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Buy tickets for Jimmy Carr - 01.05.2026., Brisbane Entertainment Centre, Brisbane, Australia Buy tickets for Jimmy Carr - 01.05.2026., Brisbane Entertainment Centre, Brisbane, Australia

STAND-UP COMEDY

Jimmy Carr

Brisbane Entertainment Centre, Brisbane, AU
01. May 2026. 20:00h
2026
01
May
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar - illustration/ arhiva (vlastita)

Jimmy Carr tickets for Brisbane stand up - sharp British comedy at Brisbane Entertainment Centre live

Looking for tickets to Jimmy Carr in Brisbane? Expect a solo stand up comedy night built on rapid one-liners, dry British timing and darker humour at Brisbane Entertainment Centre. Buy tickets for 1 May 2026 if you enjoy sharp comedy with a fast live rhythm

Jimmy Carr in Brisbane: an evening for audiences who love fast, sharp and precisely fired jokes

Jimmy Carr is coming to Brisbane Entertainment Centre with the "Laughs Funny" tour, a new stand-up performance announced for 1 May 2026 at 20:00. This is a solo evening by the British comedian whose style does not rely on long retellings of life, but on short, dense and often very dark one-liners. Carr does not build a joke slowly like a neighbourhood story - he throws it straight in front of the audience, waits for the reaction and immediately moves on to the next one. That is exactly why his performance is interesting to audiences who like a fast pace, a biting tongue and humour that does not give uncomfortable topics a wide berth.

The "Laughs Funny" tour in Australia and New Zealand has been announced as a performance with new material, with Carr's recognisable combination of dark humour, dry delivery and sharp wit. Brisbane is on the schedule immediately after the performance in Mackay, and before the second date in the same city and the continuation of the tour towards Sydney and Melbourne. For visitors, this means they are coming to a part of the Australian run that is compact, travelling and production-wise well rehearsed, without the need to view the evening as an isolated performance outside the broader tour whole.

Tickets for this event are in demand.

What to expect from Carr's humour

Jimmy Carr is best known for the fast, almost mechanically precise delivery of short jokes. His comedy often sounds like a series of verbal stabs: a short setup, a cut, silence, laughter, then a new target. Such a style best suits an audience that is not looking for gentle warming-up or long sentimental digressions. Carr moves in the area of dark, provocative and very deliberately uncomfortable humour, so the 16+ recommendation is an important note for everyone coming in the company of younger viewers.

The tour description especially emphasises "fast-paced, edgy one-liners", which describes his stage habit well: a joke rarely stays alone on the stage for more than a few seconds. Carr is not the type of comedian who will spend ten minutes building one anecdote about going to the shop. His material more often functions as a burst of short observations about social norms, uncomfortable topics, sex, death, family, public morality, language and the boundaries of what people dare to laugh about.

That does not mean the performance is suitable for everyone. On the contrary, the announcement of the event itself clearly counts on the fact that Carr's "dark brand of comedy" can put off part of the audience. That is important information, not a marketing pose: this show will suit most those viewers who already know that dry British humour, a quick game of expectations and a punchline that often deliberately comes from a direction from which more polite conversation would not let it into the room suit them.

Solo stand-up, without a line-up and without hiding behind the format

This is not a comedy evening with several comedians, where the rhythm constantly changes depending on the new performer, nor a themed revue in which the audience gets a series of different voices. A solo performance by Jimmy Carr is coming to Brisbane Entertainment Centre, so the whole evening rests on his rhythm, his relationship with the audience and his recognisable way of cutting topics into short, hard pieces of humour.

With a solo performance of this type, the dynamics are different than at a club evening with several names. There is no long introduction of the line-up, no waiting for the "main name" and no big stylistic shifts between comedians. The audience immediately adapts to one speed. With Carr, that speed usually means a dense schedule of jokes and a constant possibility that several topics will change in one minute. That can be tiring for an audience that likes slower storytelling, but very attractive to those who enjoy precise verbal ping-pong.

Seats are disappearing quickly.

Television and streaming recognisability

Carr is known to a wider audience beyond the stand-up stage as well. He has hosted and appeared in British panel and quiz formats such as "8 Out of 10 Cats", "8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown" and "The Big Fat Quiz of the Year", and his streaming presence in recent years has additionally made him recognisable to an international audience. Netflix describes him through provocative stand-up and social commentary, while his own website highlights dark humour, dry wit, heckler comebacks and short jokes as key elements of his performance.

