Press clippings Page 26
Single White Slut
The slut in the hut, Tim Key chats to The Skinny about fitting in, magnum opuses and returning to Edinburgh.
Vonny Moyes, The Skinny, 5th August 2014Interview: Nick Helm and Tim Key
The comedians discuss the Fringe, larger room and post-film & TV success.
Jo Caird, The List, 31st July 2014Tim Key: poet without a plan
Since winning the Edinburgh Comedy Award, Tim Key has managed that rare feat of marrying mainstream success with uncompromising innovation. But, as he tells Sam Friedman, there is no grand vision.
Sam Friedman, Fest Mag, 25th July 201410 of the best Latitude Festival's comedy & other acts
Latitude Festival is more than a music festival, with a wealth of comedy, dance and poetry on offer. Here are 10 which look set to be highlights this year. Includes Dara O'Briain, Robin Ince, Tim Key, Josie Long, Simon Amstell and Henning Wehn.
Sam Russell, The Eastern Daily Press, 8th July 2014Tim Key interview
The stand-up on leaving crowds bemused, his fear of hubris - and why he had to stop playing squash.
Laura Barnett, The Observer, 6th July 2014The Tim Key three minute interview
Following two sold-out London runs, a sold-out award-nominated trip to the Melbourne Comedy Festival, and a third London stint in the West End
Martin Walker, Broadway Baby, 26th June 2014The Dog Thrower misfired on almost every level. Continuing its policy of recruiting big-name actors to its small-scale dramas, the programme cast former Friends star Matthew Perry as the eponymous canine trainer/tormentor.
We first meet Perry in the park launching and catching his pet spaniel. At first, the spectacle attracts a curious and appreciative crowd, and even an imitator in the form of Tim Key and his mongrel. But an unscrupulous local journalist twists the story, turning their fame to infamy, and the pair of dog throwers quickly become social pariahs.
So full marks to writer and director Jon Ronson for originality. However, the decision to pare the dialogue down to an almost silent movie-minimum rendered the narrative incomprehensible, the humour clouded and the characters' motivations baffling. It was a gimmick that backfired disastrously, and that certainly wasted Perry's considerable screen charisma and comedy skills.
But, on a more positive note, The Dog Thrower did go some way to make amends by ending upon a very funny, and totally unexpected, visual gag.
Harry Venning, The Stage, 6th May 2014Penned by Jon Ronson, this opening episode of Playhouse Presents is a quirky silent comedy about, well, dog throwing. Tim Key puts his outsider comic skills to good use as Jonah, a dog walker who observes Matthew Perry's "Charismatic Man" tossing his hound into the air and receiving a rapturous response from a gathering crowd. Jonah, after the same adoration, starts doing the same with his canine Floppy, but things, inevitably, don't quite go to plan. Kimberley Nixon also stars.
Gwilym Mumford, The Guardian, 1st May 2014Preview: The Dog Thrower, Sky Arts 1
The Dog Thrower is very funny. Of course it is. It's got Tim Key in it.
Bruce Dessau, Beyond The Joke, 1st May 20142014 Barry Award nominees announced
The nominations for this year's Barry Award at the Melbourne International Comedy Festival have been announced with a diverse mix of comedic styles making up the shortlist. The seven nominees are (alphabetical order) The Boy with Tape on His Face, Celia Pacquola, Denise Scott, John Kearns, Kraken by Trygve Wakenshaw, Kyle Kinane, Tim Key.
Craig Platt, Sydney Morning Herald, 13th April 2014