Gala du Festival du rire de Liège 2017 : Les jeunes talents du Festival du rire de Liège
Les duos impossibles de Jérémy Ferrari : 7ème édition
Guy Montagné : Histoires de vacances
Katelyn discovers she is a character in a film after fighting back against 'The Narrator' that controls her life.
Les duos impossibles de Jérémy Ferrari : 6ème édition
Dédo: KILLING JOKE
Alex Vizorek est une dernière fois une oeuvre d'art
Chantal Ladesou – On the road again
Anne Roumanoff - Tout va bien
Michel Leeb à l'Olympia
Guillaume Bats : Hors cadre
Je m'sens bien ... sur scène !
Guillermo Guiz a un bon fond
Comiques de toujours (Vol. 1 à 4)
A comedy about girls joining the army in Denmark. Marianne joins to keep up a long family tradition as her brother won't. Both her brother and her boyfriend find her decision difficult to accept.
60 comedians in 60 minutes, that's what Kyan Khojandi has to offer tonight.
A silent black-and-white comedy inspired by the fizzing rollercoaster of Largo al factotum - the familiar aria from Rossini's The Barber of Seville - featuring the young apprentice hero and a recalcitrant, increasingly monstrous hairball.
While vacationing at a beachside resort, a single mother faces inevitable separation anxiety when her 15-year-old son — who is also her best friend — discovers magical chemistry with a girl his own age.
The Sound of Music engages with the deep-rooted sexual and class-based politics of a seemingly arbitrary and violent culture.
Tony Roper wrote 'The Steamie' for Glasgow's Mayfest in 1987. Return to Hogmany 1957 when a fiesty group of Glasgow women; Mrs Culfeathers, Dolly, Doreen and the irrepressible Magrit, all meet at The Steamie to do the traditional family wash before the New Year. The Steamie is a hilarious cameo of Glasgow's social history where the washing was always easier to do when the Women shared their laugher and sorrow and a scandalous supply of gossip. This is the definitive version of the most popular play of the last 20 years with the all star cast of Dorothy Paul as Magrit, Eileen McCallum as Dolly, Kate Murphy as Doreen, Sheila McDonald as Mrs Culfeathers and a very young Peter Mullan as Andy, the whisky loving handy man.