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Edinburgh Comedy Fest Live. Copyright: Open Mike Productions
Edinburgh Comedy Fest Live

Edinburgh Comedy Fest Live

  • TV stand-up
  • BBC Three
  • 2010 - 2014
  • 10 episodes (5 series)

Stand-up recorded at the Edinburgh Fringe. Kevin Bridges, Adam Hills, Shappi Khorsandi, Jon Richardson, Andi Osho, Seann Walsh, Josh Widdicombe host. Stars Kevin Bridges, Shaparak Khorsandi, Jon Richardson, Andi Osho, Seann Walsh and more.

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2013, Episode 1

Back for its fourth year, Scotland's finest and funniest, Kevin Bridges, hosts the Edinburgh Comedy Fest Live.

Preview clips

Further details

Edinburgh Comedy Fest Live. Kevin Bridges. Copyright: Open Mike Productions

Kevin introduces some of the biggest names in comedy from this year's Fringe Festival including Russell Kane, Seann Walsh and Jason Byrne. They are joined by Festival favourites and new acts, bringing all the action from the Playhouse in Edinburgh.

Broadcast details

Date
Wednesday 28th August 2013
Time
9pm
Channel
BBC Three
Length
60 minutes

Cast & crew

Cast
Kevin Bridges Host / Presenter
Peter Dickson Announcer
Guest cast
Jason Byrne Guest
Andrew Lawrence Guest
Tom Stade Guest
Neil Delamere Guest
Seann Walsh Guest
Russell Kane Guest
Charlie Baker Guest
Roisin Conaty Guest
Gary Delaney Guest
Ivo Graham Guest
Production team
Paul Wheeler Director
Rose Hanson Series Producer
Addison Cresswell Executive Producer
Joe Norris Executive Producer
Andrew Beint Executive Producer
Alan Tyler Executive Producer
Steve Andrews Editor
Colin Pigott Production Designer
Damian Coldwell Composer

Videos

Kevin Bridges opens the show

Kevin Bridges jokes about the weather and finds out where the audience are from.

Featuring: Kevin Bridges.

Press

For those who couldn't make it to Edinburgh for the feast of comedy served at the recent Fringe festival, here's the next best thing. Kevin Bridges, no mean comic himself, playing host to the first of two stand-up selections. Russell Kane, Seann Walsh and Jason Byrne are the biggest names but don't miss the chance to catch the deliciously downbeat Andrew Lawrence, an underrated talent who's been known to squeeze laughs out of euthanasia. You'll die laughing.

Carol Carter and Larushka Ivan-Zadeh, Metro, 28th August 2013

TV commissioners must breathe a sigh of relief when the Edinburgh Festival comes around, offering as it does an opportunity for cheap programming with mass appeal. This week offers two such easy wins. On Friday at 10pm, the ubiquitous Seann Walsh introduces the slightly edgier end of popular stand-up at in BBC Three's Late Night Comedy Spectacular, which showcases Tom Rosenthal and The Rubberbandits.

But two-parter Comedy Festival Live 2013 is a more mainstream affair, packed to the gills with familar faces from Mock the Week, Live at the Apollo et al: Jason Byrne, Russell Kane, Andrew Lawrence, Seann Walsh (again)... And all hosted by Kevin Bridges. At some point this televised stand-up bubble will burst. But not for a good while yet, it seems.

Gabriel Tate, Time Out, 28th August 2013

Having recently come back from the Fringe this week I thought to myself: "Do you know what I need? To watch some more stand-up comedy."

BBC Three has been broadcasting a selection of Fringe programmes. One of these is Edinburgh Comedy Fest, hosted by Jon Richardson, featuring a selection of stand-up comedians and musical comedians performing at the Fringe.

Alongside Richardson were Josh Widdicombe, Neil Delamere, Abandoman, Seann Walsh, Mark Watson, Russell Kane, David O'Doherty, Andrew Lawrence, Ron Vaudey, Jimeoin, Tom Stade, Ed Byrne and Shappi Khorsandi. I don't know about you, but to me that seems a bit too much.

This programme only lasted an hour, and there were 14 different acts. On average they performed less than 5 minutes each. Also, as far as I know, Vaudey isn't even performing at the Fringe. What's more, it was not exactly that diverse. Granted there were comedians from abroad (Canadian, Irish, Iranian), but there was only one woman performing and one non-white person performing - and that was the same person.

In this short format, some comedians did come across better than others. Widdicombe, Delamere and O'Doherty got the laughs, while Vaudey seemed to be a bit flat. I think it would've been a better show if there were more episodes that were of a shorter length. And more variety in terms of style of performers and their backgrounds would be nice, too.

Ian Wolf, Giggle Beats, 29th August 2011

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