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    Ian Saville is a performer, magician and ventriloquist who has been practising socialist magic for over 40 years. Rooted in the radical theatre and alternative cabaret movements of the 1970s and 80s, Ian has developed a unique act that uses the language of magic and illusion to explore left-wing politics, class struggle and social history. He performs with a ventriloquist dummy of Karl Marx and has shared stages with performers including Ben Elton and Linda Smith.

    Episode summary

    In this episode of Variety, Ian Saville joins us to explore a life spent finding the politics in magic and the magic in politics. The conversation moves through his Jewish upbringing in Whitechapel, his schooling at Hackney Downs alongside the influence of playwright Harold Pinter, his early obsession with magic shops and Tommy Cooper, and his years with the radical theatre group Broadside Mobile Workers Theater. Ian also reflects on the alternative cabaret scene, the question of whether art can change minds, and why he has spent four decades performing tricks that make audiences think as well as laugh. Along the way, he performs the Class Struggle rope trick live, teaches the host a knot, and brings out Karl Marx for a word or two.

    In this episode:

    Ian's Jewish upbringing in Whitechapel and schooling at Hackney Downs alongside the influence of Harold PinterDiscovering magic through childhood kits, West End magic shops and the comedy of Tommy CooperHow Broadside Mobile Workers Theater turned Ian into a socialist magicianPreaching to the converted and whether theatre and performance can genuinely change mindsLive magic: the Torn and Restored Newspaper, rope trick teaching and Karl Marx on ventriloquismThe alternative cabaret scene, Palestinian solidarity and what is coming next


    00:00 — Opening performance: socialist magic and left-wing splits
    01:26 — Growing up Jewish in Whitechapel
    04:37 — Hackney Downs School, Harold Pinter and Joe Brearley
    06:18 — Falling in love with magic: books, shops and West End dealers
    09:25 — Butlins, Tommy Cooper and learning comedy magic
    16:12 — University, acting and using magic as an audition piece
    18:08 — Jewish pantomime and collaborative theatre
    22:22 — The origins of socialist magic and Broadside Mobile Workers Theater
    24:33 — Preaching to the converted and engaging workers through drama
    28:57 — The Torn and Restored Newspaper: a trick about political splits
    30:55 — Teaching the host a rope trick live
    35:35 — Karl Marx speaks: ventriloquism and socialist history
    41:11 — Alternative cabaret, Ben Elton and Linda Smith
    43:31 — The Class Struggle rope trick performed in full
    48:30 — Art, politics and the shows that followed
    51:11 — Activism, Palestine and what is next

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    Sarah-Louise Young is an actress, writer, director, improviser and internationally renowned cabaret performer. Known for her acclaimed solo work, including An Evening Without Kate Bush and Julie Madly Deeply, Sarah-Louise has built a career around live performance, storytelling, music, comedy and audience connection.

    Episode summary

    In this episode of Variety, Sarah-Louise Young joins us to explore the world of cabaret, solo performance, improvisation and the realities of building a creative life. The conversation moves through her upbringing in Kent, early love of singing and theatre, years of making work at the Edinburgh Fringe, and the long process of finding her artistic voice.

    Sarah-Louise also reflects on making shows from scratch, the importance of failure, the relationship between performer and audience, and why live performance still matters in an increasingly digital world. Along the way, the episode looks at creativity, resilience, rejection, class, arts funding, AI, fame, and the strange, beautiful power of being in a room with an audience.

    In this episode
    Sarah-Louise’s upbringing in Kent and early love of performing
    Growing up with music, singing, choirs and homemade variety shows
    Discovering theatre and cabaret through the Edinburgh Fringe
    The influence of Victoria Wood, Fascinating Aïda and Stephen Sondheim
    What cabaret means and why audience connection matters
    Making Julie Madly Deeply and An Evening Without Kate Bush
    Honouring iconic artists while creating something original
    Improvisation, Showstopper! and learning to fail publicly
    Why live performance does not need to be perfect
    Rejection, reviews and being judged as a performer
    Pantomime, vaudeville and the joy of theatrical tradition
    The cost, privilege and pressure of the Edinburgh Fringe
    Arts funding, access, education and valuing creativity
    The work audiences do not see behind a performance

    00:00 — Opening preview & introduction to Sarah-Louise Young
    01:54 — Growing up in Kent and discovering performance
    08:39 — Early variety shows and falling in love with the Edinburgh Fringe
    10:10 — Inspirations: Victoria Wood, Fascinating Aïda and Sondheim
    11:44 — What cabaret really means
    15:42 — Julie Andrews, voice loss and Julie Madly Deeply
    19:22 — Creating An Evening Without Kate Bush
    23:09 — Showstopper!, improv and learning to fail publicly
    26:54 — Rejection, reviews and life as a performer
    33:25 — The Bob Ross Effect, creativity and mental health
    39:24 — Edinburgh Fringe, privilege and the cost of making art
    48:26 — AI, human creativity and why live performance still matters

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    Raffaello Morales is the musical and managing director of the Fidelio Orchestra, a London based organisation reimagining how audiences experience classical music. Originally from Rome, and trained in both music and physics, Raffaello’s journey has taken him from academia to finance and ultimately to Fidelio, where he brings together live performance, hospitality, events and cultural programming to make music feel fresh, social and alive.

