‘British light entertainment at its most vibrant’

‘Nostalgic symbols’




It’s season number 11 at the Lyndene Hotel for Jimmy Cricket as he returns to the popular Blackpool hotel in time for Legends Week.
Northern Ireland’s famous funnyman has been gracing the seafront venue for more than a decade and he’s back there again on Wednesday (4 March).
The hotel starred as the Le Ponderosa in the second series of Peter Kay’s TV hit comedy Phoenix Nights.
A social media post by the Lyndene said:

Jimmy Cricket’s last show of 2019 at his favourite Blackpool hotel is on New Year’s Eve.
Jimmy tweeted: “Great festive fun with the audiences here at the @LyndeneHotel tonight while catching up with old friends.”
Several acts usually perform twice per night, once each in different lounges at the hotel.
The Lyndene Hotel, perched on the seafront, is one of Blackpool’s unique venues as it welcomes tourists and visitors all year round.

Its website says that it offers more than 141 fully equipped and tastefully decorated en suite bedrooms.
“The Lyndene Hotel offers superb compered entertainment EVERY NIGHT of the year,” it adds.
Jimmy announced earlier this year that he is to spend a FIFTH season at the Lyndene Hotel.
He will do another 23 nights there in 2020, including two Wednesdays in January (8 and 15).
See next year’s dates below and visit the hotel’s website here.
Find out where Jimmy is performing and his other forthcoming shows by viewing all his tour dates on this website.


Jimmy Cricket and fellow well-known entertainers have visited an exhibition which remembers the great work of legendary comedy writer Eddie Braben.
Eddie, who died aged 82 in 2013, was an English writer and performer best known for providing material for Morecambe and Wise. He also worked for David Frost, Ronnie Corbett and Sir Ken Dodd.

He was credited with changing the profile of Morecambe and Wise, helping to turn them into one of the most popular and enduring comedy acts in the history of British entertainment.
Jimmy himself started working with Eddie on his TV show, And There’s More, in the 1980s and 90s, and then his radio show, Jimmy’s Cricket Show.
The exhibition on Eddie’s work at The Florrie, a stunning Grade II Victorian community heritage venue located in south Liverpool, opened on Wednesday 31 October for a fortnight.
Jimmy posted on social media: “Been to this wonderful exhibition in honour of one of Liverpool’s sons, the genius writer Eddie Braben, with his family, widow Dee and daughters Jane and Claire, with fellow acts, the great comedy actor Ricky Tomlinson and comic Tony Barton, alongside the Mayoress and other friends to celebrate his work and life.”
The Northern Irish entertainer described the exhibition as “a tribute to the genius writing of @eddie_braben“.


Jimmy Cricket is back at the Fusilier Museum in Bury, Greater Manchester in September, in another charity fund-raiser.
The well-known comedian has been asked to perform again at the venue on Moss Lane on Friday 14 September (8-11pm), having done a show there previously.

Jimmy Cricket has posted on social media a video of the finale song at the end of the popular You Must Be Joking tour 2018.
The three-week series of shows featuring Jimmy and three fellow Northern Ireland comedians ended at the Island Arts Centre on Lagan Valley Island in Lisburn.
Other team members were: John Linehan (aka May McFettridge), Gene Fitzpatrick and William Caulfield.
Afer the final night, Jimmy, 72, tweeted: Been a blast the, “You Must Be Joking Tour”, for @DavidHullPromo and here alongside, singing for the last time our finale song, my partners in crime, John Linehan and @Gene17Eugene and @wcaulfieldcomic 
The eight-show tour had opened on 20 January at the Grand Opera House in Belfast, Jimmy’s birth place though he has lived in Rochdale for many years with his wife May Mulgrew.
You can see the clip of the You Must Be Joking team singing their finale song on Jimmy’s Twitter feed here.

The You Must Be Joking tour 2018 involving Jimmy Cricket and three fellow Northern Ireland comedians has finished after eight shows in just three weeks.
It ended on Saturday night at the Island Arts Centre on Lagan Valley Island in Lisburn.
Jimmy, 72, performed along with John Linehan (aka May McFettridge), Gene Fitzpatrick and William Caulfield.
The tour had opened on 20 January at the Grand Opera House in Belfast, Jimmy’s birth place though he has lived in Rochdale for many years with his wife May Mulgrew.
William Caulfield posted a picture (above) of the whole You Must Be Joking team on Twitter.