Tag Archives: EFR25

STAMPTOWN

★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

STAMPTOWN

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★

“Fringe is an excellent space to push boundaries, but to my mind, Stamptown distastefully oversteps them”

Do you remember Rosamund Pike’s ‘Cool Girl’-monologue in Gone Girl (2014), based on Gillian Flynn’s book? The novel explains that the Cool Girl is someone who ‘adores football, poker, dirty jokes, and burping, who plays video games, drinks cheap beer, loves threesomes and anal sex’. Add Stamptown to that list. From the novel: ’Cool Girls never get angry; they only smile in a chagrined, loving manner and let their men do whatever they want’. I’ll confess I really wanted to be a Cool Girl about Stamptown, but the two stars that top this review are a testament to my shortcomings. An infamous staple of the Edinburgh Fringe, Stamptown provokes in all the wrong ways.

The show’s bad boy ringleader is the American Jack Tucker (real name Zach Zucker), who displays remarkable energy amidst the chaos. He is mostly unfazed by the flurry around him (every ten minutes or so, a group of about 15 men burst onto the stage and dance like they are in a 2016-Justin Bieber music video), and the only thing that breaks him out of his showman’s haze are frequent gunshot sound effects that leave random performers around him lying face-down on the floor. Charming and self-deprecating, Tucker’s jokes are disjointed but derive their humour from the fast pace at which he fires them at the audience. Given that their punchline is often a sound effect, the tech team (led by director Jonny Woolley) does a stellar job at keeping up with him.

Tucker is joined by a whole host of performers. It is tempting to describe rather than analyse the acts because Stamptown clearly resists interpretation. On this particular night, the show includes the able juggler Joe Fisher and a number of comedians. Martin Urbano manages to joke about femicide, domestic violence, and child pornography within about a minute. Be a Cool Girl I think, misogyny is funny, right? Every once in a while, a giant called Cory Peter Lane comes on stage and bashes a can with a hammer, spraying the beer in the general direction of his mouth. Guitarist Bonavega, dressed only in bright neon yellow hotpants, makes out with a bemused Jack Tucker, at which point the host’s hysterical partner/last night’s prostitute (Erin Farrington) makes an entrance. She’s the ‘don’t you hate it when your girlfriend’-joke (which did feature), personified.

There are two female variety acts: Elf Lyons, ‘a woman on the edge’, circles the state in confusion as her dress increasingly creeps her shoulders. I tell myself to give the show the benefit of the doubt: surely it will include one woman who is not emotionally disturbed? All hail, there comes Betty Grumble — but to no avail. The final act of the show, she quickly strips off all her clothes and sticks a flower down her vagina. Be Cool. But amongst the roaring, drunken crowd I feel uncomfortable and sad. Meanwhile, Grumble draws arrows on her body and writes ‘fuck’ on her belly with lipstick. She lets Tucker spit out his water over her as she does a widelegged handstand. She is a Cool Girl.

It’s fair to say that this show wasn’t for me, and based on the reactions in the crowd, a lot of people very much felt like it was for them. Fringe is an excellent space to push boundaries, but to my mind, Stamptown distastefully oversteps them.


STAMPTOWN

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Reviewed on 14th August 2025 at Beyond at Pleasance Courtyard

by Lola Stakenburg

Photography by Renee Dominguez (from previous production)

 

 

 

 

 

STAMPTOWN

STAMPTOWN

STAMPTOWN

ED NIGHT: YOUR OLD MUCKER

★★★½

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

ED NIGHT: YOUR OLD MUCKER

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★½

“the last few minutes of the show turn into something genuinely special, and strangely hopeful”

Ed Night’s fifth show “Your Old Mucker” at the Fringe manages to feel dry, bleak and poignant all within the hour. With signature droll delivery, Night uses the smaller Monkey Barrel venue to compliment his lowkey, conversational style – a very different tone to most of the effusive comedians also performing at the Fringe.

Most of Night’s material concerns pretty quotidian life experiences: expensive heating; flats that are high-ceilinged for no reason; having your moustache rejected aesthetically by a partner – but his original delivery makes the topics feel fresh. His girlfriend’s adjectival choice for said moustache introduces a preoccupation with choice words and their connotations – and despite the casual delivery it’s clear that every word in the set is very deliberately chosen to build up a unique comedic voice.

Then we’re taking a walk with him out of his flat and through the town- he goes to meet the dentist, then he and the dentist go to meet the butcher. At one point it feels like a shopping list memory game, but the meandering from mundane to absurd perfectly captures the internal ravings of the writer’s-block walk. There are also some curve balls that allow Night to indulge in some physical comedy in place of his regular aloof style, the set’s biggest laugh was probably over an octopus tentacle that literally came out of nowhere.

Night’s set mentions the loss of his grandfather, and there are some excerpts from an interview about the Blitz that he gave to primary school children that are very funny and punctuate the set. The dead are not exempt from having the piss taken out of them, but there’s something very tender there as well in the references Night makes to their closeness – expressing affection through means of droll cynicism is a defining tactic of his set.

There are times when the show can feel quite slow, and although he makes it clear that worrying on about a comedian’s mental health is equivalent to worrying about the fictional citizens of Gotham, there’s a below surface vulnerability that creates quite a nervous energy among the crowd. Night says early on that his comedy isn’t going to come to the audience on their level- that’s definitely true – it doesn’t pander in the slightest.

The audience feels rewarded for their embrace of this set’s stranger energy when the last few minutes of the show turn into something genuinely special, and strangely hopeful, and you realise that there’s a low-key kind of poetry to the way Night delivers what’s on the surface a very dry and laconic set. The slow-burn delivery won’t be a hit for everyone, and it’s not over-the- top, laugh a minute. But if you’re looking for an intimate venue and a unique tone and pace that cuts through the festival’s usual flamboyance, you’ll really like this show.

 

ED NIGHT: YOUR OLD MUCKER

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Reviewed on 15th August 2025 at Hive 2 at Monkey Barrel Comedy

by Emily Lipscombe

 

 

 

 

 

ED NIGHT

ED NIGHT

ED NIGHT