Medieval chickens, the curse of Tim Henman, chairs in compromising positions…just a few of the improvised sketches in last night’s Kool Story Bro

Kiell Smith-Bynoe – of shows like Ghosts, Taskmaster and Stath Lets Flats – hosts a troupe of comedy improvisers on this national tour. Taking anecdotes from the audience, the team spin these into skits and often go off on surreal tangents.
Each show promises a different celebrity guest, often featuring comedians from Taskmaster, sitcoms and panel shows. Ours was Farrel Hegarty from Coronation Street and TikTok who, for us, didn’t quite match previous billings of well-known comedians and performers like Amy Gledhill, Lily Allen and Adam Buxton. If you’re a Corrie fan though, it might be different.

For a show that relies on audience stories, the team had some challenging material to work with. Stories offered up at this performance often didn’t make sense, or didn’t have enough going for them to riff off.
The performers sometimes stood confused and had to ask lots of questions to eke out any comedy potential. At times, instructions from the improvisers and Hegarty were a little unclear, especially to those new to the concept or who hadn’t been before.

A single microphone was slow to be brought to audience members, which slowed the pace and led to shouting and the company struggling to hear or understand. They did eventually find the magic though – even with so little to play with – and were all skilled with accents, physical comedy and of course improv.
Rude? Of course! Plenty of smut and adult language, but that’s to be expected at a show like this – and it’s the sort of material that does get easy laughs. And there were laughs aplenty, with highlights including Tim Henman’s strong backhand killing people with one touch – from a true story of him saving a choking man’s life then shrugging it off.

The final sequence had clever call-backs to early stories, and wrapped things up as The Worst Story Ever Told – another dig at the poor selection of stories from the audience.
Whilst ‘yes let’s’ is key in improvisation (agreeing to offers) it felt that if the performers weren’t happy with initial stories, they could’ve asked for more suggestions and then picked from the best. However, they tended to run with the early offers or quickly dismiss others – with mixed results.
That being said, it was a fun evening, and there’s no doubting the skills, timing and performance ability of Kiell and his motley bunch. And of course each show is guaranteed to be different, so you never know what to expect or which way it will pan out.
Unpredictable, unscripted and worth a shot if you like improv.

Kool Story Bro continues a UK tour, details can be found at www.koolstorybro.co.uk

Disclaimer: Tickets were kindly provided for this performance, however all opinions are honest and are our own.
