Alexei Sayle Tour Dates

Alexei Sayle

Actor and scriptwriting for hit TV comedies such as 'The Comic Strip Presents' and

'Stuff'. He was a central part of the alternative comedy circuit more...

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IMDbPro Starmeter See rank

Alexei Sayle in Alexei Sayle's Stuff (1988)

  • Contact info

Peter Capaldi and Alexei Sayle in The All New Alexei Sayle Show (1994)

  • 1988–1991 • 18 eps

Whoops Apocalypse (1982)

  • Commisar Solzhenitsyn
  • 1982 • 4 eps

Gorky Park (1983)

  • Mr. Elias Loomis

Diane Morgan in Mandy (2019)

  • Darren Dugdale

Casualty (1986)

  • Anton Malinovsky

Beanie Feldstein in How to Build a Girl (2019)

  • Colin Goodman

Guy Henry in Holby City (1999)

  • Bernie Reddy

Alun Armstrong, James Bolam, Amanda Redman, and Dennis Waterman in New Tricks (2003)

  • Anthony Marshall

Olive the Ostrich (2011)

  • Narrator (voice)
  • 16 episodes

The Itch of the Golden Nit (2011)

  • Planet Jimmy (voice)

Martha Howe-Douglas, Ben Willbond, and Mathew Baynton in Horrible Histories (2009)

  • Dr Maverick

The Surprise Demise of Francis Cooper's Mother (2008)

  • Francis Cooper

David Schneider in Clive Hole (2008)

  • short story

Spine Chillers (2003)

  • 12 episodes
  • 18 episodes

4 Play (1989)

  • additional material

The Comic Strip (1981)

  • performer: theme song (uncredited)

Personal details

  • Alexie Sayle
  • 5′ 10″ (1.78 m)
  • August 7 , 1952
  • Anfield, Liverpool, England, UK
  • Linda Rawsthorn 1974 - present
  • Other works Book: "Alexei Sayle's Great Bus Journeys of the World" (London: Methuen, 1988)
  • 1 Print Biography
  • 1 Portrayal
  • 3 Interviews
  • 1 Magazine Cover Photo

Did you know

  • Trivia He signed a seven-year deal for The Golden Girls (1985) spin-off show The Golden Palace (1992) , but lasted two weeks. "Those old ladies are horrible", he said.
  • Quotes At least Thatcher was insane. I think that Blair's insane and sanctimonious.

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Alexei Sayle: Live Tour

Fri 31 jan – sat 1 feb 2020.

Alexei Sayle has been performing stand up for 40 years, since the day he invented modern comedy. He’d like to stay at home with his cat but he’s still really funny, dangerously political, and wildly energetic, so he feels compelled to do a live tour. The least you can do is to come and see him.

“Alexei Sayle’s humour has a streak of anarchy that sets him apart from the right-on crowd.” –  The Times

Show information

  • Age recommendation 16+
  • The show lasts approximately 2 hours, including a 15-minute interval

Ticket information

  • £22.50 full / £17.50 conc

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Alexei Sayle, Ade Edmondson, Christopher Ryan and Nigel Planer, stars of The Young Ones

‘We took the sitcom and blew it apart’: how The Young Ones changed comedy for ever

With flying eclairs, falling beds and exploding buses, the anarchic antics of Rick, Vyvyan, Neil and Mike shoved alternative comedy into the mainstream. Forty years on, we ask the show’s creators how they pulled it off

O N 9 November 1982, an unsuspecting UK was about to get an era-defining shock. A new comedy arrived on BBC Two, bringing a new generation with it. Rick (the late Rik Mayall), a sanctimonious sociology student, Vyvyan (Ade Edmondson), a violent punk, Neil (Nigel Planer), a morose hippy, and Mike (Christopher Ryan), a mysterious mature student, were undergraduates at Scumbag College. They lived in an indescribably filthy hovel owned by Alexei Sayle’s terrifying landlord Jerzei Balowski and traded in a brand of hyper-stimulated slapstick hilarity that seemed to update Punch & Judy for the post-punk era.

A sitcom it was; Terry and June it definitely was not. The Young Ones broke the fourth wall, endangered the physical wellbeing of its stars and put cool bands on the telly. They terrorised “Footlights College Oxbridge” on University Challenge, released a single with Cliff Richard and had their own Sinclair ZX Spectrum video game . The show became a touchstone and an inflection point of 80s comedy, making superstars of its cast in the process. But how did it come about?

