British Comedy Guide
Paul Sinha
Paul Sinha

Paul Sinha

  • 54 years old
  • English
  • Actor, writer and stand-up comedian

Press clippings Page 17

Why won't the broadsheets review The Stand?

The broadsheet comedy critics have no excuse. It is their job to offer an accurate assessment of comedy shows at the Edinburgh Fringe. If they are almost completely ignoring the shows at the Stand, then they are failing to do their job.

Paul Sinha, 17th August 2011

Half time report

If the Fringe is a marathon not a sprint, then I'm at the 15 mile mark feeling exhilaration and exhaustion in equal measure.

Paul Sinha, 17th August 2011

Interview: Paul Sinha, comedian (Link expired)

Paul Sinha is British-Asian, "openly gay" (his phrase), a qualified doctor, a stand-up comedian with a show at the Fringe and one of Britain's top quizzers - a skill which has just got him his own TV slot.

Brian Pendreigh, The Scotsman, 11th August 2011

Paul Sinha, Britain's most famous gay Hindu GP stand-up, stars and writes in this special one-off show about cricket and national identity, a week before the next test series between England and India.

This was inspired by "The Tebbit Test", when in April 1990 Norman Tebbit said that immigrants who came to live in England that did not support the England cricket team, but instead supported the team of their home land, were not patriotic. Sinha, along with what he claims is the entire immigrant population of England, supports the team of his parents home land, India.

The stand-up looks at the various conflicting issues with regards to supporting India in cricket, but supporting England in football and other sports. Part of the reason for this being that while India excel in cricket, they tend not to excel in almost every other sport (except kabaddi).

Highlights for me include what Sinha refers to as "My mum and dad's dinner party story" in which India had to bat for two days solid in order to save the series, and by the time Sinha's parents arrived at the ground that morning India has already lost. There is also the story of Sinha getting tickets to see the 1983 Cricket World Cup from his head teacher who smugly said that India would not be there. India won the final, beating England in the semi.

Sinha's conclusion is that we love to support the underdog, a notion I can appreciate. I support Middlesbrough F.C., partly because I'm from Teesside, partly out of a sense of duty due to the fact my parents first met at a Boro game, but also due to the fact that I, and I suspect the majority of Boro fans as well, are secretly fond of the fact that Middlesbrough is somewhat rubbish.

We will never admit it in public, but we all secretly proud of the fact we are over-polluted, mostly poor, and have a food dish - a parmo - which has Scotsmen looking at envy going: "Bloody hell, that can give you a coronary with just one bite - and it hasn't even been deep fried!"

Ian Wolf, Giggle Beats, 18th July 2011

The comedian Paul Sinha observed in The Sinha Test, "cricket is the complete works of Shakespeare to baseball's The Only Way Is Essex". As an Englishman he's biased. In fact, as an Englishman who supports the Indian cricket team he's biased.

The programme's title referred to the famous Tebbit Test - which cricket team do Asian Brits support? Sinha made clear that for him, the team you follow has nothing to do with nationality: it's all about the sport. He supports England footballers, but because his parents supported India's cricketers, so did he.

There were good jokes and some nice stories. He remembered England vs Turkey at football, when the home fans struck up a chorus of "I'd rather be a Paki than a Turk". His dad started crying, and said: "Finally, after 35 years of hard work, we're off the bottom rung."

Chris Maume, The Independent, 17th July 2011

In the Midlands Arts Centre, near Edgbaston Cricket Ground, on practically the eve of the Test Match series against India, Paul Sinha talks about being British-Asian and a cricket fan. Remember Norman Tebbitt's famous test question: which team does he support? India, actually, because it was the team his family (who came to England in 1968) supported. This really is a splendid programme, with well-observed quips about allegiances, sport, society, families. A sociologist and a former Test cricketer offer back-up thoughts but this is a top Sinha innings.

Gillian Reynolds, The Telegraph, 13th July 2011

An interview with Paul Sinha

Paul Sinha is someone who you probably know as a comedian, although he may have saved your life if you were in a hospital in London or King's Lynn in the late '90s, as a junior doctor.

The Humourdor, 10th July 2011

My comedy hero: Paul Sinha on Daniel Kitson

Comedian salutes talent and supreme ambition of friend and hero.

Paul Sinha, The List, 28th June 2011

Paul Sinha: Inside Stewart Lee's vehicle

I was utterly delighted to be asked to do the show being a massive fan not just of Stewart Lee, but also of the first series.

Paul Sinha, 12th May 2011

Paul Sinha: Barrymore gig report

He was stone cold sober. It is interesting that a complete stranger tweeting about Barrymore has constituted news, when simply asking any of the comics who were there would have provided a very different description. It wasn't a meltdown, it was just a poor gig.

Paul Sinha, 28th March 2011

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