• COMIC Lee Hurst brings his new stand up show to The Point in Eastleigh next week.

Lee is back on the road to ask audiences what winds them up in the show Things that make you go Aaarggh!!!

Lee, who is best known as one of the team captains on the comedy sports quiz They Think it’s All Over, is like all Brits he loves a right good moan, but he also likes to come up with solutions. He’ll be sharing his gripes but also finding out what makes the audience’s blood boil. Lee is in Eastleigh on Wednesday.

  • LYRICAL anti-lad Liam Williams snarls out his sulky debut at The Railway’s Attic, as part of Scoundrels Comedy Club in Winchester on Tuesday. Expect an hour of soul-smithied jokes and negative energy.

May he keep his demons and his eczema at bay.

Liam, Edinburgh Comedy Award Best Newcomer nominee and one of the most exciting and hotly-tipped acts from this year’s Fringe, embarks on his debut national tour following a widely-acclaimed run at the Edinburgh Fringe and a sold out London transfer.

  • THE LARAMIE PROJECT

On October 6, 1998, Matthew Shepard, a student at the University of Wyoming in Laramie, was brutally beaten while tied to a fencepost and left to die.

The members of The Te ctonic Theater Project went to Laramie and conducted interviews with the people of Laramie that form this deeply moving look at the American psyche.

Nuffield Youth Theatre returns to the main stage of Nuffield to present this searing double bill of plays that investigates the murder of a young gay man in an act of such brutality and hate
that shocked America into taking a difficult look at itself.

Nuffield Youth Theatre director Max Lindsay directs Nuffield Youth Theatre in this award-winning documentary-play, which runs from Thursday to Saturday.