Molly Stewart
- Actor
Press clippings Page 2
Latitude Festival comedy review: Tim Key
Tim Key is back peddling his shambolic recitals in Latitude's Poetry tent, ruing the organisers who 'don't know where to put him' and solemnly vowing in passing to make it to the comedy arena at some point.
Molly Stewart, Giggle Beats, 19th July 2015Latitude Festival comedy review: Lolly Adefope
Lolly Adefope - character comedian of your dreams - won an unwitting audience over immediately with her fabulously direct characterisation of people not necessarily likable but almost overly believable.
Molly Stewart, Giggle Beats, 17th July 2015Latitude Festival comedy review: Sarah Kendall
Australian comic Sarah Kendall scooped up the Comedy Arena's afternoon crowd with a goofy, shoulder-shrug of a set in the dense heat of Latitude Festival's first full day.
Molly Stewart, Giggle Beats, 17th July 2015Latitude Festival comedy review: Pat Cahill
Pat Cahill is a comedian who is almost more performer than comic, so full is his set with more than just straight forward jokes - costume (of sorts), music, visual gags with a microphone cable and a sexual word-play laden act out to a descriptive engineering track.
Molly Stewart, Giggle Beats, 17th July 2015Review: Invisible Dot Cabaret, Manchester
It was maybe a little bit contentious that The Invisible Dot - boutique King's Cross comedy producers - were the kingmakers of comedy at the Manchester International Festival; some argued (in small corners of the internet) that it was a dull and predictable shame that Manchester's own comedy talent was sidelined.
Molly Stewart, Giggle Beats, 12th July 2015Andrew Maxwell interview
Clever, cutting Irish stand-up Andrew Maxwell returned from a 12th year at Glastonbury and spoke to us about the brilliance of the Edinburgh Fringe, the importance of satire and the seemingly inexhaustible list of festivals he's yet to play this year...
Molly Stewart, Giggle Beats, 10th July 2015Review: Red Redmond
Red Redmond's debut stand-up DVD is a warm, smart and wholly loveable fifty minutes from an amazingly personable comic.
Molly Stewart, Giggle Beats, 1st July 2015Review: Simon Munnery Sings Søren Kierkegaard
Without wanting to sound vague or pretentious, it's as though Simon Munnery treads a line between calm, quiet storytelling and excited buoyance. His delivery is relaxed and methodical, while being fast, constant and almost giddy.
Molly Stewart, Giggle Beats, 9th May 2015Review: Andrew O'Neill's History of Heavy Metal
Andrew O'Neill's History of Heavy Metal is confusing, at first: set out more like a music gig, with a band (three quarters of Reprisal) and we, the audience, stood for the entire thing. This is like no comedy gig I've been to before. But this is Andrew O'Neill, and everything he does seems to work so well, so easily.
Molly Stewart, Giggle Beats, 3rd May 2015Review: MACE's all-female comedy night
Dead Cat Comedy here produced a night of fantastic comedy entertainment, with four brilliant Manchester acts who delivered smart, sharp and wholly brilliant stuff: the acts just also happened to be women.
Molly Stewart, Giggle Beats, 2nd May 2015