    Episode summary

    In this episode of Variety, Raffaello Morales joins us to explore the shifting world of classical music, live performance and cultural spaces. The conversation moves through the realities of running Fidelio, the balance between artistic ambition and commercial pressure, and the challenge of making classical music feel more open, relevant and alive.

    Raffaello also reflects on conducting, audience connection, arts funding, music education and the role culture can play in uncertain times. Along the way, the episode looks at what makes live performance so powerful; not perfection, but presence, risk, communication and the shared experience between performer and audience.

    In this episode

    Raffaello’s upbringing in Rome and early musical trainingStudying music and physics side by sideMoving to London for postgraduate study and a PhDWorking in finance before leaving bankingBuilding Fidelio as both an orchestra and events businessThe relationship between music, hospitality and communityWhy technique alone is not enough in performanceThe problem of elitism and access in classical musicArts funding, education and the role of governmentHow classical music can adapt for modern audiencesConducting, score study and interpretationThe importance of eye contact, physicality and leadershipThe beauty of imperfection in live performanceThe future of culture, education and meaningful shared experiences



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    Max Fulham is a comedian and ventriloquist who has been performing professionally since his teenage years. Known for his sharp improvisation, playful comedy and inventive use of puppets and everyday objects, Max has built a distinctive career on the comedy circuit and beyond.

    His work combines classic ventriloquism technique with modern stand-up, character comedy and a deep love of puppetry. From comedy clubs and Edinburgh Fringe to major theatre stages, Max brings a fresh, funny and highly skilled approach to one of variety entertainment’s most misunderstood art forms.

    Episode summary

    In this episode of The Variety Show Podcast, Adam Sternberg talks with comedian and ventriloquist Max Fulham about how a childhood Christmas puppet unexpectedly became the start of a career.

    Max reflects on growing up between East London, Essex, Scotland and Surrey, discovering performance through singing, dancing, magic and puppets, and teaching himself ventriloquism by watching videos online and practising in front of a bedroom mirror.

    The conversation explores the craft behind ventriloquism, from lip control and difficult sounds to character creation, puppetry, improvisation and the hidden acting involved in making a puppet feel alive. Max also introduces some of his puppets, including a restored vintage ventriloquist figure and his character Eugene.

    Adam and Max discuss comedy clubs, Edinburgh Fringe, surprise support slots for Engelbert Humperdinck, the importance of play, and the reality of turning a passion into a profession. They also talk about arts education, creativity in schools, and why live performance remains deeply human in an increasingly digital world.

    Funny, thoughtful and full of insight, this episode reveals the skill, discipline and joy behind modern ventriloquism.

    In this episode

    Getting a first puppet at nine years oldGrowing up across East London, Essex, Scotland and SurreyDiscovering performance, comedy and puppetryTeaching himself ventriloquism through YouTubeChoosing performance over universityHow ventriloquism actually worksCreating puppet characters and voicesVintage ventriloquist figures and puppet historyComedy clubs, Edinburgh Fringe and support slotsArts education, AI and advice for performers
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    Xnthony is an Irish writer, performer and producer whose work spans musical theatre, cabaret, performance art and live interdisciplinary performance. Originally from Roscommon, Ireland, he has built a distinctive career creating bold, pop-infused work that blends history, identity, politics and humour.

    His projects often explore queerness, Irish culture, community life and the ways pop music can be used as a storytelling tool. Over the years, he has developed work through fringe theatre, cabaret venues and large-scale arts support in Ireland, building a reputation for theatrical ideas that are playful, provocative and original. His acclaimed work includes Oliver Cromwell Is Really Very Sorry, and he is also developing new projects including Lourdes and Troll Farm.

    Episode summary

    In this episode of The Variety Show Podcast, Adam Sternberg talks with writer, performer and producer Xnthony about the winding path that led him from rural Roscommon to a career in experimental theatre, cabaret and musical storytelling.

    Xnthony reflects on growing up in an adopted family, discovering creativity through music, drama and community arts, and learning to overcome intense stage fright as a teenager. He shares what it was like coming out at 16 in rural Ireland, and how queerness, difference and a sense of otherness shaped the way he sees the world and makes work.

    The conversation explores the realities of building a life in the arts without formal theatre training, from early performance art pieces in post-crash Ireland to fringe shows, survival jobs and years of developing projects with limited resources. Xnthony also speaks passionately about the importance of public arts funding, class access in the creative industries, and why Ireland has become such a strong force in producing world-class artists.

    Adam and Xnthony also discuss pop music as dramaturgy, the influence of artists such as Madonna, Goldfrapp, French and Saunders and Kenneth Williams, and the creative power of cabaret as a live form. They dive into the origins of Oliver Cromwell Is Really Very Sorry, a pop musical that reimagines one of the darkest figures in Irish history, and talk about Xnthony’s upcoming work Lourdes, which examines faith, miracles and theatrical spectacle.

    Funny, honest and full of insight, this episode is a fascinating look at identity, ambition, art-making and what it really takes to build a creative life on your own terms.

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    Artist bio

    Laura Wyatt O’Keeffe is a multi-award-nominated Irish theatre-maker, actor, drag king and DJ whose work spans theatre, cabaret, live art and immersive performance. Raised in Cork and trained at East 15 Acting School, she has built a career creating and performing work that blends storytelling, ritual, humour and audience interaction. Her practice moves between conventional acting, devised theatre and drag performance, often exploring identity, community, belief and connection. Through her drag king character Father Jesse, Laura reimagines Irish Catholic ritual through a queer, comic and deeply human lens, bringing performance into theatres, clubs and other unexpected spaces.

    Episode summary

    In this episode of The Variety Show, Adam Sternberg speaks with Laura Wyatt O’Keeffe about her path from childhood theatre in Cork to acting, theatre-making and drag performance. Surrounded by rehearsal rooms from an early age through her playwright and director aunt, Laura grew up watching stories being built from the inside and began performing herself while still very young. She reflects on how those early experiences shaped her understanding not only of acting, but of audience, structure and the wider world of performance.

    The conversation follows her journey through university and drama school, where she trained as an actor while also beginning to make her own work. Laura speaks candidly about ambition, fame, funding and the difficult balance between artistic vision and practical survival, as well as the privileges that time, money and access can bring to making great work.

    A major turning point came during and after the pandemic, when Laura found herself drawn more strongly to drag and cabaret than to traditional theatre. Through her drag king character Father Jesse, an Irish Catholic priest delivering mass in unexpected settings, she discovered a form that allowed for deeper audience interaction, humour, ritual and shared experience. Together, Adam and Laura explore religion, performance, community, queer identity and the power of art to help audiences recognise themselves in unfamiliar worlds. The episode closes with an Irish language lesson and a discussion of Laura’s work beyond performance, including an opera-based breathing programme supporting people with long Covid.

    Timestamps

    00:00 Introduction to Father Jesse and the themes of ritual, identity and connection

    00:01 Laura Wyatt O’Keeffe’s career across theatre, drag and DJing

    00:02 Growing up in Cork and being surrounded by theatre from childhood

    00:04 Early performing experiences and learning by watching rehearsal rooms

    00:09 The Irish arts scene, cultural identity and support for artists

    00:11 University, East 15 and developing as an actor and maker

    00:17 Fame, resources and the realities of sustaining an artistic career

    00:19 The pandemic, drag, cabaret and discovering a new performance language

    00:23 Audience impact, live connection and why interaction matters

    00:26 Creating Father Jesse and using drag to explore religion, ritual and queerness

    00:31 Performing for different audiences and challenging assumptions

    00:38 Returning to acting and balancing long-form theatre with drag

    00:39 Irish language lesson and lighter moments

    00:40 Work beyond the stage, including opera and long Covid breathing sessions

    00:44 Artistic influences, storytelling and what performance can do

    If you want, I can also reduce these timestamps to 10 to match the format you used for the other episode.

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    Artist bio

    Jon is a Cornwall-born stand-up comedian and juggler whose work combines technical circus skill with sharp comic timing, improvisation and audience interaction. He began juggling at the age of six after becoming obsessed with diabolo, balance tricks and circus props, and soon turned that passion into performances, workshops and paid work while still a child. After initially training as an electrician, Jon took the leap into performance full-time as a teenager and built a career across street shows, cabaret, comedy clubs, theatres, cruise ships and international touring. Known for blending virtuoso juggling with warmth, risk and self-aware humour, he has developed a style that challenges assumptions about what a juggling show can be.

    Episode summary

    In this episode of The Variety Show, Adam Sternberg talks with comedian and juggler Jon about growing up in Cornwall, discovering juggling as a child, and turning an unusual obsession into a full-time career. Jon reflects on learning diabolo, juggling clubs and balance tricks from a young age, practicing through school lunchtimes, and performing in assemblies long before he had any real sense of what a professional life in juggling might look like.

    He shares stories of growing up as the “oddball” who was happy to spend hours practicing while others played football, being encouraged by supportive parents, and learning from local clowns, magicians and street performers. The conversation traces his path from early paid workshop jobs and a brief apprenticeship as an electrician to a life-changing opportunity with Gandini Juggling that pushed him to move to London and try performing professionally.

    Along the way, Jon discusses the difference between technical skill and building a genuinely entertaining show, why comedy and juggling belong together, and how mistakes, drops and jeopardy can actually strengthen live performance. He also talks about the misconceptions people have about juggling, the grind behind the glamour, and the strange realities of life on the road. The episode ends with Jon teaching Adam a simple juggling-based fork-and-apple trick, which becomes one of the podcast’s most satisfying small victories.

    Timestamps

    00:00 Intro, Jon’s comic style, and a preview of performance disasters

    00:01 Growing up in Cornwall and starting juggling at six

    00:03 Diabolos, juggling props, school performances and becoming the “oddball”

    00:08 Supportive parents, early paid workshops, and learning from local clowns and magicians

    00:18 Leaving an electrical apprenticeship and taking the leap into full-time performing

    00:21 How Jon built a show, found his voice, and learned that personality matters more than tricks alone

    00:24 Deliberate drops, live jeopardy, and why failure can make performance better

    00:27 Inspirations, juggling’s image problem, and some of Jon’s wildest performance stories

    00:35 The A–Z tour, performing in unusual places, and Jon teaches Adam a fork-and-apple trick

    00:41 Practice, world records, women in juggling, advice for performers, and the realities of the job

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    Artist bio

    Ashley Luke Lloyd is a Blackpool-born actor, singer, dancer, choreographer and writer whose career began in childhood on major UK stages and has since spanned West End musicals, touring productions, film, teaching and choreography. He started performing professionally at a young age after being cast in Whistle Down the Wind, touring the UK for four years, and later joined the original cast of Billy Elliot as Michael. Since then, his theatre credits have included Dreamgirls, Jesus Christ Superstar, Saturday Night Fever and Legally Blonde, alongside screen work in films including I Could Never Be Your Woman, working with names such as Michelle Pfeiffer, Paul Rudd, Sissy Spacek, Elton John and Tim Curry. Alongside performing, Ashley continues to teach young people in Blackpool and remains a passionate advocate for arts access, regional talent and the power of storytelling.


    Episode summary

    In this episode of The Variety Show, Adam Sternberg talks with Ashley Luke Lloyd about growing up in Blackpool, discovering theatre through sheer childhood energy, and building a career that has taken him from child stardom to West End productions, film sets and choreography. Ashley reflects on his first break in Whistle Down the Wind, the unusual realities of being a child performer, and what it was like to appear in the original stage production of Billy Elliot at a time when the show was reshaping conversations around masculinity, class and dance.

    He shares vivid stories from backstage life, including performing eight shows a week as a child, learning from theatre impresario Bill Kenwright, meeting Elton John, and later working on film projects with Michelle Pfeiffer, Paul Rudd and Tim Curry. The conversation moves beyond career highlights into bigger questions about auditions, rejection, live performance, why theatre remains different from film, and why storytelling matters more to Ashley than fame.


    Ashley also speaks passionately about arts education, the class barriers facing young performers, and the need to keep creative opportunities open to children from working-class backgrounds and regional communities. The episode closes with a playful segment in which Ashley teaches Adam a small piece of Billy Elliot-inspired choreography and a dramatic line reading from one of his horror films.

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    Artist bio

    Helen Nash is a Cornish-born pianist and cellist whose career spans live television, orchestral performance, crossover string work, and high-profile collaborations across classical and popular music. Raised in rural Cornwall, she began piano and cello as a child and later studied cello at the Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama. After an early break playing for Robbie Williams, Helen built a varied freelance career performing with artists including Andrea Bocelli and Cher, while also appearing on major television shows such as The Graham Norton Show and Britain’s Got Talent. As a member of Escala, she has helped bring string music to wider audiences through inventive arrangements and outreach work, while continuing to reflect on arts access, education, and the realities of sustaining a life in music.

    Episode summary

    In this episode of The Variety Show, Adam Sternberg talks with pianist and cellist Helen Nash about growing up in rural Cornwall, finding music early, and building a career that moves between classical training, live television, and crossover performance. Helen shares how an unusual combination of family influences, countryside life, and a chance encounter with a local cello teacher led her into music, even though no one in her immediate family was a professional performer.

    She reflects on studying cello seriously, stepping away from it after music college, and then being drawn back in through an unexpected mix of songwriting, freelance opportunities, and high-profile gigs. From playing for Robbie Williams at the Royal Variety Performance to joining Escala and working across television and live events, Helen describes a career that has often developed organically rather than through one fixed plan. The conversation also explores the pressures of practice, the realities behind the glamour of performance, the value of music education, and the growing barriers facing young people who want to enter the arts. Helen closes by arguing that the arts remain essential to human life, even in an age shaped by AI and rapid technological change.

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    Artist bio

    Rhys’ Pieces is an East London cabaret performer, drag artist, and host known for high-energy, genre-blending performances that combine lip sync, spoken word, movement, comedy, and political commentary. Born in Romford and raised in Hackney by a single mother, Rhys grew up navigating intersecting identities as a mixed-race, queer, working-class performer who also attended a more privileged school environment. Beginning with spoken word and rap performance before moving into drag and cabaret, Rhys became part of London’s alternative queer performance scene through institutions such as Duckie, the Royal Vauxhall Tavern, and The Glory. Over more than a decade on stage, they have performed across cabaret clubs, theatre venues, drag competitions, and community events, developing a distinctive style that plays with gender, identity, satire, and audience interaction.

    Episode summary

    In this episode of The Variety Show, Adam Sternberg talks with cabaret performer and drag artist Rhys’s Pieces about identity, performance, and finding a creative voice in London’s queer nightlife scene. Rhys shares their upbringing in East London, growing up mixed-race with a white mother and absent father, and how early interests in drama, literature, and performance helped shape their artistic outlook.

    The conversation traces Rhys’s unconventional journey into cabaret. After early ambitions in acting, struggles with auditions, and a period of feeling lost during university, a workshop with the legendary queer club night Duckie introduced them to the world of cabaret performance. From there Rhys began developing acts that mixed spoken word, rap, lip sync, dance, and performance art, eventually creating the persona Rhys’s Pieces as a way to express the many parts of their identity.

    They discuss the history and meaning of cabaret as an art form rooted in satire, community, and audience interaction, as well as the importance of spaces like the Royal Vauxhall Tavern in nurturing alternative performance scenes. The conversation also explores wider topics including class and opportunity in the arts, the impact of drag culture and shows like Drag Race, and how live performance remains uniquely human in a world increasingly shaped by technology and AI.

