The Scotsman

Comedy fans left happy as Larry

- Ho Ho Hogmanay Assembly Rooms, Edinburgh Jay Richardson

A canny addition to Edinburgh’s New Year celebratio­ns, the inaugural Ho Ho Hogmanay comedy night could boast three bona fide Scottish headliners, plus Emmanuel Sonubi hosting. A former bouncer, he knows how to read a room and raised energy levels by badgering young men in the front rows into escalating displays of applause for the acts.

Admirably choosing a Yuletide and local flavour for her set, Susie Mccabe’s opening Christmas gripes perhaps weren’t as polished as her usual standard of anecdote. Yet she successful­ly conveyed the terror of attending the nativities of no less than 12 godchildre­n. More compelling was her account of her newly-wedded stay at the nearby Balmoral Hotel, playing up her working-class unworldlin­ess encounteri­ng such luxury, with her flabbergas­ted incredulit­y remaining just the right side of faux-naivety.

Slightly unfortunat­ely, she finished on a developing routine about her wife’s insistence that she might be autistic, echoing the next act, Larry Dean, whose boyfriends have made similar diagnoses of him. Putting two gay, Catholic comics with the same potential neurodiver­sity adjacent wasn't perhaps the shrewdest programmin­g. Happily, they are such strikingly distinctiv­e performers that it was less of an issue than it could have been, with the latter’s cartoonish act outs, wired oddness and irrepressi­ble cheekiness making him the hit of the evening.

Up last, Macaulay delivered his usual waggish example of retaining your mischievou­sness even as your faculties fail, seeking out foreign audience members to educate them on Scottish culture and politics. Though possibly a little too mean on a couple of American students, his protestati­ons about the wider social impact of pubic hair falling out of fashion is a terrifical­ly daft bit of feigned horror.

 ?? ?? Larry Dean: irrepressi­ble
Larry Dean: irrepressi­ble

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom