Cadbury Crunchie Comedy Gala
ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre, Auckland
01/05/2009 - 01/05/2009
NZ International Comedy Festival 2007-09, 2013
Production Details
Cadbury Crunchie Comedy Gala ®
COMEDY COMET LANDS WITH A CRUNCH!
The night that always launches a thousand laughs comes to the ASB Theatre on May 1 when the Cadbury Crunchie Comedy Gala® hits town with an explosion of high-impact international and local hilarity. The event, which has sold out for three years running, kick starts three mad weeks of merriment by showcasing the very best acts performing at the 2009 NZ International Comedy Festival.
Wayne Brady, fresh from hosting the preshow at this years’ Grammy Awards, is the 2009 Crunchie Comedy Gala® host. A singing and dancing stand-up comedy machine, Brady won an Emmy in 2003 for his performances on Who’s Line Is It Anyway? His versatility will sure come in handy in dealing with the eclectic and excellent three hour line-up.
Filmed live for television and watched by hundreds of thousands on TV2, the rapid-fire Gala supplies a sneak peek of what’s on offer this festival season, including:
· The Australian Kransky Sisters, described by the Listener‘s Diana Wichtel as "spooky Frankenspinsters who cover Michael Jackson to the accompaniment of a saw and a toilet brush".
· Danny Bhoy ("Scotland’s next comedy megastar" –Daily Mail), Welshman Mark Watson ("Class act" –Telegraph) and Irish lad Ed Byrne ("There is no escaping Byrne’s skill as a performer "-Guardian) provide a British Isles contingent.
· And with no need for references, manic ginger Te Radar and the ostensibly American country-singing Wilson Dixon round out the event with local flavor.
With flashes of genius that will light up the night sky and an impact that will leave punters reeling for more, this years’ Gala will break new ground and leave a stupendous crater of comedy.
SPLIT YOUR SIDES AND DRY YOUR EYES FOR ANOTHER STELLAR YEAR OF COMEDY!
Cadbury Crunchie Comedy Gala® plays at the ASB Theatre, THE EDGE®
Friday 1 May, 8pm.
Tickets: $52.50 – $79.50 plus booking fees
Book now at THE EDGE® 0800 BUYTICKETS www.buytickets.co.nz
Show Duration: 3hours.
Screening on TV2 Wednesday May 6 and Friday May 8 at 9:30pm
3 hrs, incl. interval
Women get the last laugh in comedy gala's opening lines
Review by Russell Baillie 26th Apr 2010
As always, the first joke of the night in this opening barrage of the Auckland International Comedy Festival was the stage. They had gone with a Cuban theme with a banner "Viva Comedy!" above a street scene of distressed post-Castro chic which may have tempted a lesser comedian to ask: "Are we Havana good time?"
No one inquired. Mostly we did. But with 25 acts, it sure felt long and with a distinct sense of deja vu. But if we were to stretch the set’s metaphor to breaking point, it could be said that our own comedians are living in post-revolutionary times. [More]
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The launch of another fantastic three weeks of laughs
Review by Kate Ward-Smythe 26th Apr 2010
Congratulations to the Festival team – another hugely enjoyable night of comedy to launch what looks to be another fantastic three weeks of laughs.
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From brilliantly topical to wildly different
Review by Kate Ward-Smythe 03rd May 2009
The 2009 NZ International Comedy Festival’s 24 Gala acts and comedians deliver a lively capacity crowd the full range of comic experiences, from side-splitting brilliance to a bizarre unfathomable calamity, with many reasonably good routines in between.
Hosted by Emmy Awards winner Wayne Brady, star of America’s Who Line Is it Anyway?, the evening’s tone is different from previous years. Slick, warm and heavily reliant on an auto-cue, Brady’s style is more personable TV game show host than witty master of ceremonies. However, Brady’s trademark rap-improv is a crowd pleaser, as "Ross the builder" from the front row gets an impressive beat-box freestyle hip-hop number all about him, made up on the fly.
After selling out 2 years in a row, it’s easy to see why the Gala’s first guest comedian, UK’s Mark Watson, is back here for his 3rd Festival. Like many during the evening, he gives the media’s obsession with swine flu the treatment it deserves. The cheerful boy of British comedy and champion of the underdog also chats about trying to live in an over-hyped world, our appalling accent, and then closes with a brilliant piss-take of the most irrelevant of all musicals, Cats.
