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Sam McCready's one-man show recalls Charles Dickens's three visits to Belfast
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The play has the comedian's trademark props and unique delivery, but never quite his genius
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Sometimes the comedy in Tim Loane's comedy-thriller fails to thrill, but the attempts at drama are usually comical
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An hilarious exploration of 'the hypocrisy, the absurdity and the sexual immaturity' of our wee country
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The Newry comic is off to crack Oz, but Northern Ireland's comedy scene is strong enough to survive without him
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Owen McCafferty's verbatim play at the MAC is sleek, beautiful and finely-crafted, but perhaps a little cold
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A valid feminist message underlies this musical adaptation, but mostly it is about pink, puppies and pop songs
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Near-the-knuckle humour, celebrity girlfriends and the Titanic are what the comedian brings Home
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John Wilson-Foster's play about Lord Pirrie and Titanic is 'as much a eulogy to industry' as anything
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Kabosh Theatre Company use Titanic Belfast as the set of their latest site-specific piece. It works
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Famous for a deadpan appearance Father Ted, the Dublin comic battles with an unresponsive Belfast audience
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The Ulster Covenant, Home Rule and heliotherapy, but only a brief mention of an iceberg. The play is all the better for it
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100 comedians in 12 hours, and all for charity – it was a tall order for organiser Andrew Johnston
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NI Opera create a creepily atmospheric version of Britten's opera, with mad governesses, ghosts and shadows
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27 short scenes telling the story of the Irish Home Rule Crisis of 1912
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Owen McCafferty's play 'strikes afresh with recharged resonance in straitened times'
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The surrealist comic, daughter of Irish Catholic parents, on marrying a famous atheist and why bananas are funny
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The cerebral comic is always entertaining, whether singing about airships or making misogyny funny
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A sumptuous and seductive visit to the Barbary Coast by the famed Bolshoi Ballet
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Don't mistake the Dublin comic for Chris O'Dowd – he's likely to lampoon you in musical form
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Fine Millennium Forum production of Frank McGuinness's enduring classic
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Rainbow Factory's contemporary adaptation of Julius Caesar has a lean and hungry look, Lisa Nelson approves
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The 'teenagers' are a bit long in the tooth, but after 30 years this polished show proves Grease is still the word
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Brian Friel's take on Chekhov's original is wilfully melancholic, but Conleth Hill's central performance makes this production great
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In 1912 'Belfast confetti' reigned down on Churchill here to argue for Home Rule. This 2012 commemoration is more civilised
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The sharp-tongued comedian cuts out the middleman and heckles the audience
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A 'world-class Northern Irish production' sees Marie Jones at the top of her game
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Sam Millar's play explores the divide between 'pro- and anti-agreement republicanism'
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The Cork comedian 'has the razzle-dazzle of an alchemist', but lacks preparation where it matters
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Ballybofey's finest gag man delivers a clean set to 'people with dirty minds'
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A timely reworking of Fintan Brady's play on the 40th anniversary of Bloody Sunday
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Homelessness, suicide and unexpected pregnancy. Somehow, playwright Fionnuala Kennedy shows the funny side
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The Tories are bad. Bankers are bad. You get the gist. Andrew Johnston is not impressed
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A star is born at the Waterfront Hall, and it's not the geezer with the hard hat. John Higgins is pleasantly surprised
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The Tyrone comedian's use of slides and film is way out of date
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Streamed live from Russia, this Bolshoi Ballet version is 'gorgeous, just gorgeous'
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The comedian's comedian tries his hand at the 'bear pit' that is The Empire Laughs Back
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Wireless Mystery Theatre perform a period radio play of Dickens' beloved story
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May McFettridge rules the panto roost with plenty of gags and a costume Lady Gaga would envy
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Raymond Murray's play shows how preconceptions have changed for the better since the 60s
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