He’s admitted to having plenty of work done, even suggesting he might be addicted.
But Jimmy Carr has said the amount of Botox he’s had might now affect his work opportunities after a London club banned those with tweakments.
The Top Secret Comedy Club in Covent Garden banned guests with Botox earlier this month in order to liven up the crowd.
They claimed that ‘frozen faces from Botox impact the entire atmosphere’.
Now famous comedian Jimmy Carr, 52, who recently debuted a new look and has admitted he can’t stop getting ‘tweakments’ said he will no longer to play at the venue.
Speaking to Radio Times, he said: ‘I would look surprised, if I could.
Jimmy Carr has said the amount of Botox he’s had might now affect his work opportunities after a London club banned those with tweakments
The Top Secret Comedy Club in Covent Garden banned guests with Botox earlier this month in order to liven up the crowd and it has celebs worried
‘Does that mean Katherine Ryan and I can no longer play the club?
‘Because we’re mostly Botox. Of course it’s a PR stunt, but it’s a fun PR stunt. It speaks to something interesting, which is when you watch live comedy, the person on stage isn’t the only one performing.
‘Being in an audience is performative: people laugh out loud in a way that maybe they wouldn’t if they were just staring at their phone.’
In January Carr, Jimmy looked worlds away from his old self as he enjoyed a night out at Chiltern Firehouse and raised eyebrows with the startlingly different look.
Speaking also to The Telegraph this weekend, he admitted: ‘Christ, I’m like the Forth Bridge – it never stops.
‘Maintaining is the thing – I don’t think there’s anything you can do plastic surgery wise, or augmentation wise, that makes you look better, you can just stay the same, that’s what you can hope for.
‘I’ve gone a bit crazy with it, I’ve got the new teeth and the new hair – I’ve had a proper midlife crisis. Like, ‘Right, let’s get everything done’.’
The 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown host sH๏τ to fame in the early 2000s, often making himself the ʙuтт of his own jokes.
Now famous comedian Jimmy Carr, 52, who recently debuted a new look and has admitted he can’t stop getting ‘tweakments’ said he will no longer to play at the venue
Known for his quirky laugh, he told The Radio Times it took a while for him to feel comfortable with laughing out loud.
‘I didn’t have it for the first few years that I was on TV,’ he said.
‘It took a while before I was relaxed enough to really let it go, which is the weird thing about kind of growing up in public. It’s an odd laugh, but I quite like it.
‘You can joke about anything, but not with anyone.
‘I subscribe to the benign violation theory where jokes are safe spaces, and you take something that is a violation and you make it OK through laughing at it, as a way of processing and getting through tough times.
‘Also, never refuse the muse. If something strikes you as funny, you write it down and then try it in front of an audience, and let them decide what is and isn’t funny or acceptable. There’s a wisdom in crowds.’