    The episode closes with a light-hearted moment as Rhys attempts to teach Adam how to twerk, before offering advice to young performers about confidence, self-belief, and creating work that reflects who you truly are.

    Timestamps

    00:00 Intro and meeting Rhys’s Pieces

    00:01:24 Growing up in East London and early performance interests

    00:03:25 Identity, school life, and navigating race, class, and queerness

    00:05:22 Early cultural influences from Riverdance to pop music

    00:07:43 From acting ambitions to spoken word and rap performance

    00:12:49 Discovering cabaret through Duckie and London’s queer nightlife

    00:15:02 What cabaret means and its roots in satire and audience interaction

    00:18:18 The drag journey and creating the persona Rhys’s Pieces

    00:26:36 Class, identity, and opportunities in the arts

    00:32:01 Twerking lesson and advice for young performers

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    Artist bio

    Harry the Piano is a West London–born pianist, improviser, and musical director known for his virtuosic, genre-blending live performances. Raised in Shepherd’s Bush in a vicarage household with no television, he began playing piano at four after an upright was donated to his family. Classically trained to Grade 8 by 14, Harry developed a parallel obsession with improvisation and jazz, inspired by Oscar Peterson. Over a varied career he has performed with artists including David Bowie, Will Smith, and Beyoncé, appeared as a resident pianist on major UK television shows including The Big Breakfast and Johnny Vaughan Tonight, and built a reputation for spontaneous audience-request performances that fuse classical, jazz, pop, and film music in any style. His YouTube channel has attracted millions of views, and he regularly works as a composer, arranger, and educator in schools.

    Episode summary

    In this episode of The Variety Show, Adam Sternberg sits down with pianist and improviser Harry the Piano to explore a career built on spontaneity, skill, and versatility. Harry reflects on growing up in Shepherd’s Bush with no television, discovering the piano at four, and developing perfect pitch while balancing classical training with a love of jazz improvisation. He shares how early gigs in West End restaurants and clubs led to television work, performing alongside global stars, and becoming a resident pianist on major chat shows.

    Harry explains how his signature live act evolved from club performances where guests would challenge him to play any tune in any style, a format that became the foundation of his theatre shows. The conversation moves through encounters with Hugh Laurie and Dame Edna, the realities of fame, and why he prefers a creative life without celebrity pressure. They also discuss AI in music, the importance of live performance, the decline of arts funding in state schools, and why improvisation unlocks confidence in young musicians. Harry closes with practical advice for aspiring performers, from identifying your strengths to understanding how the industry really works.

    Timestamps

    00:00 Intro and Harry’s upbringing in Shepherd’s Bush

    00:02 Early piano lessons, improvisation, and perfect pitch

    00:04 School shows and discovering a love for arranging

    00:06 University in Sheffield, jazz bands, and musical direction

    00:09 Oscar Peterson inspiration and learning by ear

    00:12 First paid gigs in the West End and club circuit

    00:16 TV work, The Big Breakfast, and playing with global stars

    00:20 Hugh Laurie, Dame Edna, and celebrity encounters

    00:26 AI, live performance, and the future of music

    00:30 Arts education, improvisation in schools, and career advice

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    Artist bio

    Richard Enion is a Midlands-based drummer and entrepreneur who blends live percussion with facilitation and business. Raised in a small village near Burton on Trent, he started drumming after being inspired by a school assembly performance and later trained formally for several years in Derby. Alongside playing drum kit in bands, Richard built a career delivering large-scale drumming workshops for companies, using rhythm as a tool for connection, stress relief, and shared achievement. He appeared on Dragon’s Den, accepted an on-air offer, and later chose not to take the deal, while still benefiting from the experience and exposure.


    Episode summary

    In this episode of The Variety Show, Adam Sternberg talks with drummer and entrepreneur Richard Enion about how rhythm became both a musical path and a business. Richard shares his early life near Burton on Trent, his first drum kit at 12, and the school assembly moment that sparked everything. He explains how he moved from playing in bands to running corporate drumming workshops, building sessions that take groups from zero to a full performance and helping people feel safe, energised, and present. Richard also tells the story of travelling in the Caribbean, trusting a gut instinct that landed him a drumming gig, and how that period led directly to buying djembe drums and launching the team-building side of his work. The conversation covers why drumming can feel meditative and communal, what happens when participants are hesitant or have been drinking, and why arts access in schools matters. Richard then talks through his Dragon’s Den journey, including pushing back after being told there was no slot, the eventual pitch, the offer, and the decision not to sign. The episode ends with Richard teaching Adam basic stick rudiments and sharing advice for young musicians on starting with whatever you have, then doing the practice that builds real skill.


