Nathan Cassidy: 42 | Mumble Comedy
Skip to content
Mumble Comedy
Surveying International Comedy
Menu
Mumble HQ
Comedy
Cirque
Theatre
Music
Opera
Art
Festivals
Words
Musicals
Skyflyers
HomeNathan Cassidy: 42
Nathan Cassidy: 42
August 7, 2016August 7, 2016 yodamo
Edinburgh 2016
Nathan Cassidy. 42. The Three Tuns
Free Sisters
Aug 4-28 (19.42)
PWYL
—
—
Material : Delivery : Laughs :
—
Nathan Cassidy is funny and entertaining. He reminds me of the way that certain films start off slow before drawing you in completely. The title of his show is centered around the fact that he was once in a recording studio with the band Level 42, a moment caught on film for posterity and to entertain this year’s Fringe. His efforts last year were nothing short of startling, & the Mumble were keen to see what new tricks Cassidy had up his sleeve.
–
Bustling with street-wise banter, this modern clown worked us hard with his funky material. One-by-one, everyone in the audience warmed to him and yes, the audience loved it. Me included. I have decided to take a new look at comedians, they have nae always been my most fave to review. Divine is old school when it comes to comedy and tonight’s performance inspired me to liken the comedian to one of the greats. Tonight, Nathan had Norman Wisdom as his muse.
—
—
Cassidy’s creation also has one of the most novel finales to have ever graced the Fringe. I cannae give away the details, but there is a certain brilliance in its unusuality. This show is well worth the fiver I put in the bucket, and I sense a rising star in our midst.
–
Reviewer : Mark ‘Divine Calvert’
——————————-
THE MUMBLE
What is the idea behind this years show – & is there any continuity from last years
–
NATHAN CASSIDY
The idea of the show is the audience choose 10 options from 42 and I do a different show every night based on those options in a quest to find the meaning of life – order from chaos. It’s about love and togetherness….
–
THE MUMBLE
What does the Edinburgh fringe experience mean to you
–
NATHAN CASSIDY
Back to the Future II was about what you’d change if you had a second chance at life, this year is more about saying we have no second chances and we need to find meaning in this life and get as much from it together as possible. Edinburgh Fringe experience is what I work towards all year, and I want to give the audience something totally different, which I’m hopefully literally doing every night this year.
–
THE MUMBLE
Have you an eye on 2017 already, & if so , what is it
–
NATHAN CASSIDY
I do have an eye on 2017 already – I’m doing a show called ‘Man in the Arena’ – there’s even a big poster advertising that show in the underpass on Potterow. That show will be about bravery in a volatile world.
Share this:TwitterFacebookLike this:Like Loading…
Related
Post navigation
← Jamali Maddix: Chickens Come Home to Roost Tom Ward →
Leave a Reply Cancel reply
Enter your comment here…
Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:
Email (required) (Address never made public)
Name (required)
Website
You are commenting using your WordPress.com account.
( Log Out /
Change )
You are commenting using your Google account.
( Log Out /
Change )
You are commenting using your Twitter account.
( Log Out /
Change )
You are commenting using your Facebook account.
( Log Out /
Change )
Cancel
Connecting to %s
Notify me of new comments via email. Notify me of new posts via email.
Search for:
From the Tweenies to the Twenties
Rollin’ With The Ro
Beehive Yourself
Half Way
Food For The Soul
Meet The Wee Man
Good Vibes
Havin’ A Pop
Summerhall Sandwich
No Riots Here
Culture Vulture
Meet Paul Fletcher
Rime Royal
First Friday of the Fringe
Mime Time
In The Beginning…
Alibi: Scene 3 – 4
Dating Samantha Pressdee
Alibi: Scenes 1-2
Timewarpin’: Scenes 8-Outro
Timewarpin’: Scenes 6-7
Timewarpin’: Scenes 3-5
Timewarpin’: Scene 1b
Timewarpin’: Intro – Scene 1a
THE PEOPLE’S FRINGE: Edinburgh 2020
Tinky Disco: Scenes 8b-9
Tinky Disco: Scene 8a
Tinky Disco: Scenes 6b-7
Tinky Disco: Scenes 5-6a
Tinky Disco: Scenes 3-4
Tinky Disco: Scenes 1-2
Gilded Balloon On The Coronavirus
No Nay Never: Scenes 10b-11
No Nay Never: Scenes 8-10a
No Nay Never: Scenes 6-7
No Nay Never: Scenes 4-5
Dane Baptiste Returns to Edinburgh Fringe Festival 2020
No Nay Never: Scene 3
No Nay Never: Scenes 1-2
Gangstaland: Scene 12
Gangstaland: Scenes 10-11
Gangstaland: Scenes 6-9
Gangstaland: Scene 5
Gangstaland: Scenes 2-4
Gangstaland: Scene 1
Interview: PLUG IN Girls
An Interview with Cat Alvarado
An Interview with Rob Gee
Njambi McGrath: Accidental Coconut
Darius Davies: Persian of Interest
Twonkey’s Ten Year Twitch
Jez Watts: Absolute Zero
Meatball Séance
Bad Boys
Will Rowland: Cocoon
Our 2014 Poster
Steve N Allen: Better Than
An Interview with The Establishment
An Interview with Eli Matthewson
Alex Farrow: Philosophy A-Level
Nathan Cassidy: Observational
Matt Hobs BSc (Bristolian of Science)
An Interview with Hopwood DePree
MTT: Dinner With Comedians
Robyn Perkins: Mating Selection
An Interview with Steve N. Allen
Aaron Twitchen: Can’t Stop a Rainbow
Jack Tucker: Comedy Stand Up Hour
Adam Flood & Blake AJ: Joke Boys
Baba Brinkman’s Rap Guide to Culture
Mark and Haydn: Llaugh
Sunjai Arif: Which Princess Are You?
