Press clippings Page 5
Fringe Q&As: Tom Neenan
Tom Neenan on Ozzy Osborne and his rider.
The Herald, 28th August 2015Stage time: Fringe sci-fi from Tom Neenan (Link expired)
Talented comic wordsmith Tom Neenan merges his extraordinary knowledge of both Sci-fi and comedy in this short story based around the Fringe.
Tom Neenan, WOW247, 24th August 2015'Better than a million cat videos'
Tom Neenan chooses his comedy favourites.
Tom Neenan, Chortle, 18th August 2015Interview: Tom Neenan, The Andromeda Paradox
A chat with Tom Neenan.
Alice Carr, The Public Reviews, 18th August 2015Five fast Fringe questions with... Tom Neenan
A quick interview with Tom Neenan.
The Public Reviews, 27th July 2015Tom Neenan: The incident at the Half Moon Inn
As we head into this final weekend of Fringe madness, how about we sit back, relax for a few minutes, and share some ghost stories?
Tom Neenan, ThreeWeeks, 22nd August 2014The Tom Neenan three minute interview
When widower Leopold Clarke is sent to investigate sinister goings on at Lopham House he has no idea of the horrors that await him. Spines will be tingled and gooses bumped this Edinburgh Festival Fringe in this hilariously chilling, Edwardian ghost story from Tom Neenan.
Martin Walker, Broadway Baby, 24th July 2014The Spotlight on ... Gentlemen of Leisure
Never mind Newsnight Review, if you want incisive cultural commentary, turn to double-act Gentlemen of Leisure, aka BBC Radio writer Tom Neenan and Nish Kumar. They ask all the big questions, such as: is the novel dead, or just sleeping? If it is dead, who killed it?
London Is Funny, 14th April 2011Two young comics are to assume what I can only describe as "close to the bone" comedic alter-egos as bumbling and inept arts correspondents for the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, I'm told. Nish Kumar and Tom Neenan, who are avid fans of Newsnight Review and The Culture Show on television, are not exactly satirising the presenters and the acts that appear on such shows, but only gently "ribbing" them, Kumar says. The act, Gentlemen of Leisure, will feature such imaginary performance troupes as the Reduced Dickens Company (could this possibly have been inspired by the Reduced Shakespeare Company?) who rap the entire plot of A Tale of Two Cities. Another sketch involves a politically motivated dance troupe called Dystopia, who are "completely obsessed with the onset of robot attacks". Kumar says that, while it is not straightforward satire, it is what might happen "when the wrong people present these shows". Arts correspondents be warned. Their show is at GRV in Edinburgh from today.
Arifa Akbar, The Independent, 6th August 2010