I'm not sure when I first saw Steve's act - a brilliantly inventive and hilarious procession of visual gags and tricks - but I remember being glad I didn't have to follow him. No one wanted to, you couldn't top that, you needed an interval or a bus home. So when he said he was turning his hand to photography I was more than a little surprised. The fact is no one takes photos of comedians like Steve. Why? Because he knows us, because he's one of us. No one captures the atmosphere backstage like him because no one has the access - to us he's just Steve, and he's got his camera with him again we stop trying to impress or be funny - no mean feat for a comic - and Click! he's got us. When I look at these photos I'm right back there in the clubs , in the theatres, that happy vibrant scene, the camaraderie, the thrill and the fight - because it doesn't matter how big or successful you are or how many people have bought tickets to see you, we are all, at the end of the day exactly the same thing - stand up comics and on any night any one of the people in this book can die or be the best in the world. Only we know this and only Steve is able to nail it.Thanks for capturing us Steve you are simply the... no, sorry, not gonna go there. - Harry Hill... For many years I've been following Steve's photography work and have been mightily impressed, so when it came to looking for a photographer for the Comedy Store's 40th birthday show and celebration in 2019 then it was a no-brainer to ask him to be the official photographer. I love the shot of myself holding my granddaughter when I gave a little speech at the celebrations. In fact I love it so much it is now on the walls of the Comedy Store! Steve has a fantastic eye for catching the moment. Being a comedian himself he totally gets the timing of comedy and the nuances and idiosyncrasies of the comedians. He also understands the Comedy Store, the best comedy club in the world (I would say that wouldn't I?) Steve has photographically mastered the room, finding weird and wonderful angles and positions to creatively capture the performance. And because he feels very at home with the comedians he manages to get beautifully candid, in the moment, poignant shots backstage. His pictures document the ever changing world of comedy and comedians. With this collection of photographs he has not only given us so much visual pleasure but also a superlative historical pictorial documentation of the best live comedy scene in the world. I'll certainly ask him back for the Comedy Store's 50th birthday celebrations! - Don Ward, Founder, Executive Producer & CEO of the Comedy Store... I love Steve's photos. Being a stand up comedian himself he knows what makes a comedian tick, and this comes across in the photos beautifully. - Lee Mack... I just went to the Dome and saw your exhibition. It is brilliant. I kept going back and looking at some of them over and over again. You should be immensely proud of it, you've created something really special - Matt Forde... You're used to posing for photographs in this line of work, so a lot of photos we have of ourselves have a self awareness about them. He always captures us in the most natural positions. This photo of me for example, this is the first and last time I will ever strike this pose. I imagine it'll be the photo they use at my service when I actually die on stage in my 70's (a psychic told me once, that's how it's going to happen.) - Jayde Adams... Being a performer himself gives Steve Best a unique access to and understanding of comics. He knows where to find us, lurking and laughing in corridors or getting 'into the zone' backstage. I love his photographs because they show the timeless beauty of the theatre or comedy club. He captures the huge variety of emotions that comics will whirl through in one show. You can tell from the photos that he's one of us and he 'gets' us. - Jo Caulfield... Steve Best would be one of my favourite portrait photographers, even if I'd just come upon him by chance. The fact that his photographs are all of people I know, doing the thing I love best, is kind of overdoing it a little to be honest. Back in 1995, in the Tufnell Park Tavern, Steve Best made me fall off my chair, laughing at his act. Now, he makes me sit up straight, looking at some of the best stage and backstage photography I've ever seen. I wish I knew what it was, the magical ingredient, the knack of capturing character in a likeness, in a frozen moment, on film. Whatever it is, Steve has it. - Simon Evans... Now live art is a memory there has never been a better time to revisit Steve Best's unflinching portraits of comedians at work, in spaces that will one day soon ring with laughter again. - Stewart Lee... It takes a comedian to know a comedian and Steve just instinctively knows how to get the shot. The pictures that capture the joy, laughter and camaraderie of those off stage moments and what it is to be part of the gang of clowns. Equally he has got such a brilliant eye for getting those pictures that seem to get the very essence of the comic. The thing that defines them on stage. I'm usually caught in an exaggerated cartoon like pose...and this is me in a nut shell. - Zoe Lyons.