AUDIENCES can enjoy plenty of laughs at this year's Ageas Salisbury International Arts Festival.

Join New Zealand born Trygve Wakenshaw in his latest show on June 3 at Salisbury Playhouse.

Nautilus is the final part of rubberlimbed Trygve’s ‘underwater trilogy’, the follow-up to sell-out physical comedies Kraken and Squidboy.

Trygve trained in Paris with Philippe Gaulier, developing a uniquely eccentric style of mime comedy that has won him a long and growing list of comedy prizes and legions of fans the world over.

Also feature in the line-up is Hal Cruttenden in Straight Outta Cruttenden.

It is his first new show since the critically acclaimed Tough Luvvie tour finished in February 2015.

In Straight Outta Cruttenden Hal rants about the real evils of the modern world – oversharing on social media and the 5:2 diet.

He gives his unique insights on being an orphan on Facebook, taking his wife to Saudi Arabia and how he fell out with George Osborne at school.

He will be appearing on June 5 at Salisbury Arts Centre.

A regular on Mock the Week and 8 out of 10 Cats, Jarred Christmas mixes storytelling and gags with a dash of improvisation thrown in at the Arts Centre on May 30.

Born in Christchurch, New Zealand, and now based in the UK, he is joined by fellow Kiwi Javier Jarquin, winner of Best NZ National Artist in 2012 for his acclaimed Card Ninja show.

And Bookworks Theatre Now Listen to Me Very Carefully, combines stand-up comedy, story telling and participation to tell a story of a man's obsession with the firm Terminator 2. The show is at the Arts Centre on June 10 to 11.