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Photo for Jacqueline Novak .

Jacqueline Novak 

Artist: Jacqueline Novak 
Catch the stand-up sensation as she works out the follow-up show to the acclaimed Get on Your Knees.

Upcoming Shows

  • 27th, Mar, 2025 @ 7:30pm
    The Sugar Club, Dublin

Aiken Promotions Presents

Jacqueline Novak 

The Sugar Club

27th March 2025

 

‘Netflix should let Jacqueline Novak do anything she wants, forever.’ 

-Cracked Magazine

 

Jacqueline received a 2024 Emmy nomination for her Netflix special Get On Your Knees, directed by Natasha Lyonne and described as ‘one of the most intricately conceived and written specials’ by The Hollywood Reporter. Time Magazine named Get on Your Knees one of the Top 25 Netflix Stand-Up Specials of All Time. 

 

Beginning life at Edinburgh Fringe and Off-Broadway, the one-woman stand-up show was a New York Times Critic’s Pick, extending numerous times before touring the U.S and selling out across multiple London runs. The Guardian named Get On Your Knees as one of the top three comedy shows of 2022, while the Evening Standard described it as ‘exuding both wit and wisdom…thoroughly deserving of its standing ovation’.

 

Jacqueline has been described as ‘a stone cold genius’ by Anne Hathaway, and ‘the Muhammed Ali of comedy’ by John Mulaney. Former hosts of the popular wellness podcast Poog, Jacqueline and Kate Berlant now present new weekly episodes of Berlant & Novak.  Vogue describes the experience as “an intellectual investigation of contemporary life between your two smartest and funniest friends.”

 

This is a unique chance to see Jacqueline work on her new hour, and be the first in line to have the opportunity to see its beginnings.

 

Praise for Jacqueline

‘Remarkable… Never stops being audaciously funny’

    Guardian

 

‘Humour at its most articulate, funny but surprisingly philosophical too’

    Telegraph

 

‘Clearly her masterwork’

New York Magazine

 

‘Staggering… The kind of thing that changed everyone in the room’

Miranda July

 

‘An overthinker’s delight, and a reminder that a woman’s humor can cut as deeply as her rage.’

New Yorker