has proved a popular choice with this year’s -goers with her third hour, Of All People. Having starred in the latest series of Live At The Apollo, the stand-up, who moved from Paris to the UK in 2014, presents a personal exploration of the meaning of life and why for so many people it’s tied to money. Here, she answers .

My show is about the big threes: money, love and the void. It’s very different from my previous shows as I started therapy this year, making me the first comedian to talk about mental health and I believe the bravest girl in the world. My previous shows were mostly silly, surreal jokes but this year, therapy naturally led to become, quite frankly, obsessed with studying myself and my past.

By the spring, the show had mutated into a personal hour of stand-up and then I set my intentions on leaning into that. It’s still very silly and surreal at times of course but with, I think, a different feel from my previous shows. It was really fun! I credit Lou Sanders for helping me relax.

I was really nervous beforehand but seeing Lou be so funny and playful in such a big room when hosting helped me calm down and remember that it’s first and foremost a really nice gig. My friends were there watching and gave me flowers afterwards and I felt like Barbra Streisand. I really did! I had lots of fun, when I lived in Birmingham I’d gig around the UK all year round and it was really nice to go back to some of those venues where six years prior, I would have done a.