Skip to main content
An excellent night of alternative comedy
'We’re a long way from Live At The Apollo and interchangeable telly panel shows here, and I mean that in the best possible way,' writes JAMES WALSH
winner

Sketch Off Final
Leicester Square Festival, London

 

DESPITE the crisis in the arts, Britain has a never-ending supply of fresh weirdos. Some come straight from their university improv clubs, and some are doing their recovery in public after a year of being brutalised at infamous French clowning school Gaulier.

And some are here because their anarchic spirit allows them to belong nowhere else.

And many end up in the heats of Sketch Off, a competition dominated by character comedians, with the odd sketch act who surprise everyone by actually winning on occasion, like last year’s Burger + a Pint, who reprise their joyously stupid skits here while the judges make up their minds.

Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
prop1
Books / 3 December 2024
3 December 2024
MICHAL BONCZA recommends a compact volume that charts the art of propagating ideas across the 20th century
Cairokee
Gig review / 5 May 2024
5 May 2024
MICHAL BONCZA reviews Cairokee gig at the London Barbican
triple
Culture / 29 April 2024
29 April 2024
women poster 1
Opinion / 15 March 2024
15 March 2024
MICHAL BONCZA rounds up a series of images designed to inspire women
Similar stories
double
Theatre review / 29 January 2025
29 January 2025
MARY CONWAY applauds a study of comedians in whose cheap prejudice the tenets of the emerging political right are crystal clear
12th night
Theatre Review / 13 December 2024
13 December 2024
SIMON PARSONS questions whether a dark take on Shakespeare’s Seasonal comedy is in harmony with the original text
almo
Books / 8 November 2024
8 November 2024
ALAN McGUIRE recommends an autobiography that is an intriguing mix of short stories and personal sketches
hillbillies
Theatre review / 4 June 2024
4 June 2024
SYLVIA HIKINS appreciates the story of a working-class lottery win that had her laughing from start to finish