Next is the first of 3 stand up comediennes from abroad. Out strides Australia’s seriously suited Hannah Gadsby, who opens with the brave line: "I’m not very good at life". An assured performer, she moves through her routine on self depreciation, speech impediments, child bearing hips and speed dating from a lesbian’s perspective with poker-faced confidence, as well as delivering the evening’s best come-back after a cheerful heckle.
Ireland’s Maeve Higgins’ style is the antithesis. Behind her sweet demeanour and attempts to distract with pretty accessories, is a witty mind that turns the bizarre little things in life into excellent comedy. She scuttles off stage leaving the crowd wanting more.
Seasoned and celebrated Scottish comedienne Janey Godley returns to our Festival with more straight shooting sharp wit and wastes no time making fine comedy out of married life, how to parent your kids when they won’t leave home and of course Scotland’s latest sensation, Susan Boyle.
With their trademark tuba, singing saw and uptight strangulated vowels sounds, Australia’s number one gothic musical trio, the deliciously dysfunctional Kransky Sisters, silently creep on stage. We get a taste of their brand new show with a Bees Gees medley, which is anything but meaningless songs sung in very high voices. Brilliant.
Throughout the night, each of the Gala’s international stand up comedians, deliver sensational highlights. Jason Cook from the UK opens by taking full advantage of the fact that he looks like Helen Clark’s love child, and then delivers a devastatingly funny tale about how he has fine-tuned the art of making inappropriate comments at inappropriate times.
Australia’s Wil Anderson is a must-see talented comedian full of upbeat humour, as is the irrepressibly lovely little guy from Ireland, back in NZ by popular demand, Ed Byrne.
Carey Marx looks like a cross between a gleeful businessman and a naughty little boy and sounds like he’s half pissed. He launches into obscure tales of bread, mice and kittens; receding hairlines and ‘doodle-proof faces’. Would-be forbidden topics such as discussing ‘bum-sex’ with his Christian friends should be offensive, but far from it: his delivery reveals a sharp cerebral wit.
Also giving the impression he is in an altered state is Canada’s aloof Glenn Wool. Looking tougher than Wolf West his slurry rant about Somali pirates’ unimaginative dress-sense; how deeply unaffected he is by the financial crisis and how little he cares about the environmental crisis ruining the weather for the little children, is a huge hit with the audience.
Scottish heart-throb Danny Bhoy effortlessly proves his global acclaim is totally deserved after giving the credit crunch hysteria, pigs, Australian hospitality, geckos, tight Motel sheets and the Gala’s futuristic stage design of fluoro-tube towers and plasma, a thorough comic work out.
But the absolute hit of the night is ex-Dunedin boy (now residing in Australia) Jesse Griffin, whose alter ego is Wilson Dixon, a laid back southern man full of quirky observations. He brings the house down with his thigh slapping song "Life, It’s All About Life". Go seek his show.
The NZ acts are many and varied in terms of quality. Stand up comedians Simon McKinney, Dai Henwood, James Nokise, Ben Hurley, Te Radar, Benjamin Crellin, Steve Wrigley, Paul Ego, and Andrew Clay, all give solid performances.
McKinney’s at home with impersonations and his Sylvester Stallone gives him an excellent close; Nokise’s description of rapper Savage is priceless and Henwood’s damming of eco-politics delivers a huge laugh.
Crellin’s humour is dark and smashes through the usual ‘no-go zones’ of stand up. Leave your sacred cows at the door if you choose his show this festival.
Te Radar’s gripping yarn about hunting with Glen Osborne and getting stuck inside a dead pig is visually funny.
Hurley and Wrigley are both self-assured comedians with interesting material but unfortunately their Gala performances are slightly low on strong punch lines. Experienced comedians Ego and Clay, are again at ease in the limelight, yet surprisingly their routines also suffer from the lack of big laughs.
Two local acts didn’t fully fire. First, The Improv Bandits, whose "poem translation" is only saved by Brady’s, cameo appearance as a sign language interpreter at the end.
Second, the cast of We Are Currently Experiencing Some Issues have the dubious honour of leaving 2000 people stunned and virtually silent after performing a weird skit involving all of them dressed in full mask & body animal costumes, roller-skating across stage while trying to perform party tricks, and being introduced by a series of stuffed animals stuck to roll-on plinths. Top marks for attempting something wildly different… I just don’t think anyone understood what that something was. No doubt by their opening night on May 12th all will be apparent.
PS: Special thanks to the little men in their little tin cars who whizzed around the ASB Theatre foyer giving out Crunchies, freebees and good humour.
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