Lise Mayer (co-creator and co-writer) I met Rik when I was at Manchester High School. He was my dad’s student [at the university]. Obviously I liked him, but I didn’t think: “This person will go far.” He was naughty. I wanted to be an archaeologist. After university, I had a travelling year and then came back to London. My friend told me about this new club that had started with Rik and a few others performing at it.

Alexei Sayle (Jerzei Balowski) The first time I met Rik and Ade was a night at [Soho venue] the Comedy Store when I chose to do a really ill-advised piece of material. I was drunk as well, and there was a journalist in from the Observer so it seemed important. And I died really badly, so it was upsetting to see how funny they were!

Nigel Planer (Neil) I was doing a show with Peter Richardson from which Neil comes. It was where Neil was launched. We were a double act and we met Rik, Ade and Alexei in the Comedy Store. That was when the gang formed.

Sayle When the Comedy Store opened it was kind of a circus, really. Rik and Ade started putting it on the path where it was noticeably different: it wasn’t just mad people; it was people with something identifiably different and identifiably good. And young.

Paul Jackson (producer and director ) The Comedy Store became hot very quickly. When I got there, the queue was round the block. Not because it was successful but because you could only access the place in this terrible, rickety old lift, which could only take four people at a time. I actually felt that helped it get lift-off. You associated the queue with the Comedy Store.

Mayer Paul Jackson was a young and thrusting producer. He’d done The Two Ronnies and quite a lot of mainstream stuff but he was interested in what was happening and he would come to the Comedy Store at a time when no one else did. Normal comedy was Footlights or musical stuff. He did a programme called Boom Boom, Out Go the Lights, which was Rik, Nigel and Alexei doing their standup acts on TV. They had to edit it so much that it lost the excitement of the live shows. Rik and I were talking about why it hadn’t worked and we decided that the only two formats that were made for television were the nature documentary and the sitcom. Rik said Ben [Elton] was good at writing plays and that he should join us.

Jackson I thought the Comedy Store was wonderful. So I went back to my boss at the time, a man called Robin Nash, and said: “I think there’s something happening here.” I’d gone initially out of professional interest but I went back for pleasure.

Mayer It very much felt like a punk thing. Instead of: “Here’s three chords, now go and form a band”, it was: “Here’s a microphone, now go and be a standup comedian.”

Jackson I got a pilot script from Rik. It was hand-written and had a coffee cup mark on the first page, and I loved it. And Robin basically said: “Really Paul? I’ve read it and I don’t understand. Are you sure this is what’s happening?” And I told him they were going to be big so we made a pilot. I saw the head of comedy in a corridor a few weeks later and they’d obviously been showing the pilot around and he said: “Don’t worry, Paul. Sometimes it doesn’t work … ” But, around that time, Channel 4 was launching and they showed Five Go Mad in Dorset [the Comic Strip film that starred many of the Comedy Store regulars]. That’s what changed it. I got a call almost immediately saying: “Can you get five more done? We want a series.”

The Young Ones

Mayer Rik, Ben and I would meet and discuss the through-lines and so forth. And then we’d write two complete scripts: Ben would write a script and Rik and I would write one. And we’d push them together into one, then Alexei would have additional material, the stuff that he was doing. It would come out as an hour long or something. Then someone – usually me – would stay up all night editing it. We were determined to make them all really unpleasant. If you look at Fawlty Towers, none of them are really likable. The audience are predisposed to like main characters so you don’t actually have to make them sympathetic. We liked the idea that people would try and like these characters but every time they did, it would blow up in their face.

Jackson Vyvyan’s entry, crashing through the set on the wrecking ball, set the tone perfectly. It was the biggest entrance I can remember in a live sitcom. That was the moment when everyone there thought: “Hang on, this is going to be different!” And of course, in the studio, the audience just went berserk.

Planer I got a note saying would I go and audition for the part of Neil. And I said: “No, if you don’t cast me, you’ll have to take him out of the series. Because that’s my act.”

