Nina Conti's Edinburgh Festival 2017
British Comedy Award winner Nina Conti presents highlights of this year's Edinburgh festival. Nina meets fellow comics who are using narrative to push the boundaries of comedy.
British Comedy Award winner Nina Conti presents highlights of this year's Edinburgh festival. Nina has been coming to the festival since she was a child and made her name here as a performer in 2001, voicing her now infamous puppet Monkey. But when the festival was founded 70 years ago, stand-up comedy didn't exist in the way it does today. Nina meets fellow comics who are using narrative to push the boundaries of comedy.
She talks to Edinburgh's own enfant terrible Irvine Welsh, as he brings a brand new show inspired by the real-life gangsters of the 1960s film Performance to his home town. She meets Mercury Prize-winning troubadour Benjamin Clementine for an exclusive interview and performance taken from his eagerly awaited second album.
Nina also visits two art installations examining the legacy of poet Robert Burns and his response to slavery - Turner Prize winner Douglas Gordon's Black Burns and Graham Fagen's The Slave's Lament, culminating in a special performance at the National Portrait Gallery, featuring Makar Jackie Kay, singer-songwriter Ghetto Priest and members of the Scottish Ensemble. The programme also features Selina Thompson's fringe hit Salt.
Last on
Clips
Music Played
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Benjamin Clementine
London
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Benjamin Clementine
Phantom of Aleppoville
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Nina Conti |
Producer | Pete Stanton |
Director | Pete Stanton |
Executive Producer | Matthew Springford |
Broadcast
- Sat 26 Aug 2017 19:30