Comic booed off stage after 'Maddie and Rhys joke'
A comic was today urged to abandon shows in Liverpool after being booed off stage for making a joke about Madeleine McCann and gun victim Rhys Jones.
Up-and-coming âfunnymanâ Dave Longley, 28, attacked the pair for wearing Everton FC shirts.
Longley, from Derby, told the stunned audience at the cityâs Baby Blue club that âyou think parents would have learned about putting their children in Everton shirts after Maddie and Rhysâ.
The red-faced comic â who describes himself as âtaking tricky issues to any audienceâ â was booed off stage.
According to a club worker he left the building âa shadow of his former selfâ.
PE teacher Alison Pritchard, 25, from Prescot, Merseyside, watched the show.
âHe started off really funny and seemed confident,â she said.
âThen he asked someone in the audience what football team he supported.
âThe guy in the audience said âMan Utd, but you shouldnât make football jokesâ, but the comedian carried on and asked who supported Liverpool.
âThere was a big cheer, but he said he didnât know whether to tell this joke, that it wasnât his joke and he didnât write it.
âThen he told the joke.
âAfterwards the whole place went silent and everyone was just looking at each other thinking âDid he actually just say that?â
âHe went really red and started saying: âItâs just a jokeâ but someone shouted: âImagine if someone from Rhysâs family was hereâ.
âThen people booed until he got off stage.â
This afternoon Longley, a hit at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival with TV projects in the pipeline, was in discussions with his manager and Liverpoolâs Rawhide venue where he is scheduled to play two gigs next month.
Rawhide marketing manager Ian Christy said it was unlikely the comic would return to Liverpool in the near future.
He said: âWe are talking to his agent this afternoon to see if he wants to go ahead with it.
âIt looks like he wonât be playing those shows.
âHe made a serious error of judgment and it will be better for all concerned if he isnât playing Liverpool in the near future.
âYou trust comics to make calls about whatâs funny and what isnât, he got it badly wrong.â
Rhys, 11, was murdered last month walking home from football training.
Like Madeleine, no one has been caught for the crime.
Everton FC spokesman Ian Ross, who befriended Rhysâs parents during appeals for information about the killer, said: âHaving met Rhysâs family, they are truly wonderful people going through an appalling experience and this man should be ashamed of himself.
âI certainly speak for every Everton fan in this city and probably all the Liverpool fans when I say theyâd be eternally grateful if this man never performs in this city again.
âThere are boundaries you never cross because of common decency and this man obviously knows nothing about common decency.â
Longleyâs manager, Lee Martin, said: âDave was having a great gig and got a little carried away.
âBy his own admission he made a stupid mistake and greatly regrets the ill-chosen joke.
âHe has made a donation to the fund.â
Longleyâs promotional material describes his work as âCutting edge comedy from a newcomer making massive waves on the UK comedy circuitâ.


