Joz Norris, Benjamin Alborough, John-Luke Roberts to record specials
Online comedy store and DVD production house Go Faster Stripe has organised a day of comedy special recordings at Moth Club in London on Sunday 16th July, featuring shows by some of the UK's most acclaimed alternative comedians.
The day of show recordings will begin at 2pm and finish at 10pm, with tickets to each individual show priced at £5.50, or an all-day ticket to all four shows available at the discounted price of £16.50. Tickets
The full details of the day's schedule is as follows:
2pm - Terry Wogan Screams
Terry Wogan has returned from Hell to revive his light entertainment career. They tried to stop him but they couldn't. Wogan (Benjamin Alborough) attempts to revolutionise the game show format while being supported by shiny floor comedian Sean Morley. No-one really knows what's going on.
4pm - Joz Norris: Blink
Former comedian-turned-legendary magician Joz Norris has perfected the hardest magic trick of all time - making an entire audience think, and blink, in unison. With the help of his glamourous assistant Ben Target, he's got absolutely everything figured out this time. Nothing can possibly go wrong. One of the Evening Standard's top comedy shows of 2022.
7pm - Joz Norris Is Dead. Long Live Mr Fruit Salad
Joz Norris has retired, or possibly died, who cares? All that matters is that Mr Fruit Salad, a fictional chimaera he created as a form of self-care, has developed autonomy and is putting on a solo show. An absurdist meditation on anxiety and grief performed by an idiot from Pontefract who doesn't exist. Winner of the Comedians' Choice Award for Best Show 2019. Nominated for the Malcolm Hardee Award for Comic Originality and the Chortle Award for Best Music & Variety Act.
9pm - John-Luke Roberts: A World Just Like Our Own, But...
There's a world just like our own, but there isn't a word for sand. There's a world just like our own, but the keys on pianos are in random order so pianists really have to work for it. There's a world just like our own, but Edith Piaf regretted five things. An Edinburgh Festival sell-out hit, John-Luke Roberts presents a show about all the worlds we don't live in, which is sneakily about the one we do.