British Comedy Guide
Please donate to help support British comedy at all levels. Thank you. Find out more

Steve Bennett (I)

  • Journalist and reviewer

Press clippings Page 57

Elf Lyons: Love Songs To Guinea Pigs review

Her move from the absurd to the personal, without abandoning the sense of silliness that defined the former, can certainly be deemed a success.

Steve Bennett, Chortle, 30th September 2019

Frayed review

Once Frayed's premise is finally established, it offers plenty of to suggest this is worth sticking with.

Steve Bennett, Chortle, 26th September 2019

Review: Clinton Baptiste in the Paranormalist Returns

There's a thin line between a spoof of a cheesy low-rent entertainer and the real thing, and Alex Lowe - the man behind Baptiste's bouffant - too often finds himself of the wrong side.

Steve Bennett, Chortle, 23rd September 2019

Funny Women final 2019 review

With so much of today's best comedy, especially on TV, coming from women, it seems more ridiculous than ever to think of female-led comedy as a sub-genre. And judging by the impressively strong final in this year's Funny Women award, there are plenty more talented comics waiting in the traps to keep redressing the industry's historic gender imbalance.

Steve Bennett, Chortle, 20th September 2019

Review - Eddie Izzard: Wunderbar

Wunderbar genuinely swoops from the sublime to the ridiculous. How many comics will namecheck a specific gene as well as mime a suspicious seagull?

Steve Bennett, Chortle, 19th September 2019

TV review: Comedians Giving Lectures

It's a fun and diverting half-hour of post-Taskmaster entertainment.

Steve Bennett, Chortle, 18th September 2019

TV review: Defending The Guilty

Given the Supreme Court deliberations are dominating the news today, this is either the best or worst day to launch a comedy about lawyers.

Steve Bennett, Chortle, 17th September 2019

Review - Romesh Ranganathan: The Cynic's Mixtape

Romesh Ranganathan has quickly supplanted Jack Dee as comedy's favourite grouch.

Steve Bennett, Chortle, 16th September 2019

Review: Perfect Sound Whatever, by James Acaster

James Acaster's second book covers the same annus horriblis as his current, brilliant tour show Cold Lasagne Hate Myself 1999 - but with more about the music of 2016. A lot more.

Steve Bennett, Chortle, 12th September 2019

Review: Scarborough

When Scarborough was announced, it seemed to have a lot in common with creator Derren Litten's long-running hit Benidorm, being set in a seaside resort town with a cast of working-class characters united by a love of karaoke. But they show two very different iterations of the same broad premise.

Steve Bennett, Chortle, 7th September 2019

Share this page