Laura Solon
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Laura Solon (aged 26 as of August 2005) is an English comedienne, writer and winner of the 2005 Perrier Comedy Award, only the second female to win as a solo performer (the first being Jenny Eclair in 1995).
She was born in London and raised in Little Kimble near Aylesbury.
She won the Perrier award for her one woman show Kopfraper's Syndrome: One Man and His Incredible Mind. She is now being courted by both the BBC and Channel 4 who hope to secure her talent for TV work.
Solon started writing and performing as a student in the Oxford Revue at Oxford University where she studied English.
She had tried her hand at being a stand up comedian but found character comedy suited her better [1].
[edit] Kopfraper's Syndrome: One Man and His Incredible Mind
The title is in fact a holdover from an entirely different show that Solon had planned to perform at the Edinburgh Fringe with a male partner. When the partner dropped out she rewrote the show in the three weeks leading up to the festival but retained the title in order not to negate the value of the advance publicity or confuse those who had already purchased tickets.
Solon plays eight different characters in the show, which consists of sketches of varying lengths, including:
- an Andrew Lloyd Webber fan
- Caroline, an Australian, disabled housewife who is possessed by the ghost of Diana, Princess of Wales
- Karen, a prize-winning beautician
- Borgesia, a Polish story-teller
- a wedding planner from Rotherham
- a hunter who does not believe in zebras
- Katrina, a corporate high-flier with an irrational terror of the Chinese
- a marketing assistant forced to dress as a bookworm
As a Perrier award winning show it secured a run in London's West End, at the Soho Theatre, in November 2005. Solon also received £7 500 with the prize.
[edit] Critical reception
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"an astonishingly assured debut".
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"The writing is as fresh as a cowslip, as sharp as a kitchen-knife, and sometimes as coarse as a fishwife"
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" It is not a well-developed set. Solon's vignettes seldom exceed five minutes, and so the characterisation is not always subjected to the rigour that longer monologues would necessitate. But Solon's twisted imagination means that the show is jam-packed with delights." (3 stars out of 5)
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"Laura Solon is not an Alan Bennett or Victoria Wood, but she is young, within sight of them and might yet rival them. She is an immensely talented writer with performance skills to match." (4 out of 5 stars)
[edit] Radio
Ed Reardon's Week - Lucy, in Series 3