Will Penswick: Nørdic(k)
Jon Long: Planet-Killing Machine
Naomi Karavani: Dominant
Grandad’s Grandad-Themed Family Reunion
Richard Wright Is Just Happy to be Involved
Byron Bertram: Passport and Prozac
Any Suggestions Doctor? The Improvised Doctor Who Parody
Lolly Jones: I Believe in Merkels
Jeroen Bloemhoff: A List of 100 Things That Unreasonably Annoy Me
Jim Campbell: Beef
Robin Morgan: What a Man, What a Man, What a Man, What a Mighty Good Man (Say It Again Now)
Flora Anderson: Romantic
The Dots
Anesti Danelis: Six Frets Under
Ollie Horn: Pig in Japan
Alasdair Beckett-King: The Interdimensional ABK
Cry Babies: Danger Brigade
Eli Matthewson – An Inconvenient Poof
Harriet Braine: Les Admirables
Erich McElroy: Radical Centrist
Martha McBrier: Happiness Bully
Joe Bor: The Story of Walter & Herbert
AJ Holmes: Yeah, But Not Right Now
Expanding the Mumbleverse
Tania Edwards: Don’t Mention It
Konstantin Kisin: Orwell That Ends Well
Gary G Knightley: Twat Out Of Hell
Black Sheep
Luke Rollason’s Infinite Content
Snack Chat
Oleg Denisov: Russian Troll
Myra Dubois: Dead Funny
An Interview with Erich McElroy
Hurst Schmurst
James Barr: Thirst Trap
Fat Blast and Crackers: 101 Sketches in 50 minutes
Wit & Mirth
Sonia Aste: Made In Spain 2
Joe Jacobs: Grimefulness
Elizabethan
Troy Hawke: Tiles of the Unexpected
An Interview with Scribbling Ape
Privates: A Sperm Odyssey
Langston Kerman: Loose Cannon
The Wonder Jam
An Interview with Black Sheep
Chris Washington: Raconteur
The Establishment: Le Bureau de Strange
Men With Coconuts
Brandi Alexander
A Jewish Sexagenarian and a Liverpudlian Plumber Walk into a Bar…
Louisa Fitzhardinge: Comma Sutra
An Interview with Michelle Aldridge
An Interview with Henry Churney and John Wilson
An Interview with The Bareback Kings
An Interview with Oleg Denisov
An Interview with Sarah Lee
An Interview with Gary G Knightley
An Interview with Bróccán Tyzack-Carlin
An Interview with Ryan Dalton
An Interview with Konstantin Kisin
An Interview with Joe Bor
Mumble Rumbles (i): That Adam Riches Eruption
An Interview with Nigel Osner
An Interview with Samantha Pressdee
An Interview with Naomi Karavani
An Interview with Travis Jay
An Interview with Sonia Aste
An Interview with Stephen Catling
An Interview with Mandy Muden
An Interview with Nathan Cassidy
Meet The Team
An Interview with Dom Mackie
The Carnal Magic of Scott Agnew’s “Work in Progress”
Commissioned
An Interview with Sonia Aste
An Evening with Rick Molland
An Interview with Nathan Cassidy
An Interview with Katy Schutte
Follow Mumble Comedy on WordPress.com
Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.
Post to
Cancel
Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here:
Cookie Policy
%d bloggers like this: