I first became aware of it when I was passing the Soho Theatre on a soggy Tuesday in October and noticed a line that encircled the Dean Street corner. It wasn’t Friday. No well-known English headliner was scheduled.
The name of a Lebanese-French comic that I had never heard of was written in three scripts on the poster. The first ten minutes were all in Arabic, and the room was crammed to the back wall. No one appeared to be lost. They were doubled over.
| Field | Detail |
|---|---|
| Scene name (informal) | London Multilingual / Bilingual Stand-Up Circuit |
| Origin period | Loosely dated to the mid-2010s; momentum from 2022 onwards |
| Primary languages on stage | Arabic (Levantine and Maghrebi), Spanish (Iberian and Latin American), French, English |
| Key venues | Soho Theatre, The Bill Murray (Angel), Top Secret Comedy Club, Backyard Comedy Club |
| Notable touring acts | Esther Manito, Eman El-Husseini circuit visitors, Ignacio Lopez, Marcel Lucont (English-French) |
| Average ticket price | £12–£28 |
| Typical run | 1 to 3 nights, often selling out within 48 hours |
| Audience demographic | Largely under-35, bilingual, diaspora-heavy |
| Comparable scenes abroad | Jamel Comedy Club (Paris), Comedy Cellar Arabic Nights (NYC) |
| Festival anchors | Soho Comedy Festival, Shubbak, Camden Fringe spillover |
Comedy in London has changed, and the club owners saw it before the critics did. For many years, it was believed that stand-up either worked or didn’t work in English because the punchline’s rhythm was somehow integrated into the language. That presumption is quietly disintegrating. If you walk into the Bill Murray on a Wednesday, you might see a Madrileño discussing Brexit in Castilian Spanish, then switching back to English for the callback. The viewers follow it. The code-switching is no longer apologized for.
Speaking with promoters gives me the impression that this wasn’t intentional. It occurred as a result of the city’s transformation and the comedy scene’s eventual catch-up, which happened more slowly than music or cuisine. There are about 300,000 French speakers in London, sizable Arabic-speaking communities along Edgware Road and West London, and a Spanish-speaking diaspora that has experienced rapid growth since 2016. These audiences were real. Until recently, they lacked a circuit that was serious enough to program for them.

The French wave is the easiest for outsiders to understand, in part because France has been experiencing a stand-up boom for nearly 20 years. You can trace this back to Jamel Debbouze’s club in Paris in the mid-2000s and continue through the Netflix specials of Blanche Gardin and Fary. The bilingual offspring of that lineage are typically found in London’s French comics. Both Stewart Lee and Gad Elmaleh, who they grew up watching, are evident in a single set. An early proof of concept was Marcel Lucont, a character who was born in England. Interestingly, the new French acts don’t care about the persona. On stage, they simply express themselves in two languages.
The Arabic scene is likely more fascinating and more difficult to map. The broadsheets don’t review the majority of it. Word spreads via Instagram Reels and WhatsApp groups. A Camden venue can be sold out by Friday night if a set goes viral in Beirut on a Tuesday afternoon. It’s possible that the lack of cultural translation is what makes the content feel honest because it isn’t softened for non-Arabic ears, which is exactly the point. Last month, I saw a Palestinian-British comedian perform a fifteen-minute segment about his mother’s relationship using WhatsApp voice notes, half in English and half in Levantine Arabic. The audience laughed in two waves, with the bilingual audience laughing first and the rest reading the room a beat later.
Stand-up in Spanish falls somewhere in the middle. Young professionals, students, and a larger Latin American community than most Londoners are aware of are drawn to it. This seam has been worked for years by Ignacio Lopez. Rooms in Hackney and Peckham that English-language promoters had dismissed as comedy-dead are being filled by newer acts, many of whom are women and many of whom are queer.
It’s difficult to ignore the fact that all of this is taking place while the more well-established English-language circuit laments, quite rightly, dwindling attendance and escalating venue expenses. Comedy appears to be in decline, according to investors in the live entertainment industry. If you look in the appropriate rooms, the numbers reveal a different picture. It’s still unclear if this boom will last through the inevitable arrival of larger commercial promoters who will want to smooth out the edges. As of right now, there are actual lines outside Soho on Tuesdays.
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