| Dan Clarke - The Day iLost my iPod | |
|
Fri 23rd February at 8:00pm |
|
What happened when Dan lost his iPod? A bizarre day in the life of a man addicted to modern gadgets spawns some surprising revelations. With his trademark neuroses, off-beat observations, physically engaging performance style and heartfelt love songs, Dan Clarke (from The Mighty Boosh, French & Saunders) sheds light on some modern day conundrums that eat away at all of us. “60 minutes of uninterrupted comic ecstasy” - Metro |
|
| Tickets: £8.5, Concs£7 | Comedy |
Dan has appeared on TV in: The Mighty Boosh (BBC), The Estate Agents (C4), French & Saunders (BBC), Totally Top Trumps (Challenge TV) and The Stand Up Show (BBC).
Following his critical successes 57 Minutes, in 2003, and last year's Edinburgh Festival sell-out hit Erotic Neurotic, this brand new show tells of a bizarre day in the life of a man addicted to modern gadgets and technology.
The loss, as referred to in the title, happens at the beginning of a normal day; not a major event in anyone's life, granted, but it spawns some interesting revelations about how much Dan relies on modern technology and conveniences. Recounting the events of that epiphanal day, he explores some surprising conclusions that those small incidents catalysed.
What would it be like if we could put our minds on shuffle in the same way we now listen to music on an iPod? What is the future of pop music? And why is Dan afraid of men?s public changing rooms? With his trademark neurosis, off-beat observations, physically engaging performance style and heartfelt love songs, Dan sheds light on some modern day conundrums that are eating away at all of us.
“A delightful balance of confident swagger and self-deprecation, the bizarre and the brilliant. Clark is Noel Fielding without the clothes habit, a sharply focused Ross Noble with his feet still firmly on planet Earth? 60 minutes of uninterrupted comic ecstasy” - Metro
“Delivered in an impeccably witty and biting manner which had the audience responding with ceaseless laughter. His interaction with the audience was spot on, and made for a show that was observational comedy at its best” - Three Weeks
“Has a lovely distinctive feel. A consistent, warm hearted style that sets him apart from the crowd” - Chortle
“The crowd gave him belly laughs aplenty” The Stage