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Comedy

11th Aug 2019

FRINGE 2019: Why you need to see… London Hughes

Hughes surely breaks all known records for how much the word 'dick' is mentioned in a single Edinburgh show. But like Eddie Murphy and Chris Rock before her, she utilises profanity with such artistry and flair.

Nooruddean Choudry

Who: London Hughes

What: To Catch a Dick

Where: Pleasance Courtyard – The Attic

When: 20:15

Why:

“I want to talk about my father. I’m sorry to fuck the stereotype, but I do know him…”

At the top of To Catch A Dick, London Hughes has a warning. If the Hitchcockian title wasn’t enough of a clue, she warns that her show is filthy. So filthy in fact that she has decided to appoint a member of the audience as her moral compass – ideally a white man because “it’s about time someone gave you that power.” Hughes promises a journey through space and time as she recounts her “dick-catching history”. What follows is an absolute tour de force of expletive-laden brilliance.

It is a veritable cacophony of cock, a plethora of penis, and whirlwind of wood. Hughes surely breaks all known records for how much the word ‘dick’ is mentioned in a single Edinburgh show. But like Eddie Murphy and Chris Rock before her, she utilises profanity with such artistry and flair. Anyone can get up on stage and be x-rated for an hour. The trick to elevating it beyond one-note shock tactics is to use curse words and crudities as seasoning, rather than your sole ingredient.

Thankfully Hughes is a masterful performer who knows this all too well. She has so many strings to her comedy bow. You will struggle to find a stand-up at the Fringe who elicits greater guffaws from pure physical comedy. Hughes can make people laugh by simply acting out her full name. There is one section where she explains – or rather demonstrates – how she got the nickname ‘seagull’, which had members of the audience literally crying in painful convulsions.

What Hughes does especially well is build up a storm of laughter and ride it for all it’s worth. This often involves her shouting incredulously over the noise of a howling crowd still recovering from the last zinger. Her Brian Blessed vs nervous rap battler bit is a perfect example, whilst her inventive use of GCSE Spanish to fake an orgasm is achingly good. And throughout all this you’ve got a nervous looking moral compass who’s at risk of being called upon at any moment.

You’ll no doubt hear a lot about To Catch A Dick in coming weeks. It is too good to ignore – even amongst the more conservative of Edinburgh critics – but really, no words will do it proper justice. You just have to go and experience it, if you can still get a ticket. This is comedy with “all the power of a thousand Destiny’s Children”. I don’t know what the female equivalent of ‘big dick energy’ is, but London Hughes has it in droves.

You can buy tickets for To Catch A Dick here.