






|
About Us |
|
R.B.Home Page |
|
Ed Fest2007 |
|
Holyrood: Main Page |
|
Ed Fest 2005 |
|
Rare Birds Entertainment |
|
|
|
Holyrood: |







|
Rare Birds Entertainment |
|
|

|
Return to top of page |
|
previous |
|
next |
|
Ed Fest 2004 |

|
Edinburgh Fringe Festival 2006 |
|
HOLYROOD TAVERN |


|
Also, Comedy and Me Sabrina George |
|
A must see, intriguing third successful stand up show, from this experienced engaging comic. Jokes, performed brilliantly... “Somewhere between Natalie Haynes and Jo Brand” The Scotsman. "Impossibly likable, nonchalant-delightful has lived a colourful existence" Metro |
|
Sabrina George presents her exciting new show following the success at both The Melbourne and Edinburgh Comedy Festivals in 2004. As a sought-after compere, George regularly appears at various festivals and clubs across the UK and beyond, most recently having completed the fabulous Shetland Folk Festival. Her seductive stand-up has been spotted in Canada, Germany, Australia and America. |
|
Leaving home with a fiver and two plastic bags of possessions, Sabrina stayed away from all aspects of really earning money (See previous Edinburgh Show Crime, Comedy and Me). Then turned around and changed everything. Relishing learning about money she went to great lengths to find out more. “I am so spiritual, that when I give to Charity I don’t even sign the cheque”. This money Guru charged £20 for her workshop. “There is a trillion dollars out there that is yours, you just have to believe you can get it – now give ten people a hug and say ‘You are awesome’” This guru charged £15,000. |
|
Tony Benn MP “Why do we always have the FOOTSIE index at the end of the news? No one knows what it means” |
|
A ticket to a Premier League football match costs many times as much as a ticket to the Opera but football is not an elite sport? |
|
|
|
“ I have always been fascinated by money, from the days when we exchanged a goat for a nice frock to the present day where we use cash machines with an edge of hysteria that someone might steal our soul” |
|
What the Critics have said |
|
‘George is a flirt who seduces strangers and welcomes them into her world’ Time Out 2 Nov 2003 |
|
‘There is not a small amount of Dawn French’s knowing chirpiness in her delivery, alongside Jo Brand’s dry wit.’ |



