Filled with magical moments of gorgeous Gershwin music, heart-melting vocals and divine choreography, this production will win you over in a heartbeat.
All tagged comedy
Filled with magical moments of gorgeous Gershwin music, heart-melting vocals and divine choreography, this production will win you over in a heartbeat.
Exuding an infectious energy that oozed with cheekiness and confidence, their comedic banter earned whoops and shouts from men and ladies alike.
Come on a journey with the boys from Head First Acrobats to discover the ultimate body-enhancing human elixir.
After a successful 2019 Fringe Season, Nicholette C is back with her one-of-a-kind Fringe event, Diary of a Racially Confused Girl. With her charismatic and charming spiels about her teenage years or the nostalgic reminiscence for hometown food, the show was clearly written with the racially disoriented in mind.
I’m no comedian (unless I’m six beers in) but Chris Martin: Claw Machine is a harmlessly delightful stand-up show NOT by the Coldplay front-man.
It’s a very specific brand of Australian humour that lets comedian Amos Gill shine, and has the crowd in knots with each punchline. In fact, it’s stand-up comedy that can only be described as ‘home-brand’.
The Great Detective once said, ‘There is nothing new under the sun. It has all been done before.’ But this show sets out to prove him wrong…
There’s a new sheriff in town. And by sheriff, I mean one heck of a Fringe show — more specifically, one put on by the ever-loved Headfirst Acrobats.
Melbourne comedy duo Barney Pollock and Matt Young take you aboard an otherworldly train ride to Paradise, a colourful absurdist romp through the realm of desire and validation. We chat with them ahead of their upcoming show at Fringe World, showing from 12th - 16th of February 2019.
Amid the dead air and amateurish production, I could vaguely sense where The Breaker Upperers humour was coming from, and it’s certainly a refreshing perspective. You want to like it because it's so desperate to please and to make you laugh.
Hot Brown Honey is a melange of comedy, hip hop beats, contemporary dance, circus and cabaret conspiring to change the way its audience sees the world.
Being a winner of the 'Best Comedy Award' at Fringe World 2017 and selling out quite nearly everywhere he goes, Josh Glanc’s 99 Schnitzel (Veal Ain’t One) left the audience feeling a brilliant mixture of confusion and bewilderment, but also awe as the comedian in front of them swept them away in a flurry of audio and visual spectres
Outrageous, silly fun that probably should have just left it at that
Byrdon and Coogan return with their delightful blend of the comedic and the culinary. In this case, The Trip to Spain delivers precisely what we’ve come to expect from the series. Beautiful scenery, amazing food and a couple of weather beaten male comedians who flit between self-deprecation and vanity.
‘Irreverent hipster-comedy’ podcast-turned-television show Comedy Bang! Bang! announce live tour of show in Australia
Hot Saucerman is bringing a live version of his cult favourite "ironic hipster comedy" podcast and IFC show, Comedy Bang! Bang!, on an Australian tour this August, and yes, that includes Perth as well.
Jam-packed with rapid-fire zingers and cleverly constructed comedic situations, Mistress America is Noah Baumbach’s most deliberately funny screenplay to date, quite possibly due to the involvement of co-writer and star Greta Gerwig.
Armed with a clever script, a talented ensemble cast, and a subtle dose of feminist critique, "In a World…" is a charmingly whimsical satire that cements writer-director Lake Bell as a capable filmmaker with a distinctive voice that needs to be heard.
First up, we have the English ‘middle-class private educated white boy’ Chris Turner’s Pretty Fly show which is touted as a journey of life through hip hop and secondly Perth’s own new-New Yorker Josh Makinda, performing a very impromptu and crowd-tailored comedy, Lots of Ideas and Limits .
It is hard for me to find fault with this film, with everything coming together quite perfectly. The pacing never feels stale, even when the jokes require the film to move slower, and every joke hits the mark brilliantly