Category Archives: featured

Somewhere Over The David O’Doherty **** ‘The Skinny’

Bernard O’Leary of ‘The Skinny‘ reviewed David’s fantastic new show. Here is what he had to say.


David O’Doherty has come equipped with fascinating animal facts, mainly taken from his book 100 Facts About Pandas. He points out that he’s not a qualified zoologist, something which seems obvious to the huge crowd at the Pleasance, but was not so apparent to several book reviewers.

O’Doherty is now a Fringe legend and the festival is not complete without catching one of his gigs. There’s no ego on display, however. His opening lightshow consists of him holding a torch, his keyboard is still his battered 1986 Yamaha and the man himself remains a loveable emo dork.

The routine is what everyone has come to expect: free-wheeling whimsy, trivial nonsense, improvised songs and the reading of more fake panda trivia. The heartbreaking story of the running of the pandas at Pamplona brings a tear to the eye.

O’Doherty frequently compares himself to people with real jobs and describes his job as useless, but the satisfied crowd would probably disagree. The world needs more of what he has to offer.

David O’Doherty is performing his show ‘Somewhere Over The David O’Doherty’ at 10.20 in Pleasance One for the duration of the festival. You can buy tickets here.

Des Bishop ‘My Dad Was Nearly James Bond’ ***** (one4review)

Another fantastic review for Des Bishops powerful new show, posted by one4review.

Des Bishop – My Dad Was Nearly James Bond

*****

5 Stars


Irish-American comedian Des Bishop was born in London to an English father and Irish mother. He was raised in Queens, New York until the age of 14 when he was kicked out of school and sent to boarding school in Ireland. This complicated upbringing has provided plenty of material for Bishop in the past and continues to do so with devastating effectiveness.

Not only did Bishop have a complicated upbringing (the show touches on his alcohol and drug problems as a teenager, and discovering he had testicular cancer at the age of 24), but he also grew up with a father who had small roles in several films and commercials, and a successful career as a model before becoming a retail manager in several big New York department stores in order to support his wife and three sons.

When Bishop’s father was diagnosed with Stage 4 small cell lung cancer recently it gave the eldest Bishop son (his younger brother Aiden also has a show at the Fringe this year) cause to reflect on his childhood and the career his father gave up to support his family; the peak of which was when, as the show title suggests, he narrowly missed out on the role of James Bond which was won by George Lazenby.

The show is fast paced, passionate, touching and hilarious. Des’ interaction and banter with the near sell out crowd is effortless and only adds to the friendly atmosphere in the room, even when giving sex advice to a 19 year old boy sitting in the front row with his family! The show is also accompanied by film clips and photos projected behind Bishop and these effectively add to the story being told.

This was the first show of this Fringe that has managed to make me laugh until I cried and then moments later bring a genuinely emotional tear to my eye. As I mentioned after seeing Des Bishop’s Fringe show last year, he is a household name in Ireland where he still lives and he certainly deserves the same success this side of the Irish Sea.

Reviewed by Sarah

Tickets are available from Assembly@George Street or online.

‘My Dad Was Nearly James Bond’ **** Metro

Damon Smith from ‘The Metro‘ reviewed Des Bishop’s new show. Here is what he thought.

My Dad Was Nearly James Bond: Des Bishop ****

The name’s Bishop, Des Bishop.

‘I know there are Protestants here, I can smell them,’ grins Des Bishop. It’s a pleasantly familiar jibe from the stand-up who was brought up in New York and moved to Ireland at the age of 14.

His fans, who supported him through his brush with testicular cancer in 2000, lap it up. However, this year’s Fringe excursion isn’t the usual bombardment. It’s the show of a lifetime, or more specifically his father’s lifetime as he salutes the seemingly indestructible man who could have beaten George Lazenby to one of cinema’s defining roles.

Opening with a clip from the classic 1964 film Zulu, in which Mike Bishop played the pivotal role of Surgeon’s Assistant No 3, My Dad Was Nearly James Bond is a warm and affectionate tribute to the model turned actor who was diagnosed with stage four lung cancer last year and continues to battle the disease with dignity.

Des says that he has never had so much fun writing a show and the love for his old man shines through, beginning with a potted history of the formative Bishop years- ‘My father is English, my mother Irish, so I was born to hate myself’- before showing a clip of a television advertisement for tobacco starring Mike that seems unconscionable in the current age of smoke-free political correctness.

At one point, Des jokes, ‘If there was an Emotional Olympics, Ireland would be in the special one,’ but he is evidently letting down his countrymen and women because he talks with heartfelt emotion, before he reveals his father’s escapades with the infamous Black Bob. The closing minutes deliver an emotional kick that almost knocks us off our feet for a richly deserved standing ovation.

Des Bishop is playing at the Assembly@George Street until August 29th. You can buy tickets here.