
For the 6th edition of the not-to-be-missed winter comedy festival, the resort of Les Orres and Borderline Production have concocted an exquisite program. On the bill this year? Gus, Naïm and Cartman, all in the starting blocks to make people laugh every night from February 18 to 20, 2020. Rendezvous at Espace Rencontre et Culture for evenings as funny as they are unforgettable.
French magician and illusionist Gus will open the 2020 edition of Rirozor.
Immerse yourself in the world of this magician, as funny as he is gifted, in a family-friendly show enchanted by the poetry he exudes. Gus' show is generous, interactive and powerful, but above all, magical. If you can't understand his tricks, you're guaranteed to laugh and marvel.
In 2015, he reached the final of "La France a un Incroyable Talent", and then performed in Montreal as part of the Juste Pour Rire Festival. Two years later, he joined the cast of "DIVERSION", the new French magic show presented by Arthur, and became part of The Illusionist 2.0 troupe. He is also a regular on TF1's "Vendredi Tout est Permis".
Already in the cast of the first edition of Rirozor in 2014 under the name of Lamine Lezghad, Naïm is back in Les Orres for a show in which he reveals his intimate relationship with dogma and his quest for emancipation. Far from the prevailing consensualism and on the bangs of the self-righteousness that defines our society and our humor, he shakes things up, amuses and makes us think.
Born in Algeria and brought to France at the age of 10, the young Franco-Algerian grew up in the suburbs, hanging out with what he calls the "gosses de bourges". Discovered on France 2's "On n'demande qu'à en rire" in 2010, this is his 5th one-man show. A humorist with a degree in engineering, both trashy and elegant, Naïm has never been able to fit into pre-drawn boxes.
/!\ : For informed audiences.
To finish on a high note, Cartman, our master of ceremonies at the2nd RIROZOR in 2016, will this time present his1st One Man Show. While he began his career on the radio, it was in 2003 that he appeared on screen alongside Cauet, on TF1. He inherited the nickname "Cartman" in reference to his voice, which is said to be similar to that of the eponymous character in the cartoon South Park. Then a columnist on Touche Pas à Mon Poste (C8), where he played the famous Sébastien Patoche, he ended up joining Arthur on Vendredi Tout est Permis (TF1) in 2015.
You may think you know him, but on stage, you'll meet Nicolas Bonaventure: a child whose father proudly drove an AX, a teenager who grew up between Club Dorothée and Sunday night erotica, a young man who went bald before having his first sexual experience, and today, a forty-something who's determined to prove that you can be short, bald and happy.
Prices per show :
Online ticketing on Billet Web.
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PRESS POINT & INTERVIEWS: on request from the Les Orres resort press office: Pamela Lemonnier - p.lemonnier@lesorres.com - 06 66 53 42 37