a belief that the current breed of parents spoil their kids rotten whether it’s to do with the ever-increasing size of garden trampolines, or his own kids’ demand for elderflower cordial. “My dad wasn’t a bad dad, he was just a 1970s dad. I could never see my children ever again from this moment on, and I’ve already done more parenting then he did in my entire life. But, of course, I made a conscious decision that I was going to be an awesome dad. My wife will come back with tales from her friends of how awful their husbands are and she’ll see me smiling and say ‘alright, stop congratulating yourself just because such and such can’t be left alone with their children for two minutes’.” In his new touring show, the perfectly-titled Spoiler Alert, Ed compares and contrasts the old-school child-rearing days with 21st century methods and suggests that there are different ways to learn how to be a mum or dad. “I grew up in what I would call an aspirational household in that my parents bettered themselves over the course of my childhood. My mother was a radiographer and ended up a lecturer in radiography, while my dad was a sheet metal worker and went up to a supervisory role. I’d still say that you are expected to do a lot more parenting than our parents did and that’s a weird thing because you tend to think that your parents are where you learned parenting from. But you don’t, really, it’s more that you look around you to see what’s going on with other parents.” For the show Ed extends his analysis on the culture of entitlement to look at areas where we could perhaps do with being spoiled a little bit more. “Where I think we’re not acting spoiled enough is in the political arena. We have a tendency to accept what’s happening and that’s where we should be acting more entitled: we are literally entitled to the government we want. We’re spoiled in all these little ways, but not spoiled enough.” As well as stories about his two young sons, Ed weaves in routines about running out of petrol in the most awkward place imaginable, helping rescue an injured man in the Cairngorms, and the nation-dividing campaign and result of the EU referendum. His way of tackling Brexit is to draw an analogy with the time his son was determined to touch an electric fence with his dad trying to warn him of the dangers. “I was telling the story of the electric fence for a while, and then suddenly it struck me that it was Brexit in microcosm. I don’t want to alienate half of the population or maybe a third of my audience, but it works as an analogy whichever side you’re on. The government told you not to do this and that it would be a terrible idea, but you said ‘no, we want to do it anyway’. So now we’re doing it and it’s proving a terrible idea. I do think it’s a fair analogy, but no doubt for some it will come across as me being a typical liberal elite Remoaner.” Spoiler Alert also continues a theme that he’s tackled in previous shows, that of his gradual shift from being a working-class Dubliner to a fully paid-up rural-residing member of the middle classes. Where once he would do routines slating 4x4 owners, he is now the proud(ish) owner of such a vehicle. And in the poster for his tour, he brandishes other signifiers of social mobility: a bowtie and chainsaw. “It’s one of two I own: that one is the smaller of the two,” Ed remarks of his chainsaw rather than his neckwear. “I use it for firewood, both for my wood burning stove and also for the barbecue. The first time I used one I was fine, though I think it worried my parents that I had bought a chainsaw.” Having premiered Spoiler Alert at the Edinburgh Fringe and used the month of August to hone the show, it is fully ready to go. “Being on stage is enjoyable and this part of the writing process is enjoyable. The empty page though is a scary thing. On the first leg of the tour l’ll do about an hour and 15 minutes, plus I’ll have a support act. I keep a tour diary now of places where the curries are disappointing and where they are good and where audiences have been good before.” With such an extensive series of dates ahead, chances are Ed Byrne will be coming to a town near you soon. Go and spoil yourself. A list of tour dates can be found here:- http://edbyrne.com/live-dates/ https://www.facebook.com/Ed.Byrne.Comedian/ http://edbyrne.com/ |