Sayle I was the first one to be on television in a substantial way – on OTT , which was a late-night version of the kids’ show Tiswas. But what I really needed was rather than being in a show that was at odds with my ethos, to be in something that was part of it. As soon I read the scripts for The Young Ones, I realised this was it. Rather than just us doing our acts, it deconstructed the sitcom. It took a TV form and blew it apart in the way that we’d done to cabaret at the Comedy Store. They didn’t need me, really. But I’d been the dad at the Comedy Store. So they were too frightened of me to exclude me!

Mayer Alexei was the person that everyone was in awe of. He was more senior and he was actually working class whereas everyone else was just pretending. Having his seal of approval helped. When Dawn French and Jennifer Saunders started doing standup, we wanted them in it, too. We were able to create employment. The only casting we did was for Mike; for everyone else, it was like, “Let’s give that part to so-and-so …”

Christopher Ryan (Mike) I was doing a play called Can’t Pay? Won’t Pay! by Dario Fo. Maggie Steed was in it and Maggie’s partner at the time was Andy de la Tour, who was part of the alternative comedy scene. Peter Richardson wasn’t going to be involved so Andy suggested me. I went along and met Paul, Rik, Lise and Nigel. And I read and did a couple of improvisations and that was it.

Nigel Planer as Neil

Jackson Chris was a really good actor but he wasn’t part of the alternative circuit and he’s suddenly surrounded by all these young people. It was difficult and he coped really well.

Ryan Everyone involved was brilliant: witty, clever, energetic. I didn’t feel I really belonged. I wasn’t of their stable. Nothing against them because they were fantastic. But I never got hold of that character. People often say: “You must have had great fun; you must have really enjoyed it.” And I always say: “I wish I had.” It was brilliantly written. But I was never relaxed enough to enjoy it.

Planer Chris Ryan was very popular among us and absolutely brilliant in the show. My theory is: if you unpick that linchpin, the whole thing would collapse.

Mayer It’s sort of a family. A dysfunctional family. We were all still so near to being students. We’d just left so we were still imbued with the memory of living like that.

Jackson Ben used to write a play a week but they were all written at university. They all had ideas literally pouring out of them and threw them all down on the table.

Planer It’s in disguise but it is a structured, normal sitcom. You have Rick and Vyvyan, the quarrelling siblings, and you have Mum and Dad. Neil is obviously mum; he does all the cooking and complains a lot.

Jackson Vyvyan personifies the destructive, couldn’t-care-less side of it. He was the nihilist so he gave the show that cartoon violence: it’s no accident that it’s his head that got kicked along the railway line [after the character was decapitated in the University Challenge episode, Bambi]. Shooting that was just an absolute joy. We had to bury Ade up to his neck and swing a boot at him, just for that one shot on the railway line. If you think of The Young Ones without the manic, destructive energy of Vyvyan, it would be a completely different show and not a quarter as good.

Rik Mayall (Rick), speaking to the Guardian in 1987 Rick is just self-centred … He wants street cred, wants to be a rebel, to care about nothing and be an anarchist. But we all know he’s a hypocrite and that he’ll be a computer analyst by the time he’s 30, the little shit.

Planer Rik was a special person: infuriating and inspiring at the same time. There’s a video on YouTube of us doing the Who’s My Generation live [for a benefit show] – Ade, me, as Neil, Rowland Rivron on drums. But Rik as lead singer, is putting about 12 times more energy into it than is necessary or even desirable. It’s insane and really funny and epitomises what he could do that was so unique.

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Jackson Ade is a brilliant physical comic and his timing with Rik was extraordinary. You’ve got this lunatic with four studs drilled into his head but, in real life, he was much quieter than Rik. I’ve always found him really reassuring and solid and professional to work with.

Sayle If there was a star, it was Rik. I was very fond of him. He could be infuriating but he was naturally very funny. It came easily to him. He wasn’t ever going to do a sophisticated Broadway comedy, he just made you laugh. He was just full of life.

Mayer We often had to defend the show on moral grounds. We got called in once by [BBC executive] Jim Moir who said that we couldn’t have a scene with Vyvyan fucking the floor. It was actually a scene where he was doing press-ups at a party to try and impress girls. They thought it was obscene even when it wasn’t!

Planer They had to pull a shot when Rik is playing with a tampon. He finds it in a girl’s bag and pulls it out and pretends it’s a mouse. And as I recall, he popped it into her glass of red wine and it swelled up and came out red. And that was the only point when the BBC felt it had gone too far.