    00:00 Intro and Richard’s background near Burton on Trent

    00:02 First drum kit and the school assembly inspiration

    00:04 Lessons, rudiments, and learning the fundamentals

    00:08 Caribbean drumming detour and trusting the instinct to ask


    00:10 From bands to djembe workshops and the start of team building


    00:11 What a corporate drumming session looks like and why it works

    00:14 Handling reluctant participants and the alcohol factor

    00:15 Drumming as focus, stress relief, and shared “medicine”


    00:21 Arts in schools and inspiring young people through music

    00:21 Dragon’s Den, the offer, and why Richard walked away


    00:27 Adam learns stick basics: singles, doubles, and paradiddles

    00:33 Human energy vs electronic tools and AI concerns


    00:36 Advice for young drummers: start anywhere, then practice hard

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    Laura Wright is a British singer and recording artist best known for classical and choral repertoire, crossover performances, and live appearances at major sporting events. She began singing young, learning by ear and developing a natural instinct for harmony through family car journeys. Laura won BBC Songs of Praise Young Chorister of the Year as a teenager, which led to national performances and recording opportunities, including being in the classical-crossover group All Angels. She later trained at the Royal College of Music, building the technique and stamina needed for a long career. Alongside concerts and recordings, Laura is closely associated with stadium anthems and ceremonial performances, and she supports the growth of women’s sport through music.

    Episode summary

    In this episode of The Variety Show, Adam Sternberg talks with singer Laura Wright about the early moments that shaped her voice, from harmonising in the car as a child to performing in high-pressure live settings. Laura shares how winning Young Chorister of the Year opened doors to broadcast performances and major opportunities, then led into All Angels and eventually formal training at the Royal College of Music. They discuss nerves and breath control, what happens when live performances go wrong, and how emotion and grief can affect the voice over time. Laura also explains how her love of sport became part of her career, from singing at landmark matches to supporting women’s sport, and she reflects on fame, reviews, and staying grounded.

    00:00 Intro to Laura Wright

    00:01:04 Early memories of singing, harmonies, and musical upbringing

    00:04:10 The moment Laura realised singing could move people emotionally

    00:07:40 Young Chorister of the Year and the first big break

    00:12:25 Nerves, breath control, and the risk of live performance

    00:15:00 When things go wrong: mic failures and adapting in the moment

    00:18:34 All Angels, touring young, and the realities of the industry

    00:22:00 Royal College of Music, training, and the opera question

    00:31:04 Sport, stadium anthems, and women’s sport

    00:46:15 Vocal warm-ups, Adam’s lesson, and advice for young performers

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    Artist bio

    Laura London is a Westminster-born magician and close-up performer known for sharp sleight of hand, storytelling-led shows, and deep knowledge of magic history. Diagnosed with ADD (now ADHD) as a child, she found focus through performance—first inspired by a kids’ party trick at eight, then shaped by formative mentorships including Hungarian legend George Kovari, iconic British magician Fay Presto, and manager Jenny Dunster. A former youngest female member of The Magic Circle at the time of her admission, Laura works internationally across theatres, private events, and corporate settings, and is passionate about advancing magic through study, practice, and respect for the craft rather than labels or shortcuts.

    Episode summary

    In this episode of Variety, Adam Sternberg meets magician Laura London at The Magician’s Table in Bermondsey for a candid, funny, and wide-ranging conversation about how a chaotic childhood in London’s nightlife world led to a life in magic. Laura talks about being born in Westminster, spending early years around entertainers and rock ’n’ roll energy through her mum’s nightclub, and the shock of losing that world as a child. Diagnosed young with ADD/ADHD and told she might struggle in conventional school and work, Laura explains how creativity became her anchor—after seeing the classic “Run Rabbit Run” at age eight and realizing it wasn’t the trick that mattered, but the joy it created.

    Laura traces the path from magic-shop afternoons at Davenports to meeting George Kovari, across the road, then leaving school and home at 15 and using magic to survive—sometimes literally trading performances for food. She shares what it felt like entering The Magic Circle as a young punk-looking newcomer, and the moment Fay Presto intervened, mentored her, and opened doors to her first serious paid work. The conversation turns to women in magic: the long history of overlooked pioneers, why Laura avoids the label “female magician,” and how representation is shifting through TV, the internet, and changing expectations for what girls can do.

    They also dig into the difference between close-up and stage magic, why presentation matters more than method, and the idea of “real magic”—not supernatural belief, but the rare performance moment that stays with someone forever. Laura describes performing internationally and how audiences vary by culture, why reading a room matters at corporate events, and how a nightmare Edinburgh Fringe malfunction forced her to improvise in front of some of the world’s best magicians. The episode ends with Adam attempting a card spring under Laura’s instruction, followed by a tease of Laura’s upcoming new show (not all cards this time), developed with Jonathan Goodwin.

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    Artist bio

    Coco Sato is a Tokyo-born origami artist, educator, and performer who reimagines traditional paper folding as large-scale sculpture, installation, and live performance. With a background in printmaking and photo media, she approaches origami as both a visual art form and a choreographed, audience-driven experience. Her work spans workshops for children and families, festival performances using giant paper and full-body movement, and collaborations that connect origami with STEM ideas like geometry and engineering.

    Episode summary

    In this episode of Variety, Adam Sternberg sits down with origami artist Coco Sato to explore how a simple sheet of paper can become sculpture, performance, and even a tool for teaching maths. Coco shares origami’s roots in Japanese history, from folded poetic letters and gift-wrapping traditions to its modern identity as a widely taught childhood pastime in Japan.

    Coco traces her own path from studying paper-based art and photography to building a career after becoming a mother, when she shifted toward teaching and discovered that scaling up origami made it more visible, physical, and performative. She describes moving from small demonstrations to giant outdoor festival work, where the folding itself became the art. They also discuss the difference between precision sculpture and live performance, the minimal tools required, and the real-world problems origami faces, including weather, soggy paper, and the challenges of giving clear instructions in the moment.

