York writer-performer Katie Lingo launches Funny Fridays comedy nights at Patch in revamped Bonding Warehouse

Katie Lingo in the main ground-floor room at Patch at the Bonding Warehouse, York, where she will host the monthly Funny Fridays comedy nights

PATCH, York’s new co-working space, will echo to the sound of laughter tomorrow at the Bonding Warehouse for the first time since the days of Michael S Bennett’s Comedy Shack.

Set up to support York’s burgeoning comedy scene, Funny Fridays is the new monthly venture from York comedian Katie Lingo, otherwise known as Katie Thompson, purveyor of copywriting,  content strategy,  journalism, digital marketing,  reporting and data visualisation services at the Raylor Centre industrial park off James Street.

To bring a smile to her face, the debut bill of Kenny Watt, Tuiya Tembo, Matty Oxley, Saeth Wheeler and John Pease has sold out already at an introductory price of £6.50 but tickets are available for the second night on June 13, when admission will rise to £10.

Kenny Watt: Scathing Scottish current affairs commentator

“There will be drinks. There will be swears. There will be laughs,” says Katie Lingo managing director Katie, who will host the event from 7.30pm in Patch’s main room, kitted out with a bar, on the ground floor.

“I’m a member of York Creatives, so, when Patch re-opened the Bonding Warehouse as a co-working space, Thom (site director Thom Feeney) suggested I should put on a comedy night here, harking back to the Comedy Shack days.”

Set up by the late Michael S Bennett in the early 1990s, the club’s first three shows were headlined by rising talents Mark Thomas, Alistair McGowan and Jo Brand, while Bennett asked a then-unknown north-eastern comedian by the name of Ross Noble to compere the bills. A nascent Lee Evans would later appear there too.

“I feel very honoured to have been asked, and to know to know that I’ll be running Funny Fridays where so many of my comic heroes once played,” says Katie Lingo

Now Katie is picking up the comedy baton. “I started performing comedy in January 2024 and the biggest place I’ve done so far is the Comedy Store in London,” she says.

“I’ve performed at Complete Joke Comedy nights in The Den at Micklegate Social, held on the first Sunday of every month, and I’ve played Laughs On Draught at Brew York, off Walmgate, too.

“Soon I’ll be doing the new Rik Mayall Comedy Festival [running from May 31 to June 7] at Droitwich Spa, a lovely little village where I went in March.”

Saeth Wheeler: Performing on the first Funny Fridays bill at Patch

Katie is thrilled to be setting up Funny Fridays, with its format of five acts per bill, each performing 15 minutes upwards to a seated capacity of 120 (or 130, standing).

“Absolutely! I feel very honoured to have been asked, especially to do so at a building that has played its part in York’s history, and also to know that I’ll be running it where so many of my comic heroes once played,” she says.

Katie looks forward to introducing tomorrow’s five acts: Saeth Wheeler, the “rampant socialist lesbian the Daily Mail warned you all about”; Kenny Watt, Scottish export of scathing current affairs commentary; Matty Oxley, BBC New Comedy Awards semi-finalist; Tuiya Tembo, quirky, lively and brutally honest cultural observer, and John Pease, Edinburgh Fringe Gilded Balloon finalist with a touch of southern comfort.

Katie Thompson: managing director of Katie Lingo writing, content marketing, blogging and word research business, podcaster, Funny Fridays host and comedian

How would she describe her own comedy style? “I would say, very physical, loud, energetic and profane. I was very, very inspired by Rik Mayall when I was growing up. Harry Enfield, Jennifer Saunders and Helen Lederer  too,” she reveals.

As it happens, she will be interviewing Helen Lederer for an upcoming episode of the My Bottom podcast.

Funny Fridays, at Patch, The Bonding Warehouse, Terry Avenue, York, tomorrow, 7pm for 7.30pm start, SOLD OUT. Age restriction: 18 plus. Tickets for June 13 can be booked at eventbrite.co.uk/e/funny-fridays-at-patch-tickets.

Tuiya Tembo: Appearing on the Funny Fridays bill at Patch tomorrow

What is Patch?

PATCH invested £900,000 to set up a 12,000 sq ft co-working space in the Bonding Warehouse, Terry Avenue, York, opening in February. This space aims to accommodate approximately 50 companies and 400 members, offering office and co-working spaces, with a focus on tech, media and education industries. Comedy and live music events are held there too.

What’s On in Ryedale, York and beyond. Hutch’s List No. 19, from Gazette & Herald

Pease talks: John Pease features on the the inaugural bill at Katie Lingo’s Funny Fridays stand-up comedy nights at Patch in the Bonding Warehouse, York

A NEW comedy night in a bygone location and Shakespeare on a council estate stand out in Charles Hutchinson’s picks for cultural exploration.

Laughter launch of the week: Funny Fridays, Patch, Bonding Warehouse, Terry Avenue, York, May 9, doors 7pm for 7.30pm start

LIVE comedy returns to the Bonding Warehouse for the first time since the days of the late Mike Bennett presenting the likes of Lee Evans and Ross Noble under the Comedy Shack banner. Stand up for Funny Fridays, hosted by York humorist Katie Lingo (alias copywriter Katie Taylor-Thompson) with an introductory price of £6.50.

On her first bill will be Kenny Watt, Tuiya Tembo, BBC New Comedy Awards semi-finalist Matty Oxley, Saeth Wheeler and Edinburgh Fringe Gilded Balloon semi-finalist John Pease. Box office: eventbrite.co.uk/e/funny-fridays-at-patch-tickets.