Mayer More or less every other week, there was a visit to A&E. We had these crazy, inventive special effects guys who had a whole department in North Acton. We’d say: “Can we have a sofa that turns into a coffin”, or whatever. “A giant eclair that falls from the ceiling?” And they’d make them.

Planer There wasn’t much health and safety. Things were falling on our heads! I had to go to the osteopath after the episode with the giant eclair! I’m the tallest so I took the weight of it. We actually had a live elephant in the studio. There’s a scene where Rik and Ade are fighting on the bed and the floor caves in. And on the actual set, the floor caved in! They fell 15 feet on a bed. They both jarred their spines. They carried on acting but that was certainly one of the narrow escapes.

Jackson The designer, Graeme Storey, was brilliant. We said to him: it’s part Steptoe and Son and part student house. Graham did a brilliant job of designing this grotty, grungy place. When you’ve got a situation where you need two actors to be able to literally fall through the floor, that’s a massive rig. And those things are expensive.

Planer We quite deliberately made it look crap! By then, everyone was straining to get hi-tech special effects involved in things. We wanted it to look cheap, like they’d made a mistake hiring us. You know that graffiti spray paint? Before I went on, they’d spray me from head to toe in brown to make me look dirtier. I can still smell that show now.

The Young Ones take on the toffs of Footlights College Oxbridge in Bambi

Jackson You couldn’t have made The Young Ones on a sitcom budget. It was expensive. We liked having the music and we liked having the bands. But one of the reasons we had them on was so we would qualify as an entertainment show and get a bigger budget.

Mayer Mainly me and Rik chose the bands. The Damned and Motörhead were really sweet. The naughtiest person we had on – and you probably wouldn’t even notice it was her – was Andi Oliver, when she was in Rip Rig & Panic.

Andi Oliver (Rip Rig & Panic) I was about 19. When I see it I look like a small child. I think Dawn French and Jennifer Saunders were on that episode because I just remember them being hilariously funny. Gareth Sager [Rip Rig & Panic frontman] decided that we weren’t going to have proper instruments so they were playing washing-up liquid bottles and stuff. There was a lot of alcohol involved. Years later, I saw Lise Mayer and she was like: “God, you guys were wild!”

Sayle It was Rik, Lise and Ben’s obsession that they were only going to do 12 episodes. I was sad that we didn’t do a bit more. It was popular, and that was a struggle for me. Because my own work was abrasive and challenging in some ways, I struggled with popularity. The Young Ones delivered me a kind of popularity by proxy which I appreciated.

Jackson If 12 episodes was enough for John Cleese, it’s enough for us. Everybody knew that was it. And to be very sure, they were absolutely and completely murdered. We put them in a bus and drove it off a cliff. It hit the ground and then, nothing! So we were left with the terrible dilemma of whether we approached it because it was full of explosives. There were conversations about how to detonate it. And that’s when we put the little: “Phew, that was close!” voiceover in [before the bus eventually explodes]. Because the shot we wanted, of it hitting the ground and exploding, just didn’t happen.

Sayle When you’re in the middle of a thing like that, you don’t understand the impact. You’re the one group of people who isn’t part of that conversation. You don’t get to say: “Wow, did you see The Young Ones?” For years, I probably paid no attention to it at all, really; it’s only in the last 10 years or so that I’ve looked at the episodes. But it’s very evocative to watch them. We were happy and young.

Planer When The Young Ones came out, there were only three channels. [Channel 4 launched just a week before the first episode.] You could watch that or a heartwarming comedy drama or a soap. There wasn’t a lot going down. There’s a wonderful feeling about all watching the same thing at the same time. It’s not just the giving of pleasure to other people, it’s the collective experience.

Sayle It’s about being fresh to something. If you don’t know the rules, you can’t conform to them. But the BBC was definitely a braver organisation back then. The people who were commissioning then had been programme makers themselves. They weren’t just bureaucrats.

Ryan I can be anywhere and people will bring it up. Just today, I was walking down the street and someone told me they knew me. People smile when they talk about The Young Ones.

Mayer Watching it at the time, all I could see were the bits that didn’t quite come out right. Now, even though lots of it doesn’t work, it’s got so much in it. So many ideas in it. There’s something about the verve of doing things when you have no idea what you’re doing. You’re making mistakes in public but you also invent things. Punk wouldn’t be punk if it wasn’t rough around the edges. If you tried to tidy up The Young Ones, you’d ruin it.

