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TALKING COCK 2: THE SECOND COMING
MALE QUESTIONNAIRE
FEMALE QUESTIONNAIRE
Talking Cock Podcast Talking Cock with Richard Herring Subscribe on iTunes 
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What is Love, Anyway?
Christ on a Bike!
How Not To Grow Up
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@gaijintendo nope. The distribution company has sold it to them and we get no money for that one. We might sell them some of the others tho  (56 minutes ago)

@DAG_2013 it's not a great medium for a chat! But lovely to hear from you. Just coming to end of tour and no plans to gig in Preston at mo!  (59 minutes ago)

@tim2040 nope, only through gfs  (1 hour ago)

@cmoorin Yup - email away. herring1967 at link  (1 hour ago)

Video about filming of new series of RHLSTP - link (audio will still be free)  (1 hour ago)
FORTHCOMING EVENTS
RICHARD HERRING'S LEICESTER SQUARE THEATRE PODCAST: Another series of RHLSTP (rhlstp) will run from May 27th - July 1st. May 27th - Chris Addison.
June 3rd Stephen Fry
Other guests to be confirmed, but I am aiming for BIG names, so book now
EDINBURGH FRINGE 2013: Tickets are now on sale for both my Edinburgh Fringe shows. "We're All Going To Die!" is on at the Pleasance Beyond at 8pm Book here
Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast is at Stand 1 daily at 14.10. Book here
GIGS: These are my upcoming gigs.
Click GIGS above for more details.
TALKING COCK unless otherwise stated
MAY
19th Swindon
20th Exeter
21st Tewkesbury
22nd Tring
23rd Reading
NEW DOWNLOADS/PRESS: 17/05/13 JOURNALISM Metro 64
PRESS Interviews with the North Devon Journal and the Daily Chuckle
14/05/13 PRESS Time Out RHLSTP article and Podcast top 10
13/05/13 PRESS This is Nottingham review of Talking Cock










TALKING COCK PODCAST: The new Talking Cock podcast (all extra material that doesn't appear in the show) is now up at The British Comedy Guide.
and iTunes
TALKING COCK TOUR: All the tour dates are now up on the Talking Cock page

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Press Archive
Telegraph Review of The Headmaster's Son

Richard Herring - The Headmaster's Son at the Leicester Square Theatre

Richard Herring, one half of 1990s duo Lee and Herring, digs up the past with a pitiless comic examination of his own childhood.

by Tom Chivers

20 Feb 2009

Richard Herring - The Headmaster's Son at the Leicester Square Theatre

Herring boldly examines his own childhood and teenage years

In the 1990s Richard Herring formed, with Stewart Lee, one of the finest comedy double-acts of the decade. Like all great partnerships they thrived on their differences. Lee, laconic and faintly saturnine, was a stark contrast to the hyperactive, eager Herring.

Having gone their separate ways in solo standup a decade or so ago now, it is interesting to see how their personas have remained the same. Lee, though older and heavier, is still poised and catlike, while Herring – now in his forties – is eerily reminiscent of a Labrador puppy.

Alone, untempered by Lee's calming influence, Herring's unbridled energy can be tiring, even grating. And the show is so much about himself – schoolboy memories, self-analysis, et cetera – that he opens himself up to accusations of solipsism.

Somehow, though, he holds it all together. The show is about his childhood, and some of the odd little vignettes are both hilarious and strangely touching. The best come when he reads through his teenage diary, allowing him to mock his own adolescent bombast and self-pity with wounding accuracy.

His material has a universality, certainly for male members of the audience – bringing back memories of the fiery, hot-cheeked embarrassment of trying to talk to girls, say, or the pitiful attempts at youthful rebellion. Belching during a school assembly seems to have been as far as Herring was prepared to go.

On the whole, advancing age seems to be treating Herring kindly (although his startling hair-and-beard combination doesn't sit well on a slightly tubby man in his middle years), and he has written a charming, warm, funny show with some splendid surrealist asides. But, as good as he is, it's hard not to miss the glory days of This Morning With Richard Not Judy. What chance a reunion, you wonder?