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Shazia Mirza

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Shazia Mirza


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Shazia Mirza on The World Stands Up
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Reviews

What's So Funny? End of conference stand-up show
Live Review
British Library

What's So Funny? End of conference stand-up show

The British Library is fast becoming an unlikely fixture on the London comedy circuit. Robin Ince has been here with his Book Club – which makes sense – Andy Zaltzman’s brought Political Animal here; and now a stand-up gig to close a day of discussions on some academic aspects of comedy.

Held in a comfortable lecture theatre, it’s the sort of gig where Ince, on tonight too, doesn’t stand out shuffling on with an armful of literature, Alistair Barrie brings on a portfolio pad and host Tiffany Stevenson brings on… a glass of red wine. It’s only a shame the audience can’t bring booze into these plush environs as well.

But it’s apposite as one of her nicest gags involves wordplay about why she’s like a bottle of plonk. There is a good smattering of nifty puns in her set, as well as a snappy malapropism or two, although her longer routines tend to lose their way – such as a roundabout yarn about her boyfriend tackling a mouse –  or start from an uninspiring premise: what if Hitler had Facebook (‘Himmler likes this’ etc etc etc).

Yet thought her amiable banter she mustered up something approaching a club atmosphere among the mix of students and older library regulars that comprised this unusual audience.

Not that Ince is exactly your standard club act. Rather than questions like ‘Who here smokes dope?’, he asks ‘Who here takes an empirical view of philosophy?’ But then this is the sort of audience who are always going to be intellectually flattered by such an approach.

Following the Wittgenstein material, our cardigan-wearing comic offers a more down-the-line observational routine about poor use of language that doesn’t particularly surprise, before returning to his favourite topic of bad writing, with readings of an overblown giant crab horror epic and an hilariously clunky Danielle Steel poem, sometimes accompanied by the willowy frame of Ben Moor, contorting into strange shapes to wittily, if unusually, illustrate the narrative.

Next up, Barrie took a line of very little resistance, with his easy and often superficial comments from his liberal-left standpoint. America as the world bully, with Britain his annoying mate goading him on, is an old and obvious idea, while picking apart Sarah Palin’s stupid statements is like shooting Alaskan deer in the head.

There are some good lines amid the unchallenging polemic – about Britain heading backwards or an obscure George Bush fact regurgitated – but overall the writing needs more intensity and focus, even though the delivery is slickly assured. His putting on of stereotypical accents and his routine about the British ‘discovering’ places to the surprise of the people already living there were both overplayed, and his translation of the slogans of the right into more civilised language (on the aforementioned pad) seemed weak.

Having spoken about offensive comedy in a panel earlier in the day, Shazia Mirza offered a few lines about Muslims and Irish people wanting to blow people up. ‘Don’t be scared to laugh,’ she asserted at another point… as if it couldn’t possibly be the laziness of the stereotype that muted the response.

More relaxed than she used to be, Mirza hit a more productive seam with material about arranged marriages and her overbearing parents. But when she directs her comedy outwards rather than inwards, the effect can be more brutal than funny. When it comes to moaning about white and Asian kids who think they are ‘black’ (whatever that means, I suspect they’re not impersonating Nelson Mandela), or teachers knocking off at 3.30pm, the material needs more than just a sneer to succeed.

If Mirza evoked the day’s earlier ‘offensive comedy’ discussion, and the proletarian Stevenson the class-based one, headliner Hal Cruttenden had the debate on camp comedy covered, his slightly effeminate posh voice meaning he’s forever being mistaken for gay despite his protestations, wife and children.

He claimed an inferiority complex about the venue – ‘I’m not one of the more intellectual acts’ – but his litany of middle-class concerns certainly struck a cord here, whether complaining about his rotund figure, minor ailments or lack of spark in his marriage. There’s an authenticity to the material, and he delivers it with affability, passion and rhythm, adroitly bouncing ideas around the audience as a set-up to each routine in a way that’s as charming as he is witty.

Cruttenden thought the audience might have been disappointed after he was announced as being ‘off the Royal Variety Performance’ but not being famous. But surely no one would have been, following this impressively strong set.

Date of live review: Wednesday 19th Jan, '11
Review by Steve Bennett
Shazia Mirza : Original Review
Shazia Mirza : Original Review

Monday 14th Jul, '08-
Shazia Mirza: A Portrait Of Shazia Mirza
Shazia Mirza: A Portrait Of Shazia Mirza

Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2008 -
Funny Women Gala 2006
Funny Women Gala 2006

Show - Misc live shows - Tuesday 0th Mar, '06-
Leicester Comedy Festival Preview Show 2009
Leicester Comedy Festival Preview Show 2009

Show - Misc live shows -
Shazia Mirza: Wish You Were Here?
Shazia Mirza: Wish You Were Here?

Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2004 -
Shazia Mirza: Between You And Me
Shazia Mirza: Between You And Me

Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2005 -
Funny Women gala 2005
Funny Women gala 2005

Show - Misc live shows -
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Comments

Skip to page: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7

The "can't be bothered" attitude that some people have referred to is nothing of the sort, in my opinion. It's a carefully crafted deadpan delivery that she has, and it works very well. She plays on Western expectations/interpretations of Islamic females as downtrodded and feeble and twists this with a humour that is intrinsically embedded in her own culture, but more importantly, British culture, too. A very funny, very clever lady.

Jo, September 2006


Saw here at the Theatre Royal Stratford last night - she tries too hard to be funny, laughs at her own jokes and pauses for a response from the crowd. Very cheap and weak material

Asif, July 2006


She's very hostile and unengaging with the audience. Leaves me cold and I feel her material is under worked and aggressively delivered.

Jess, July 2006


Wow, there's a lot of conflicting feedback here about Shazia... I saw her in Edinburgh last year and thought she was brilliant. She was able to make interesting points and bring them to life with lots of laughs. I don't think she is another stereotypical comic - she's different to most others on the circuit in style and content, and that's just one of the things that makes her so interesting to watch. Bottom line - when I saw her do her show in Edinburgh, she was very funny and really engaged the crowd.

Damien, June 2006


If she wasn't Muslim or female I doubt she would have any jokes to tell Writing stuff on your hand, what's that all about? It's cringingly unfunny when you can see a comdian trying too hard to be funny

Nutrina, April 2006


No, nothing sexist or racist is going on (see below) - an easy/unfounded charge to make simply because this act is female and Muslim. This review has got it about right. We had to sit through het 'set' at the Funny Women show. Ye Gods, only positive discrimination must have got her on that bill

Shelagh, April 2006


Some kind of prejudice is going on. Is this wesbite racist? or sexist? Shazia is a brilliant comedian and eveybody knows it, the fact that she is successful, original and very very funny. Now people want to knock her because she is brave enough to be original, I saw her at the Hackney Empire three weeks ago, she broght the house down and was without a doubt the best one on the bill

Sarah Myers, March 2006


Saw her last night and she was funny...she knows how to handle the audience and her jokes were great.

Laura, March 2006


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Where can I see Shazia Mirza next?

Where can I see Shazia Mirza next?

20:00 - Thursday 17th Mar, '11
Venue: Cambridge Junction
Prices: £12 (£10 concs)
Show: Shazia Mirza: Multiple Choice
Show starts: 20:00 (Doors open approx 30 mins earlier)
20:00 - Friday 18th Mar, '11
Venue: Barbican
Prices: From £10
Comics: Ahir Shah, Anil Desai, Imran Yusuf, Isma Almas, Paul Chowdhry, Shazia Mirza
Show starts: 20:00 (Doors open approx 30 mins earlier)
20:00 - Thursday 24th Mar, '11
Venue: Banbury Mill Arts Centre
Prices: £12 (£10 concs)
Show: Shazia Mirza: Multiple Choice
Show starts: 20:00 (Doors open approx 30 mins earlier)
20:00 - Friday 25th Mar, '11
Venue: Wakefield Theatre Royal & Opera House
Prices: £13.50 (£12 concs)
Show: Shazia Mirza: Multiple Choice
Show starts: 20:00 (Doors open approx 30 mins earlier)
20:30 - Tuesday 29th Mar, '11
Venue: Birmingham Glee Club
Prices: Adult - £10.00
Comics:
Show starts: 20:30 (Doors open approx 30 mins earlier)
20:00 - Saturday 2nd Apr, '11
Venue: Leeds Carriageworks
Prices: £10 (£7 in advance)
Show: Shazia Mirza: Multiple Choice
Show starts: 20:00 (Doors open approx 30 mins earlier)
21:15 - Tuesday 5th Apr, '11
Venue: Soho Theatre
Prices: £10
Show: Shazia Mirza: Multiple Choice
Show starts: 21:15 (Doors open approx 30 mins earlier)
21:15 - Wednesday 6th Apr, '11
Venue: Soho Theatre
Prices: £10
Show: Shazia Mirza: Multiple Choice
Show starts: 21:15 (Doors open approx 30 mins earlier)
20:30 - Thursday 21st Apr, '11
Venue: Bristol Comedy Box
Prices: £12
Show: Shazia Mirza: Multiple Choice
Show starts: 20:30 (Doors open approx 30 mins earlier)
20:00 - Saturday 30th Apr, '11
Venue: Burntisland Potter About Cafe
Prices: £10
Comics: Shazia Mirza, JoJo Sutherland (MC)
Info: Plus Tommy Reid, Chris Carr, Eleanor Morton
Show starts: 20:00 (Doors open approx 30 mins earlier)
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