The Stand Up Sketch Show. Finlay Christie
Finlay Christie

Finlay Christie

  • Actor, stand-up comedian and writer

Press clippings Page 2

Why TikTok reels are reshaping comedy

Comedians are finding they're not just adapting for an audience when producing online content, they're adapting for an algorithm.

Liam Pape, The Spectator, 12th July 2022

Finlay Christie: Is Tik-Tok good for comedy?

Finlay Christie on what digital comics can learn from older stand-ups - and vice-versa.

Finlay Christie, Chortle, 12th July 2022

Finlay Christie interview

It's about university, being a child stand-up, and what we can learn from Gen Z.

On The Mic, 3rd July 2022

Finlay Christie shares how comedy has helped his mental health

'I used to laugh when people told me they started comedy to help their confidence, as bad gigs used to completely destroy my confidence.'

Finlay Christie, Female First, 23rd June 2022

Gilded Balloon announces full Edinburgh Fringe Programme

Britney Spears, mental health, fitness, relationships, disability and sex are just a snippet of themes covered, while hilarious storytelling, music and magic take kids on an unforgettable journey of laughs and self-discovery.

Bruce Dessau, Beyond The Joke, 8th June 2022

Chortle's Fast Fringe returns

Arthur Smith will be hosting a jam-packed showcase of 28 comedy and variety acts heading to the Edinburgh festival at the Bloomsbury Theatre on July 7.

Chortle, 27th May 2022

The TikTok hopefuls trying to make it big in comedy

Social media has become a viable alternative to live gigging as a route to comedy stardom. But can viral success ever be a true substitute for hard graft on the circuit?

Lara Olszowska, The Guardian, 21st April 2022

Finlay Christie wins So You Think You're Funny? 2019

Finlay Christie has won the So You Think You're Funny? new act stand-up competition at the Edinburgh Fringe.

British Comedy Guide, 23rd August 2019

More neatly observed, finely tuned comedies by Marcella Evaristi about modern dilemmas of shared parenting, starring Sarah Alexander as Mimi, the thrice-married mum, with Mark Bonnar as Dad (replacing David Tennant, who played him in the first series last year). Their two children are Tom (he'll be 11 now) and teenage Lucy, played by Finlay Christie and Phoebe Abbott (and very well too) about to get her mother's full attention in this first of six episodes. Marilyn Imrie directs, for independents Absolutely Productions. And there's more good news, in that there are six episodes, rather than the four of the first series. Make the most of them because big budget cuts seem to be digging into the schedule in ways that limit new programmes. Any day now across the whole schedule radio is repeating many more programmes than it once did. Sometimes that's not a bad thing, one person's repeat being another person's first hearing. But as Radio 4, in particular, produces more new programmes across a greater variety of genres than other networks, it is bound to restrict innovation and is already affecting how digital Radio 4 can use more recent programmes.

Gillian Reynolds, The Telegraph, 29th June 2012

Dysfunctional families are always a good source of comedy, and they don't come much more dysfunctional than the extended family of Tom and Lucy Millar. They are the children of divorced parents Joe and Mimi, now both on their third marriages, and are constantly being shuttled between their two homes. Played by newcomers Finlay Christie and Phoebe Alexander with consummate ease, their bickering and camaraderie in the face of their parents' idiosyncrasies feel totally natural. David Tennant's Joe is just a dad wanting to do right by his kids, while Sarah Alexander is excellent as the anxious Mimi. It could be classed as Outnumbered for radio, but that would be doing a disservice to a nuanced comic take on life among the chattering classes of north London.

David Crawford, Radio Times, 6th May 2011

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