Edinburgh Comedy Awards winners | reviews, news & interviews
Edinburgh Comedy Awards winners
Edinburgh Comedy Awards winners
Saturday, 27 August 2011
The winners of the 2011 Foster's Edinburgh Comedy Awards have been announced. The main award, worth £10,000, went to Adam Riches for his anarchic and intensely physical show Bring Me the Head of Adam Riches; the best newcomer award, worth £5,000, went to Humphrey Ker for Dymack Watson: Nazi Smasher!, a tall tale woven from his grandfather's real-life wartime exploits as an intelligence officer sent behind enemy lines.
The special panel award, also worth £5,000, went to The Wrestling, a one-off event during which 20 comics engaged in wrestling bouts with professional wrestlers.
- Adam Riches: Bring Me the Head of Adam Riches
- Andrew Maxwell: The Lights Are On
- Chris Ramsey: Offermation
- Josie Long: The Future is Another Place
- Nick Helm: Dare to Dream
- Sam Simmons: Meanwhile
The nominations for Best Newcomer 2011 were:
- Cariad Lloyd: Lady Cariad’s Characters ·
- The Chris and Paul Show
- Hannibal Buress: My Name is Hannibal: The Hannibal Montanabal Experience
- Holly Walsh: The Hollycopter
- Humphrey Ker is Dymock Watson: Nazi Smasher!
- Josh Widdicombe: If This Show Saves One Life
- Thom Tuck: Thom Tuck Goes Straight to DVD
- Totally Tom
more Comedy
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Tom Walker in a bravura display
Spencer Jones: Making Friends, Soho Theatre review - award-winning comedian mines his post-lockdown escape to the country
If big chickens scare you, this is your thing!
Six Chick Flicks, Leicester Square Theatre review - funny, frenetic and feminist spoof
Whip-smart parody of the genre
Pierre Novellie, Soho Theatre review - turning a heckle into a show
Thoughtful take on neurodivergence
Catherine Bohart, Soho Theatre review - girlfriends, gossip and gay parenthood
Full-throttle show from Irish comic
Miles Jupp, Cambridge Arts Theatre review - life's vicissitudes turned into laughs
Finding the funny in medical emergency
Andy Parsons, Touring review - reasons to be cheerful...
...Even if the country's falling apart
Bill Bailey: Thoughtifier, Brighton Centre review - offbeat adventures with a whirling, erudite mind
Bailey's fusion of studied musicality and off-the-wall wordplay remains one-of-a-kind
Paul Foot, Soho Theatre review - how to discover the meaning of life
Personal show from the absurdist comic
Jessica Fostekew, Soho Theatre review - age is just a number
Landmark birthday prompts some musings
Fascinating Aida, London Palladium review - celebrating 40 glorious years of filth and defiance
Age has not withered one jot the FAs' fury at the absurdities of modern life
Frank Skinner: 30 Years of Dirt, Gielgud Theatre review - a mature master of class-A smut
Has Skinner's act got less dirty over the years, or audiences more so?
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