British Comedy Guide

Frank Tully

  • Actor

Press clippings Page 49

Interview with Glee club founder Mark Tughan

Glee founder talks Michael McIntyre, Lee Evans mahem, accidents, launches and deaths.

Paul Cole, The Birmingham Mail, 24th August 2014

Fringe Q&As: David Kaufman of The Cleek

David Kaufman of The Cleek chats to HeraldScotland about being a Harvard student, drinking Irn Bru and a funny taxi driver called Iain.

The Herald, 22nd August 2014

Lee Mack interview

"In television, making a sitcom, you have a team of people around you, and there's a bit of structure in your life," Lee Mack admits. "Touring live means you're driving round eating a pasty at four in the morning at a service station. It's a little bit less conducive to family life."

Ebhan Loughlin, Galway Advertiser, 21st August 2014

Stewart Lee interview

Known for his acerbic wit, 46-year-old writer, comedian, director, producer and musician Stewart Lee lives in London with his wife, fellow comedian Bridget Christie, and their two children.

Belfast Telegraph, 21st August 2014

Lee Evans: Monsters review

There are funny moments in Lee Evans new show, but he should try less hard.

Dominic Cavendish, The Telegraph, 19th August 2014

Josie Cunningham begging Keith Lemon to sleep with her

Josie Cunningam is STILL begging Keith Lemon to sleep with her, despite him pleading with fans for a second time to stop tweeting him about her.

Almost five days after Josie first asked the Celebrity Juice host to sleep with him in return for her "disappearing from all media", she's asked him once again if he'd be up for it.

Zoe Shenton, The Mirror, 7th August 2014

Stewart Lee & Richard Herring: how we made Fist of Fun

Richard Herring: 'We got a lot of saucy letters. And someone even sent in a Brian May made out of liquorice'.

Laura Barnett, The Guardian, 5th August 2014

Review: Stewart Lee on Kevin Eldon's new book

'An opinionated, ignorant, and largely talentless intellectual snob'

Stewart Lee, Chortle, 5th August 2014

Stewart Lee: I'm finding it very, very hard to be funny

"Don't those responsible for atrocities understand I have deadlines to meet?" Stewart Lee on why stand-up is the world's hardest job.

Stewart Lee, The Big Issue, 5th August 2014

Fleeting pleasures

Hugely popular at the Fringe, improvised comedy is de facto banned from the Festival's main award. Tom Hackett asks why.

Tom Hackett, Fest Mag, 3rd August 2014

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