British Comedy Guide
Kim Noble
Kim Noble

Kim Noble

  • Actor, comedian and writer

Press clippings Page 3

The most memorable comedy gigs of the 2010s

Here Chortle editor Steve Bennett recalls the shows that had the biggest personal impact since 2010.

Steve Bennett, Chortle, 31st December 2019

Art exhibition showcasing work by comedians opens

Art Is The Best Medicine, an exhibition showcasing the artwork of comedians, has opened in London. It runs until 20th December.

British Comedy Guide, 13th December 2019

The 50 best podcasts of 2018

From Julia Davis's dark comedy Dear Joan to track-by-track teardown Dissect, Marc Maron to Meat and beyond, here are this year's finest audio offerings.

Hannah J Davies, Hannah Verdier and Harriet Gibsone, The Guardian, 30th June 2018

Edinburgh Fringe day 12

How to destroy a comedy career & other news.

John Fleming, John Fleming's Blog, 13th August 2017

Opinion: what is stand-up?

What is stand-up comedy? I thought I knew, but I'm starting to wonder.

Bruce Dessau, Beyond The Joke, 19th May 2016

Kim Noble: You're Not Alone review

This is a show of incredibly audacity and bravery and - for all its seeming bleakness - humanity.

Peter Jacobs, The Reviews Hub, 13th March 2016

Kim Noble: You're Not Alone, Soho Theatre - review

A brazen, clever and deeply unsettling study of loneliness and the nature of human existence.

Marni Appleton, Everything Theatre, 18th December 2015

Kim Noble's landmark show about loneliness is back

No one quite does comedy shows like Kim Noble. The stunts he pulls, the lengths he's prepared to go to, the gut-punching emotional impact, the uncompromising honesty about life's dark edges...

London Is Funny, 7th December 2015

Shazia Mirza on Kim Noble

Kim Noble exposes himself on stage - sometimes literally - in an act that is shocking, frightening, unethical and hilarious.

Shazia Mirza, The Guardian, 25th March 2015

Kim Noble: You're Not Alone review

As the title suggests, it's a show about loneliness; specifically the loneliness of men and the things they do to anaesthetise themselves.

Stephanie Merritt, The Guardian, 22nd February 2015

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