Richard Herring - Lord of the Dance Settee, Electric Palace, Bridport.

DANCE, Dance, wherever you may be, I am the Lord of the dance settee.

This misconstrued hymn lyric when just a child conjured up a great image in the mind of Richard Herring.

The Cheddar comedian imagined that Jesus would be dancing on a sofa.

This has obviously stayed with him as he has turned a routine once performed on the This Morning With Richard, Not Judy TV show into an hour-long stand-up show.

He talks about his time spent on holiday in Weymouth as a teenager, with his mates, terrorising the boss of a knock-off KFC (is your name Dave Manager or are you Dave the Manager?)

He also tells a story that anyone that listens to his Leicester Square Theatre podcasts will be familiar with.

Herring and his friends paid a lot of money to heckle Ted Rogers (and Dusty Bin) at Weymouth Pavilion, he talks about how in his youthful naivety he wanted to put down this old man that hadn't been on TV in years.

It was only when doing research for the show, Herring worked out that he is now older than Rogers was and technically as Ted was playing in Weymouth instead of Bridport that he was more successful than him.

Although I am sure the Electric Palace will disagree with that.

Herring obviously did his research before the show, making a joke about how Bridport butcher's RJ Balson & Son, Britain's oldest family butchers should technically be called RJ Balson & Son & Son & Son & Son & Son & Son. It was a nice touch.

The warm-up act, Bournemouth's Gareth Richards and his disappointing towel also deserve a mention; he's a very funny man.

You can't get a much better night's entertainment for under £20 and the Electric Palace do well to book a lot of good stand-ups, Stewart Francis and Ed Byrne among them.

ANDY REED