For visitors in Brisbane, this is useful because Carr is not a comedian whose name relies only on local popularity or one viral clip. His reputation has been built on television formats, international tours and stand-up specials. The venue announcement states that his previous tour "Terribly Funny" attracted more than 1.2 million viewers in 45 countries, which speaks to the reach of his live format and to how easily his style transfers between different audiences.

Themes: everyday life, taboos and social edges without retelling jokes

With Carr, what matters is not only what he talks about, but how quickly he changes the viewing angle. In his previous performances and streaming materials, themes such as family, parenthood, relationships, public morality, social rules, religion, sex, cancel culture and what the audience considers "allowed" to laugh at often appear. That does not mean that the audience in Brisbane can expect the same jokes from earlier specials; the tour has been announced as new material. It is more important to understand the framework: Carr likes areas in which the audience first flinches, and only then decides whether it will laugh.Such humour works best when the viewer accepts that discomfort is not a flaw in the programme, but part of the mechanism. Carr often uses a cold facial expression and measured delivery so that the contrast between the topic and the punchline is stronger. In the hall, this can create an interesting rhythm: laughter does not always come as one unified wave, but as a series of quick reactions, short pauses and occasional collective "did we just laugh at that?" moments.

Who will find this performance most interesting

This is an evening for an audience that knows stand-up can be direct, uncomfortable and very entertaining without a warm hug at the end of every topic. Couples may find it interesting as a night out that is not a predictable dinner and a light show. Groups of friends will like it if they enjoy comparing reactions after the show - because Carr's joke often makes one person laugh immediately, makes another raise an eyebrow, and makes a third pretend he did not hear it.


  • For fans of biting humour: Carr is especially interesting to those who like short one-liners, darker themes and a very dry British style.

  • For viewers who know him from television and streaming: the live performance brings a more immediate rhythm than an edited TV format.

  • For groups of friends: it is a good choice if the group likes comedy that can be discussed afterwards, not only retold as the easiest part of the evening.

  • For more cautious viewers: the 16+ recommendation and announcements about darker humour are a sufficient signal that the content will not be soft or universally tame.

Brisbane Entertainment Centre: a large hall for a comedian who fills arenas

Brisbane Entertainment Centre is located in Boondall, in the northern part of Brisbane. It is a large indoor arena used for concerts, sports events and special performances, with a capacity of around 11,000 seated places for sports setups, while configurations using the floor can raise capacity to around 13,500. For stand-up, this means a different experience from a club: a larger audience, a wider space and a stronger sense of shared reaction when a joke hits the whole hall.

The arena opened in 1986 and is part of the Brisbane Bicentenary Sports and Entertainment Complex. The address is 1 Melaleuca Dr, Boondall QLD 4034. For visitors travelling from other parts of the city, it is important that the hall is not located in Brisbane's very centre, but in the northern suburb, so arrival should be planned somewhat more carefully than for an evening in the CBD.

It is worth securing tickets on time.

Practical information for arrival

Organising arrival can significantly affect the evening, especially because this is a large arena. Brisbane Entertainment Centre states that it is located around 16 km from Brisbane CBD and around 8 km from the domestic and international airport. By car, access is via Gateway Motorway and Bicentennial Road, with the note that more time should be left for arrival and departure. Parking is on the venue grounds, and parking payment is made by card upon entry.

For those who do not want to drive, the train is a very practical option. Boondall Station on the Shorncliffe line is about 600 metres' walk from the centre according to the venue's information. This is useful to know for the return as well: after later event finishes, some services may have limited connections, so it is wise to check final departures and transfers in advance. Translink is the main address for current information about public transport in Queensland.


  • Location: Boondall, northern Brisbane.

  • Address: 1 Melaleuca Dr, Boondall QLD 4034.

  • Distance from the CBD: around 16 km according to venue data.

  • Train: Boondall Station on the Shorncliffe line, around 600 m walk to the hall.

  • Taxi: there is a special taxi zone at the location.

  • Rideshare: the pick-up and drop-off zone is listed in Carpark 5.