This article was amended on 14 March 2023 to clarify that by the time The Young Ones aired, there were four terrestrial channels in the UK.

The Young Ones: The Complete Collection 40th Anniversary Edition is out on Blu-ray on 28 November .

  • Alexei Sayle
  • Adrian Edmondson
  • Nigel Planer

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What's Good To Do

Alexei Sayle on Tour at The Lowry Review

alexei sayle tour 2022

Reviewed by Louise Totton

Seeing as this is his first stand-up tour in 17 years, and much of what used to form the basis of his very particular brand of political humour is no longer current, I really wasn’t sure what to expect from Alexei Sayle’s routine.

It has to be said though, that aside from the missing over-tight grey suit, not a great deal has changed. His Liverpudlian, socialist roots shone through, and he managed to have a good pop and pretty much all of the main political players, including a particularly funny piece on Ed Milliband.

It seemed that most of the audience would have remembered Alexei from the 80s and 90s, and judging from their reactions and laughter, they got exactly what they wanted from his performance. My husband, a long time Sayle fan, enjoyed the performance immensely. Not being such a keen fan myself, I didn’t find myself lost in the raucous laughter that a good number of the audience did, but I still enjoyed the performance greatly.

Speaking to my husband about it afterwards, he had a fabulous evening, but felt it much more suited to a lad’s night out than an evening with ‘the wife’.

Rating: 4/5

Alexei Sayle is currently on tour until 8 November 2013. For more details or to book tickets click here .

Phil Jupitus at The Lowry Review

The bramingham luton review.

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Alexei Sayle at 70: How much do you know about his career | Try our festive Tuesday Trivia Quiz

Alexei Sayle at 70: How much do you know about his career

Try our festive Tuesday Trivia Quiz

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Test your knowledge with this special edition of our weekly multiple-choice trivia quiz, compiled – as always – by broadcaster and comedy historian Hayden Parker. Good luck!

Published: 2 Aug 2022

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COMMENTS

  1. Alexei Sayle

    Alexei David Sayle (born 7 August 1952) is an English actor, author, stand-up comedian, television presenter and former recording artist.He was a leading figure in the British alternative comedy movement in the 1980s. He was voted the 18th greatest stand-up comic of all time on Channel 4's 100 Greatest Stand-Ups in 2007. In an updated 2010 poll he came 72nd.

  2. Alexei Sayle tour dates & tickets

    Follow Alexei Sayle on Ents24 to receive updates on any new tour dates the moment they are announced... Follow. Be the first to know about new tour dates. Alerts are free and always will be. We hate spam and will never share your email address with anyone else. More than a million fans already rely on Ents24 to follow their favourite artists ...

  3. BBC Radio 4

    Alexei Sayle delivers a mixture of stand-up, memoir and philosophy. Homepage. Accessibility links. ... Thu 27 Oct 2022 18:30. BBC Radio 4. Thu 3 Nov 2022 07:30. BBC Radio 4 Extra. Thu 3 Nov 2022 ...

  4. Alexei Sayle's Imaginary Sandwich Bar

    Alexei Sayle delivers a mixture of stand-up, memoir and philosophy. Homepage. Accessibility links. ... Thu 3 Nov 2022 18:30. BBC Radio 4. Thu 10 Nov 2022 07:30. BBC Radio 4 Extra. Thu 10 Nov 2022 ...

  5. Alexei Sayle

    Alexei Sayle review - a blizzard of rage and gloriously biting wit. Touring for the first time in seven years, it's clear that the standup veteran hasn't lost any of his sharp humour. 11 Mar ...

  6. Alexei Sayle

    Alexei Sayle. Actor: Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade. Alexei Sayle was born on 7 August 1952 in Anfield, Liverpool, England, UK. He is an actor and writer, known for Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989), Alexei Sayle's Stuff (1988) and Whoops Apocalypse (1982). He has been married to Linda Rawsthorn since 1974.

  7. Alexei Sayle

    Hi Alexei, I was amazed that it is now apparently possible to get a train from Manchester Piccadilly direct to Bournemouth! When I was a student in Manchester you would have had to go to Euston and then get the Northern Line underground to Waterloo to board a train for sunny South Coast resorts such as Bournemouth.

