About the Author:
Bruce Dessau is the king of comedy critics. He cut his critical teeth during the 1980s Alternative Comedy explosion in smoky rooms in the arse end of London, from Malcolm Hardee's infamous Tunnel Club to The Comedy Store before it became part of the respectable establishment.
Review:
"An intriguing history of humour's bad boys claims that almost every great comedian is a damaged soul ... Delightful nuggets for the new wave of comedy enthusiasts" Sunday Times "Dessau shows us that comedians tend to be weird, or compulsive, or obsessive; they veer easily towards depression; and they mostly find themselves, at least for a period, desperately out of fashion. Beyond this, he doesn't overanalyse. He simply lines them up, one after the other, and recounts their strange lives" Evening Standard "Meticulously researched and utterly compelling, it's a great read" The Sun, 4 stars "Dessau is an established comedy critic, with plenty to say about the sometimes sordid, often complicated lives of comedians...Dessau's look at stand-up is entertaining" Metro "By filleting the best yarns from dozens of biographies - whether those stories be entertaining, deplorable or a combination of the two - Dessau has created a concentrated essence of comedy's most memorable anti-heroes. They may all have been emotional, and often moral, screw-ups, but they all gave us a laugh" Chortle
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