So much at stake: Laura Castle’s Count Dracula and Jamie McKeller’s Van Helsing in Neon Crypt Productions’ Dracula: The Bloody Truth. Picture: Michael Cornell

Taking their first bite of the week: Neon Crypt Productions in Dracula: The Bloody Truth, Theatre@41, Monkgate, York, until Saturday, 7.30pm plus 2.30pm Saturday matinee

THE York producers of The Deathly Dark Tour and A Night Of Face-Melting Horror, Jamie and Laura McKeller, get stuck into their debut stage show under the name of Neon Crypt Productions.

From the mischievous minds of physical theatre specialists Le Navet Bete, Dracula: The Bloody Truth reveals the truth behind the fangs, as told by Jamie McKeller’s disgruntled Professor Van Helsing  and a troupe of three very stressed actors, Laura Castle’s Count Dracula, Laura McKeller’s Mina and Michael Cornell’s Jonathan Harker. Together they will shatter the lies spoken by the charlatan Bram Stoker and finally shed light on what actually happened. Box office: tickets.41monkgate.co.uk.

Gary Oldman in Krapp’s Last Tape on his return to York Theatre Royal after 45 years. Picture: Gisele Schmidt

York theatre event of the year: Gary Oldman in Krapp’s Last Tape, York Theatre Royal, until May 17

OSCAR winner Gary Oldman returns to York Theatre Royal, where he made his professional debut in 1979, to perform Samuel Beckett’s melancholic, tragicomic slice of theatre of the absurd Krapp’s Last Tape in his first stage appearance since 1989.

“York, for me, is the completion of a cycle,” says the Slow Horses leading man. “It is the place ‘where it all began’. York, in a very real sense, for me, is coming home. The combination of York and Krapp’s Last Tape is all the more poignant because it is ‘a play about a man returning to his past of 30 years earlier’.” Tickets update: check availability of returns on 01904 623568 or yorktheatreroyal.co.uk.

The young lovers in York Stage’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream: Will Parsons’ Lysander, left, Meg Olssen’s Hermia, Amy Domeneghetti’s Helena and Sam Roberts’s Demetrius. Picture: Charlie Kirkpatrick, Kirkpatrick Photography

Reinvented play of the week: York Stage in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Grand Opera House, York, until Saturday, 7.30pm plus 2.30pm Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday matinees

YORK pantomime golden gal Suzy Cooper turns Fairy Queen Titania opposite York-born Royal Shakespeare Company actor Mark Holgate’s Fairy King Oberon in Nik Briggs’s debut Shakespeare production for York Stage.

In his first co-production with the Cumberland Street theatre, Briggs relocates the Bard’s most-performed comedy from the court of Athens to Athens Court, a northern council estate, where magic is fuelled with mayhem and true love’s bumpy path is played out to a new score by musical director Stephen Hackshaw and Nineties and Noughties’ dancefloor fillers, sung by May Tether. Box office: atgtickets.com/york.

Scott Bradlee’s Postmodern Jukebox: Putting the retro into today’s hits at York Barbican

Nostalgia for today: Scott Bradlee’s Postmodern Jukebox: Magic & Moonlight Tour 2025, York Barbican, tonight, doors 7pm

AFTER chalking off their 1,000th show, retro collective Postmodern Jukebox are on the British leg of their Moonlight & Magic world tour. Enter a parallel universe where modern-day hits are reimagined in 1920s’ jazz, swing, doo-wop and Motown arrangements. Think The Great Gatsby meets Sinatra At The Sands meets Back To The Future.  Dress vintage for the full effect. Box office: yorkbarbican.co.uk. 

Wes Banderson: Transferring Wes Anderson’s film music from screen to concert stage at The Crescent, York

Witty name of the week: Wes Banderson, The Crescent, York, tonight, 7.30pm

WES Banderson bring the music of Wes Anderson’s movies to the concert platform in a night of original score and deep-cut soundtracks from the left-field works of the idiosyncratic Texan filmmaker.

Noted for addressing themes of grief, loss of innocence and dysfunctional families, Anderson is the auteur behind The Grand Budapest Hotel, Fantastic Mr Fox, The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou, The Royal Tenenbaums, Moonrise Kingdom, Isle Of Dogs and Asteroid City. Box office: thecrescentyork.com.

AKA Theatre Company in The Flood, on tour in York, Hull and Leeds

Premiere of the week: AKA Theatre Company in The Flood: A Musical, Friargate Theatre, York, May 9 and 10, 7.30pm; Godber Studio, Hull Truck Theatre, Hull, May 13, 7pm; Leeds Playhouse Burton Studio, May 14 and 15, 8pm

AKA Theatre Company’s premiere of Lucie Raine and Joe Revell’s musical The Flood blends live music and heartfelt storytelling based on true accounts of facing up to disaster in West Yorkshire in 2015.

 “This is a story about what it means to come together when everything falls apart,” says writer-director Raine, who uses a cast of five actor-musicians. “It’s not just a play. It’s a tribute to resilience and creativity, inspired by Hebden Bridge and its people. It’s a celebration for all communities who have faced adversity and emerged stronger.” Box office: York, ticketsource.co.uk; Hull, hulltruck.co.uk; Leeds, leedsplayhouse.org.uk. 

Kate Rusby: Showcasing new album When They All Looked Up at Ryedale Festival. Picture: David Angel

Concert announcement of the week: Ryedale Festival presents Kate Rusby, When They All Looked Up, Milton Rooms, Malton, July 25, 7pm

BARNSLEY nightingale Kate Rusby performs songs from her new studio album, When They All Looked Up, with her Singy Songy Session Band as she weaves new melodies, timeless tunes and heartfelt storytelling into an evening of pure folk enchantment. Box office: ryedalefestival.com/event/kate-rusby.