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Venue:The City Cafe, 19 Blair Street Edinburgh EH1 1QR
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Phone: 0131 220 0125
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Links: Click Here for venue details, Click here for map
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Ticket Prices: Pay What You Can Tickets - from £5
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Room: Nineties
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JUL 31, AUG 1-24 at 16:55 (45 min)
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Would you sacrifice good food for freedom? Join Alvin Liu, a Chinese comedian who was once arrested, as he navigates the hilarities of starting anew in the UK.If you have a first-world passport, this comedy show is made just for you. If you don't, this is an instruction on how to get a first-world passport.Nominated for BBC New Comedy Awards"Potent in its imagery, authenticity, perverse logic and volatility" - British Comedy Guide"Hilarious... one to watch" - Chortle★★★★★ - Morning Star
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| Click Here for Show Website | This Show on Facebook Video Link |
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| News and Reviews for this Show 
August 8, 2025    The Wee Review | | Chinese-born comic Alvin Liu starts off strong with a song about a sandwich sung in a crooning Elvis-style before using his culinary number to branch off into humorous stories about growing up in a household where food is the answer to anything, even ADHD.Whilst this then leads to standard culture-clash comedy when Liu arrives in the UK, the stand-out joke being his disbelief at the typical British meal deal sandwich, he is stronger when dealing with more serious topics, such as his arrest in China whilst performing stand-up there.This allows him to showcase one of his strengths as a performer, namely making this heavy subject matter palatable for a revved-up afternoon audience expecting pure laughs. Specifically Liu effectively makes his breaking of draconian laws affecting stand-up comedy into a darkly comic critique of his joke telling ability, casting his interrogator in the unlikely role of Fringe reviewer. Liu also uses a similar technique to defang an anecdote about a racist comment made when he first arrives in the UK, deftly subverting expectations whilst linking the punchline to his earlier childhood material.However, it’s the crowd control where Liu excels the most. Audience interaction is usually the hardest thing to get right for a Fringe comedian – with unlucky ones having to struggle against unwilling or inappropriate punters. In contrast, Liu is able to turn any potentially tricky encounter into an opportunity to mine the comedic potential of the situation. This includes pitting two overly enthusiastic applauders together in a ‘clap-off’ contest that threatens to dominate the rest of the show.Liu, however, manages to keep things on track to his climax, where he gets two audience members to join him in improving the aforementioned meal deal sandwich. Whilst the results are messy, it’s certainly a unique approach that, along with Liu’s overall stage presence, marks him out amongst the comedic output at the Fringe.‘Love Letter to a Sandwich’ may be an acquired taste (in more ways than one!), but Liu’s sheer enthusiasm and creativity is infectious – his impromptu culinary and audience skills impress the most. Click Here |
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