  8. Alexei Sayle: Live Tour

    Alexei Sayle: Live Tour - HOME. Alexei Sayle: Live Tour. Part of: Our new Jan - Jul 2020 Theatre Season. Fri 31 Jan - Sat 1 Feb 2020. Alexei Sayle has been performing stand up for 40 years, since the day he invented modern comedy. He'd like to stay at home with his cat but he's still really funny, dangerously political, and wildly ...

  9. BBC Radio 4

    Alexei Sayle delivers a mixture of stand-up, memoir and philosophy. Homepage. ... Thu 10 Nov 2022 18:30. BBC Radio 4. Thu 17 Nov 2022 07:30. BBC Radio 4 Extra. Thu 17 Nov 2022 17:30.

  10. 'We took the sitcom and blew it apart': how The Young Ones changed

    Sat 12 Nov 2022 06.00 EST Last modified on Tue 14 Mar 2023 11.50 EDT. ... Alexei Sayle (Jerzei Balowski) The first time I met Rik and Ade was a night at [Soho venue] the Comedy Store when I chose ...

  11. BBC Radio 4

    Alexei Sayle delivers a mixture of stand-up, memoir and philosophy. Homepage. Accessibility links. ... Wed 19 Jan 2022 17:00. BBC Radio 4 Extra. Thu 20 Jan 2022 05:00. BBC Radio 4 Extra.

  12. Alexei Sayle on Tour at The Lowry Review

    Seeing as this is his first stand-up tour in 17 years, and much of what used to form the basis of his very particular brand of political humour is no longer current, I really wasn't sure what to expect from Alexei Sayle's routine. It has to be said though, that aside from the missing over-tight grey suit, not a great deal has changed.

  13. Alexei Sayle

    330 - Alexei Sayle. The godfather of British alternative comedy, Alexei Sayle is always at the edge of catastrophe. The star of The Young Ones, Alexei Sayle's Stuff, The Comic Strip Presents, many more and now his Imaginary Sandwich Bar, gets stuck into why inauthenticity is his bugbear, how to make the most of creative discomfort, the ...

  14. Alexei Sayle at 70: How much do you know about his career

    Alexei Sayle turns 70 next Tuesday. How much do you know about his career? Test your knowledge with this special edition of our weekly multiple-choice trivia quiz, compiled - as always - by broadcaster and comedy historian Hayden Parker.

  15. Moscow Metro Underground Small-Group Tour

    Overview. Go beneath the streets on this tour of the spectacular, mind-bending Moscow Metro! Be awed by architecture and spot the Propaganda, then hear soviet stories from a local in the know.Finish it all up above ground, looking up to Stalins skyscrapers, and get the inside scoop on whats gone on behind those walls.

  16. Alexei Sayle's Strangers on a Train

    Episode 3 of 6. Alexei Sayle takes a train journey and breaks the golden rule of travelling by train - he talks to his fellow passengers and reveals their lives and personal stories. Show more ...

  17. Private Moscow Metro Tour

    Private Sightseeing Tours in Moscow: Check out 6 reviews and photos of Viator's Private Moscow Metro Tour

  18. Private Moscow Metro Tour: explore the underground palaces

    Moscow is home to some extravagant metro stations and this 1.5-hour private tour explores the best of them. Sometimes considered to be underground "palaces" these grandiose stations feature marble columns, beautiful designs, and fancy chandeliers. Visit a handful of stations including the UNESCO-listed Mayakovskaya designed in the Stalinist architecture. Learn about the history of the ...

  19. BBC Radio 4

    Series 1. Alexei Sayle's Imaginary Sandwich Bar. Alexei Sayle delivers a mixture of stand-up, memoir and philosophy from behind the counter of his imaginary sandwich bar.

  20. Private Moscow Metro Half Day Tour 2022

    The Moscow Metro is one of the oldest in the world, as well as one of the most beautiful. As a visitor, it can be tricky to know which stations are must-sees, but this guided tour ensures that you see the best. Also, because it's a private tour, you don't need to feel self-conscious of being in a large tour group getting in commuters' way.

  21. BBC Radio 4

    Alexei Sayle takes a rail journey from London to Glasgow and meets strangers on a train. Homepage. ... Fri 22 Jul 2022 07:30. BBC Radio 4 Extra. Fri 22 Jul 2022 17:30. BBC Radio 4 Extra.