    Adam learns two simple folds on camera, a butterfly and a cat, and Coco explains why origami can be therapeutic, how it trains focus and concentration, and how it can reshape how people see creativity in everyday materials. The conversation also touches on origami’s links to STEM, including geometry basics, collaborations with mathematicians, and real-world engineering applications like compact folding methods used in space-related design. Finally, Coco reflects on AI, where it can mimic the look of folds in advertising without being physically possible, and offers advice for young artists: stay flexible, say yes to opportunities, take risks, and do the scary thing that leads somewhere new.

    00:00 Behind the scenes setup and intro to Coco Sato

    00:00:42 What origami is and its origins in Japanese poetic letters

    00:02:24 Coco’s background, Tokyo and Yokohama, creativity at home

    00:03:55 From childhood play to paper-based art and 3D folded photo work

    00:07:08 Motherhood, teaching, and discovering large-scale origami

    00:08:18 Giant origami, choreography, performance vs sculpture

    00:11:18 Minimal tools and Coco makes Adam a paper bow tie

    00:17:47 Origami butterfly tutorial on camera

    00:22:30 Adam learns an origami cat and Coco’s philosophy on perception

    00:28:00 STEM links, folding limits, things going wrong, AI, and advice for artists

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    Artist bio

    Kevin Bishop is a veteran television producer and director whose career spans decades at the BBC. Starting behind the scenes in theatre and variety, he went on to work with some of Britain’s most iconic performers, directing and producing shows including French and Saunders, A Bit of Fry and Laurie, The Kenny Everett Show, Wogan, the Royal Variety Show, and the Eurovision Song Contest. Across his career, he has overseen hundreds of live broadcasts and worked closely with stars ranging from Victoria Wood and Elton John to Liza Minnelli, Terry Wogan, and Shirley Bassey.

    Episode summary

    In this episode of Variety, Adam Sternberg sits down with legendary TV producer and director Kevin Bishop for a rare behind-the-scenes look at British television history. Kevin reflects on his early love of theatre, his first backstage jobs, and the winding path that led him to the BBC, where he helped shape some of the most influential comedy and variety shows of the last 50 years.

    The conversation covers Kevin’s experiences working with comedy greats like Victoria Wood, French and Saunders, Fry and Laurie, Roy Bremner, and Larry Grayson, as well as producing and directing ten Royal Variety Shows. Kevin breaks down how acts were chosen, how running orders were built, and why egos were rarely a problem. He also shares memorable moments involving Elton John, Liza Minnelli, Shirley Bassey, Rowan Atkinson, and Bob Monkhouse.

    Adam and Kevin then turn to Eurovision, including the UK’s 1997 win, the challenge of hosting the contest in Birmingham in 1998, the last-ever Eurovision with a live orchestra, and the night Dana International won in a moment that helped redefine representation on the world stage. The episode wraps with reflections on the BBC, the meaning of variety entertainment, and Kevin’s question for a future guest.

    00:00 Introduction and Kevin Bishop’s career overview

    01:00 Working with comedy legends and spotting future stars

    02:25 Early passion for theatre and first backstage jobs

    04:00 Breaking into television and first producing roles

    06:08 Queen Mother’s 90th birthday gala and Royal Variety Shows

    07:56 Booking acts and running order decisions

    10:07 Rehearsals, live orchestras, and handling big stars

    11:31 Starstruck moments and working with Larry Grayson

    13:54 Live TV pressure, mistakes, and editing fixes

    15:37 Wogan, Eurovision, the BBC, and the meaning of variety

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    Artist bio

    Judge the Poet is a London-born spontaneous improvised poet who has been creating rhyming poems on the spot for over three decades. A performer and writer with a background in English literature, he has taken his act around the world, appearing on TV, performing at private and public events, and writing his own book of poetry. His work blends quick-thinking craft with audience-reading empathy, turning live moments into tailored poems that tell real stories.

    For more on Judge the Poet visit:

    https://www.instagram.com/judgethepoet/

    Episode summary

    In episode 2, Adam Sternberg welcomes Judge the Poet for a deep dive into the unusual art and business of improvised poetry. Judge opens by demonstrating his spontaneous poet skill, asking Adam for three random prompts, Christmas, entertainment, and pink, then instantly shaping them into a coherent rhyming poem.

    From there, Judge shares how he has been making up poems since primary school, how he trained his craft like a musician or athlete, and how he built a career the hard way by knocking on doors, taking low-paid early gigs, and growing through word of mouth. They explore the two sides of performance, technical skill and stagecraft, plus the reality of resilience, instability, and why live entertainment matters, especially post-COVID.

    The conversation also tackles poetry’s image problem in schools, why poetry should be felt like music rather than solved, and how rhyme and rhythm pull language into the heart. They also discuss AI, why it can imitate poems but cannot truly read the room. Judge closes by improvising a final poem that sums up the episode’s themes, poetry, variety, and AI.

