• Home
  • Contact
Entertainment Now
  • Home
  • Music
  • Movies
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcasts
  • Food and Drink
  • Edinburgh Festivals
    • Cabaret
    • Dance, Physical Theatre & Circus
    • Family
    • Musicals
    • Spoken Word
    • Theatre
  • Comedy
  • Books
  • Theatre
  • TV
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Music
  • Movies
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcasts
  • Food and Drink
  • Edinburgh Festivals
    • Cabaret
    • Dance, Physical Theatre & Circus
    • Family
    • Musicals
    • Spoken Word
    • Theatre
  • Comedy
  • Books
  • Theatre
  • TV
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Entertainment Now
No Result
View All Result
Home Comedy

Matt Price: Fighting Fit

Kate Copstick by Kate Copstick
August 6, 2023
in Comedy, Edinburgh Festivals
7 0
0
Matt Price: Fighting Fit

IThey say there is a first time for everything but I never imagined sitting talking about running and kettle bells with a comedian who is going from strength to strength, with an Edinburgh hour he is absolutely proud of, together with his ‘missus’, a woman who is so protective of him he should have a weapons’ licence for her.

There is, to be fair, a good deal less to get of both of them these days. Matt Price’s new best friends are his running shoes and a set of kettlebells and his missus, the brilliant Glasgwegian comic Martha McBrier is unusually excited about her new weighted hula hoop). Both are revelling in newfound sveltedom.

Related articles

Brighton Fringe Review: Cabaret Impedimenta

Cally Beaton’s Namaste Motherfckers* Returns in Paperback as UK Tour Extends Following Huge Demand

Matt says that the loss of weight has meant a gain in confidence, as has months of gigging non-stop to enthusiastic response and a regular demand for his funny, pretty much everywhere.

“I still have the same opener. I come on and come down to the front of the stage and say “I know what you’re thinking. You’re thinking ‘he doesn’t look like someone who is gonna be able to do this’, aren’t you?” he says “but now, if someone has a go, I have ten different ways to come back at them. And they are good.”   

His skilfully engaging way – genuine palm of the hand stuff – with an audience means he gets a lot of work as an MC as well as a mere stand up. He has gigged all over the world. Theresa May’s  2018 New Deal grant-making committee certainly got their money’s worth out of their award to the unemployed comic-in-waiting Matt Price.  

There were little comedy hiccups along the way – having honed skills on the circuit he decided to risk Edinburgh for the first time in 2006 only to find that the venue didn’t exist. But the chance a Fringe show offers a good comic to stretch their funny over an hour, is a powerful draw, and, in the years that followed, lucky audiences got to enjoy a Cornish-flavoured lifetime of unbelievably (in every sense of the word) funny stories from Matt’s event strewn past. 

Expect mentions of the criminally insane and cancer victims in wheelchairs. Matt is a magnet for the … unexpectable.   I remember when I met them at first, and it was Martha – the consummate storytelling comic – who was the one trying to persuade Matt how good he was.   

In those days, despite looking as if he shared a gene pool with Shrek and Jethro, he was incredibly fragile. The hurts were deeply felt and it sometimes showed. Now he has enough technique and experience to be verging on the heckle-proof. “It still hurts me”, he says “but now it doesn’t show”. 

I ask if he worries that – as I have seen happen too often – experience and technique – and even success – take over, and the loveability of the vulnerable, storytelling ‘country yokel’ (his words) will disappear into a sort of Cornish Michael McIntyre. He looks at me as if I am utterly deranged. “No.”  We move on.

The narrative of this year’s hour comes from his (sadly no longer with us) podcast ‘Conversations With Criminals’. Oh yes. And the death threat he got. 

And … well, you really should go and see the show. I do not tell the story nearly as well as Matt.

Matt Price: As Seen on CCTV

18:20

Just the Tonic

August 3 – 27

https://tickets.edfringe.com/whats-on/matt-price-as-seen-on-cctv

Kate Copstick

Kate Copstick

Copstick is an actress, television presenter, writer, critic, director and producer. She has been on the panel of the Perrier Comedy and Malcolm Hardee Awards and when she isn't making or breaking someones career with one review she is working with her charity, Mama Biashara.

Related Posts

Brighton Fringe Review: Cabaret Impedimenta

Brighton Fringe Review: Cabaret Impedimenta

by Victoria Nangle
May 23, 2026
0

A stalwart of the Weekend of Weird sub-Fringe season at The SpiegelGardens, Cabaret Impedimentia packs an enjoyably disruptive punch. The premise is simple: five professional cabaret...

Cally Beaton’s Namaste Motherfckers* Returns in Paperback as UK Tour Extends Following Huge Demand

Cally Beaton’s Namaste Motherfckers* Returns in Paperback as UK Tour Extends Following Huge Demand

by Helen Hurdman
May 22, 2026
0

Best-selling author, comedian and broadcaster Cally Beaton is continuing a remarkable second act as her Sunday Times Top 10 bestseller Namaste Motherfckers: A Modern Manifesto For Keeping Cool When...

Penn Jillette and Piff The Magic Dragon Team Up for Nine Date UK Tour

Penn Jillette and Piff The Magic Dragon Team Up for Nine Date UK Tour

by Siobhan Rowe
May 22, 2026
0

Penn Jillette and Piff The Magic Dragon are heading out on their first ever UK tour together later this year with brand-new live show Piff & Pop’s...

Brighton Fringe Review: Ben Hur

Brighton Fringe Review: Ben Hur

by Victoria Nangle
May 22, 2026
0

How? How is it possible for a cast of four (plus two incredible backstage dressers) to put on the epic tale of ‘Ben Hur’ as a...

Brighton Fringe Review: Nocturne Musical

Brighton Fringe Review: Nocturne Musical

by Victoria Nangle
May 17, 2026
0

Where Alice In Wonderland meets the Moomin trolls – but in Norway – that’s where ‘Nocturne Musical’ exists. When 12 year old nature-lover Solveig goes into...

RECOMMENDED

Music: The Night Comes Alive with ‘Champagne’
Music

Music: The Night Comes Alive with ‘Champagne’

October 28, 2024
Yuriko Kotani: We couldn’t do this during lockdown
Comedy

Yuriko Kotani: We couldn’t do this during lockdown

August 23, 2023
Entertainment Now

Your daily fix for what is trending in entertainment.

© 2026 Entertainment Now.

  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Music
  • Movies
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcasts
  • Food and Drink
  • Edinburgh Festivals
    • Cabaret
    • Dance, Physical Theatre & Circus
    • Family
    • Musicals
    • Spoken Word
    • Theatre
  • Comedy
  • Books
  • Theatre
  • TV

© 2026 Entertainment Now.