FASITUA AMOSA is Ruufless!!
Basement Theatre, Lower Greys Ave, Auckland
24/04/2010 - 01/05/2010
Club Ivy, The Garden Club, 13B Dixon St, Wellington
12/05/2010 - 15/05/2010
NZ International Comedy Festival 2010
Production Details
Dates: Sat 24 & Wed 28 April – Sat 1 May, 10pm
Venue: The Basement, Lower Greys Ave, City
Tickets: Adults $22 / Conc. $18
Bookings: Ticketek, 0800 TICKETEK, www.ticketek.co.nz / www.comedy.co.nz
Show Duration: 45 mins
45 mins
A unique perspective
Review by John Smythe 14th May 2010
The aggressive, expletive-riddled amplified introduction to Fasitua Amosa’s show, Ruufless!, is in total contrast to the bright-eyed, amiable, cheeky, laid back and quietly wise comic who steps up to the mic.
While he brings us fairly standard observational humour, his view of the world is unusual, given his father was a Presbyterian minister and theirs were the only brown faces for miles around where he grew up in South Canterbury. Likewise his more recent life in West Auckland differs from the Palagi experience shared by most of his audience, and the few Pacific Islanders present have the great pleasure of seeing their own lives reflected.
It is tales of playground insult-trading and fighting that gets him onto his ‘ruufless’ theme and his list of ‘ruufless’ people who, “When they have a problem, they don’t cry about it, they just …” – cue punch line (sometimes a literal one). By last night, however, John Key’s ruthless backflip on his promise not to raise GST could have been added to with a reference to Tuhoe and the Uruwera National Park.
(Incidentally, while everyone was getting carried away with the PM’s gag about being Tuhoe’s dinner – and they would have gagged on him, surely – no-one noticed his next comment about meeting the challenges of government, tagged with: “But nothing’s beyond the creativity of this one, trust me.” Such ruthless abuse of the language, to equate creativity with deviousness and deception …! But I digress.)
Also in need of updating is his satirising of the Auckland logo, given a whole new proposition is on the table now following a rather dodgy judging process.
Amosa’s 8 year-old reading of the Bible’s Old Testament – while being denied certain TV shows – certainly alerted him to the ruthlessness of so-called humanity. A riff on stereotypes – on how different ethnicities, genders and age groups see each other – is thought-provokingly entertaining too.
His unique perspective also comes from being half Samoan and half Tuvaluan (a geographically disappearing homeland) but seeing himself as “a Bounty Bar” alongside an Aunty still angry at the Dawn Raids. And he reveals why the hugely popular Pasifika Festival is held in Central rather than South Auckland.
But Amosa is at his most ‘ruufless’ in dissecting the David Bain case, where he challenges us to admit that deep down we agree with him that “weird means guilty”. Ruthlessness can be covert and insidious, too.
He does a ruthless rendition of how dramatic actors can get in real life, displays his vocal prowess with send-ups of film and TV promos, talks about loving food and ends on a gag about name suppression.
It’s good to get to see the world as other see it and/or have your own perceptions affirmed, and that’s what this show offers.
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Lewd, racist, real and true
Review by Venus Stephens 25th Apr 2010
More power to him, go see his Ruufless! show…it is mint. Support NZ Comedy!
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For more production details, click on the title above. Go to Home page to see other Reviews, recent Comments and Forum postings (under Chat Back), and News.
Copyright © in the review belongs to the reviewer
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Michael Smythe May 15th, 2010
"Such ruthless abuse of the language, to equate creativity with deviousness and deception …!"
I saw John Key's failed attempt to participate in the comedy festival after shafting Tuhoe before the cabinet even discussed Chris Finlayson's report as compounded by the bare-faced audacity of completing his routine with the words "trust me". But I cannot agree that it is etymologically incorrect to equate creativity with deviousness and deception.
Vilem Flusser's 'The Shape of Things: a philolosphy of design' (1999 Reakton Books) points out that 'design' can be associated with cunning and deceit. The German word for art - kunst - shares the same root as 'cunning'. He writes: "ie: 'artist' means a 'trickster' above all. That the original artist was a conjourer can be seen from such words as 'artifice', 'articificial' and even 'artillery'."
So when John Key says, "But we will work our way through these, there are always challenges of Government, nothing is beyond the creativity of this one - trust me!" he is mangling the language a bit but, more importantly, he is happily admitting to leading a band of bullshit artists.