    10 YouTube chapters (timestamps)

    00:00 Cold open poem and quick intro

    00:45 Who Judge is and what a spontaneous poet does

    01:50 Live demo setup and how the game works

    02:12 Demo poem using Christmas, entertainment, and pink

    03:32 What makes it more than a party trick, story and meaning

    04:11 Judge’s background, London to Devon to English Lit in Yorkshire

    06:00 Origins and practice, childhood poems and building the craft

    09:00 Making a living, knocking on doors, sales, and word of mouth growth

    11:40 Performing styles, close-up tables vs stage, tailoring to the room

    13:28 Poetry, arts value, education, rhyme, and accessibility

    30:31 Adam tries improv poetry, then AI vs human creativity, and closing poem

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    Artist bio

    Bounder & Cad are a London-based musical comedy duo known for sharp, lyrical satire set to classic crooner, jazz, and operatic styles. Formed at the University of Cambridge, the pair blend close harmony singing with original parody songs that skewer politics, power, culture, and modern absurdities—always punching up. Regular performers at venues including Crazy Coqs, they draw inspiration from Noël Coward, Flanders & Swann, Dudley Moore, and Kit & The Widow, combining musical virtuosity with wit, warmth, and theatrical flair.

    Episode summary

    In this episode of Variety, host Adam Sternberg welcomes musical comedy duo Bounder & Cad for a wide-ranging conversation following a bold opening performance skewering Vladimir Putin. The pair trace their origins from university choirboys and jazz crooners to becoming a fully-fledged satirical act, sharing stories of May Balls, their first original parody song about Prince Harry, and a last-minute, near-missed debut gig at 10 Downing Street.

    They unpack their approach to satire—why they prefer timeless absurdity over partisan politics, how they balance provocation with kindness, and why comedy works best when it releases tension rather than fuels anger. The episode also dives into creative partnership, disagreement, privilege, performance mishaps, and the importance of humor as a coping mechanism. It wraps with a playful operatic finale: a comic English-language take on La donna è mobile, featuring Adam joining them on stage.

    Don’t miss out on how we plan to bring this podcast to life with Variety Live shows.

    🎵 Original title music written by Peter O'Donnell and produced by Chris Burgess.

    Join Adam Sternberg next time for another captivating glimpse into the world of live entertainment.

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    Artist bio

    Andrew Robley is a British musical-theatre performer and singer from Carlisle who began his career as a cathedral chorister, later winning a BBC “Search for a Star” competition and going on to play leading-man roles in shows like Grease (Danny Zuko) and classic musicals including Carousel and Oklahoma!. He’s now a regular performer at London’s Brick Lane Music Hall, where he’s become best known for his work as a pantomime dame—an unexpectedly demanding, fast-paced role he grew into after years as a principal boy/leading man.

    For more on Andrew Robley visit:

    👉https://www.instagram.com/andrew.robley

    Episode summary

    In this Christmas special of Variety, host Adam Sternberg chats with Andrew about his unusual route into panto: from choirboy beginnings and a brief detour as a chef, to musical theatre leading roles, and finally being thrust into dame duties at the last minute when another performer was injured. Andrew breaks down what makes pantomime unique—ad-libbing, timing, audience interaction, and relentless quick-changes—plus the character work, voice choices, slapstick, and how panto traditions are evolving (and enduring). The episode also features a playful spoken “duet” of Sonny Boy and wraps with details of Andrew’s upcoming run at Brick Lane Music Hall in Jack and His Giant Stalk (over-16s), followed by a family version later.

    Don’t miss out on how we plan to bring this podcast to life with Variety Live shows.

    🎵 Original title music written by Peter O'Donnell and produced by Chris Burgess.

    Join Adam Sternberg next time for another captivating glimpse into the world of live entertainment.

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    Artist Bio

    Aaron Clark (“Keith Ripoff”) and Alex Larke (“Mock Jagger”) are the long-time twin engines of premier Rolling Stones tribute act The Rolling Clones. Growing up in neighboring Hertfordshire towns, both were shaped by early musical influences: Aaron gigging from age 11 with a Stones riff book smuggled into lessons, Alex trading a teenage go-kart racing career (he once raced Jenson Button) for frontman life after being dubbed a “modern-day Mick Jagger” in the local press. United by a deep love of the Stones’ catalogue, obsessive attention to detail, and a shared refusal to live the actual Stones’ lifestyle (these days it’s post-gig tea, not Jack Daniel’s), they’ve spent well over a decade touring the world, from French town squares to theatres and Middle Eastern stages, bringing Mick-and-Keith swagger to audiences of every age.

    For more on The Rolling Clones visit:

    👉https://www.instagram.com/rollingclones

    Episode Summary

    In this episode, they talk about how they fell in love with the Rolling Stones, why they think the Stones out-rock the Beatles, and what it really takes to “become” Mick and Keith on stage night after night. They share stories of massive gigs, weird audiences, fire alarms killing the PA mid-show, and one particularly drunk early gig where “Mick” fell off the stage and was rescued by the man who played Bungle from Rainbow. We hear how the Rolling Clones evolved from cabaret act to a high-energy modern live-Stones experience, why Aaron convinced Alex to stop drinking on stage, and why tribute work turned out to be a “golden ticket” to make a living in music without fame.

    Don’t miss out on how we plan to bring this podcast to life with Variety Live shows.

    🎵 Original title music written by Peter O'Donnell and produced by Chris Burgess.

    Join Adam Sternberg next time for another captivating glimpse into the world of live entertainment.