  • Accessibility: parking spaces are available near accessible entrances, with a valid permit displayed on the windscreen.

Brisbane as the host city

Brisbane is a good city for this type of evening event because it combines a large urban audience, airport accessibility and halls outside the densest city centre. Visitors coming from other Australian cities or from the wider Queensland region should bear in mind that Boondall is north of the centre, so it is useful to choose accommodation according to the travel plan: closer to the CBD if staying longer and exploring the city, or closer to the north if the goal is simpler access to the hall and the airport.

For audiences combining the show with a short stay in the city, Brisbane offers a more relaxed rhythm than Sydney or Melbourne, but also enough content for the day before or after the performance. The river, South Bank, museums, restaurants and evening walks through the centre can fill the trip well, but for the evening of the performance itself, logistics are key: it is better to plan the return from Boondall after the event before entering the hall than to solve it when thousands of people start dispersing at the same time.

Atmosphere in a large hall: laughter that spreads in waves

Stand-up in an arena is not the same as stand-up in a small club. In a club, the comedian can see almost every face, feel every rustle and immediately react to a table that is laughing too loudly. In Brisbane Entertainment Centre, the reaction is larger, broader and physically stronger. When Carr delivers a fast series of jokes, laughter can spread through the hall in waves, not as one compact explosion from the front rows.Carr is also known for heckler comebacks, but visitors should not come expecting every interaction with the audience to become a separate segment of the evening. His main strength remains the rhythm of prepared jokes and control of tempo. If there is interaction, it will probably function as a sharp spice, not as a replacement for the whole show.

Ticket sales for this event are in progress.

Before setting off: what to check

For an event of this size, the most useful thing is to check the arrival schedule, public transport and any information the venue sends to visitors shortly before the start. Brisbane Entertainment Centre states that event time information is sent to the registered ticket buyer 24 hours before the start, so it is good to monitor email and messages if the ticket was bought in someone else's name. All visitors must have a valid ticket for entry.Since this is a stand-up performance with a 16+ recommendation, parents and companions of younger viewers should carefully assess whether the content suits the audience they are coming with. Carr does not perform as a family entertainer, but as a comedian whose humour is announced as dark, fast and sharp. That is precisely the reason why part of the audience loves him, but also the reason why he is not an ideal choice for viewers who want a completely safe, soft and content-neutral night out.

Why this date is important for Carr fans

Brisbane gets Carr in the middle of the final part of the Australian tour, at a moment when Sydney, Melbourne and Gold Coast are still on the schedule. The date of 1 May is not his only performance in Brisbane, because a second date on 2 May is also listed in the schedule, but the first date is especially interesting to audiences who want to catch the start of his Brisbane stop. In the context of the tour, this is an evening that comes after a series of smaller and medium-sized Australian cities, and before the largest final markets on the east coast.

For a visitor who knows Carr only from television formats, the arena will show another side of his work: less editing, more immediate rhythm and a clearer sense of how much the audience participates in the speed of the performance. For an existing fan, "Laughs Funny" is an opportunity for new material, not just a repetition of the most famous TV moments. For a sceptical viewer, the best question is simple: are you bothered by humour that deliberately stands close to the edge? If not, Brisbane Entertainment Centre could be a very lively hall that evening.Sources:

- Brisbane Entertainment Centre - information about the event "Jimmy Carr: Laughs Funny", dates 1 and 2 May 2026, 16+ recommendation, description of the performance style, previous tour and visitor information.

- Jimmy Carr - schedule of the "Laughs Funny" tour for Australia and New Zealand, including Brisbane dates and the wider tour schedule.- Brisbane Entertainment Centre, Getting Here - information about the location in Boondall, distance from the CBD and airport, arrival by car, train, taxi zone, rideshare zone, parking and accessibility.

- Austadiums - information about Brisbane Entertainment Centre, address, capacity, year of opening, type of hall and car park.

- Netflix - description of the special "Jimmy Carr: Natural Born Killer" and thematic framework of Carr's streaming stand-up material.- Jimmy Carr Netflix page - biographical description of the comedian, including dark humour, dry wit, heckler comebacks and one-line jokes.

Everything you need to know about tickets for the stand-up show by Jimmy Carr — on location Brisbane Entertainment Centre

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5 hours ago, Author: Culture & events desk

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