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Fanny Simon - Mais Que Vont Dire Les Voisins ?

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Fanny Simon - Mais Que Vont Dire Les Voisins ?
Fanny Simon - Mais Que Vont Dire Les Voisins ?

Le Boui-Boui


7 Rue Mourguet
LYON Rhône-Alpes
Fanny Simon - Mais Que Vont Dire Les Voisins ? at Lyon, 29/08/2025.
To find out more, the information (prices, ticketing, seating plan) for this demonstration are to be found on this page.

Tickets for the next show of Fanny Simon - Mais Que Vont Dire Les Voisins ? (Le Boui-Boui) are on sale at the online ticket office. Book now your tickets to attend this show in Lyon and see Fanny Simon - Mais Que Vont Dire Les Voisins ? on stage!



Le Boui-Boui welcomes a sharp, intimate comeback

At Le Boui-Boui, we champion artists who know how to turn a room into a conversation, and that is exactly the energy powering Jim revient. Our stage is built for clarity and closeness: the kind of setup where a raised eyebrow, a well‑timed pause, or a whispered punchline reaches every seat with the same precision. Framed by this intimacy, the new hour brings an agile, contemporary voice that leans into observational humor, quick pivots, and audience interplay. In a comedy moment where viewers binge formats like Jamel Comedy Club, Montreux Comedy, and Roast Battle, our crowd comes expecting craft and surprise; Jim revient meets that appetite with writing that moves from slice‑of‑life absurdities to sharper social angles without losing warmth. From our vantage point, this is a return that feels both worked-in and freshly risky—the kind of balance our room loves, because it lets laughter build organically and then detonate on the beat.

What to expect on stage at Le Boui-Boui

Our team has watched the material evolve in rehearsal and in test slots: Jim revient is structured like a journey rather than a string of disconnected routines. You’ll hear tight takes on digital-age reflexes (notifications, endless logins, the modern fear of “no service” in a basement), relationship misfires that turn into miniature farces, and those off-the-cuff detours that only happen in a compact Lyon room when a look, a cough, or a latecomer flips the rhythm. The set thrives on the kind of proximity Le Boui-Boui is known for; every seat is near enough to catch the micro‑gestures that make good writing land as great comedy. If your recent watchlist has included televised showcases or streaming-first hits, from Jamel Comedy Club to Roast Battle, you’ll recognize the contemporary pacing—tight setups, clean tags, and callbacks that reward focused listening—while the club setting restores the underground grit that first made these forms irresistible.

From our curatorial perspective, the artistic news here is about renewal: new bits, new stakes, and a sharpened voice built in front of real audiences. Jim revient arrives at Le Boui-Boui after months where many fans discovered stand-up through short-form clips and late‑night panels, and that context matters; the show leans into economy without rushing, letting ideas breathe and then snap shut with precision. Expect moments of crowd work tuned to our room’s acoustics, narrative arcs that loop back with satisfying payoffs, and a finale that lifts earlier threads into a bigger release. As ever, seating at Le Boui-Boui is deliberately close and capacity is purposefully limited to protect that spark of immediacy that filmed sets can’t replicate. Whether you come for the razor lines, the playful tension with the front row, or simply the thrill of a comic testing and owning fresh pages, Jim revient is the kind of live encounter our stage was built to host—and the kind of night that sends you back into Lyon still laughing at the next tram stop.



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