FOUR HEADS
The Elliot Stables, 39 Elliot St, City, Auckland
12/05/2010 - 15/05/2010
NZ International Comedy Festival 2010
Production Details
Dates: Wed 12 – Sat 15 May, 10pm
Venue: The Elliot Stables, 39 Elliot St, City
Tickets: Adults $15 / Conc. $12 / Groups 4+ $12
Bookings: Ticketek, 0800 TICKETEK, www.ticketek.co.nz
Show Duration: 1 hour
1hr
Hit-and-miss results
Review by Nik Smythe 14th May 2010
Four fledgling comics, two Kiwi, two British, share an hour in a random order as determined by the onstage spinning selector wheel.
First up on Thursday night is Sanjay Patel, a local lad of “Indian human” descent. His grimacing demeanour is at first jarringly stiff as he rambles about stereotypes he’s always confronting, like if he walked around a hospital’s corridors people would assume he’s a doctor. Then he starts talking like one, spouting mathematics, biology and geometrical functions in the course of discussing topical issues ranging from cricket to swinger parties.
Ultimately Patel’s relentless patter, bordering on monotone, has a curiously endearing quality that makes him (for me) the most unique and interesting character of the night.
Spin no. 2 lands on Ferg: long hair, beard and vintage duds create a look he calls ‘Jesus on Life on Mars’. In his giveaway North-England accent, the kind tailor-made for standup, he identifies his home town as Carlisle, which makes me think of Robert Carlyle who played Begbie in Trainspotting, which seems appropriate given the way Ferg describes his allegedly wholly unpleasant hometown.
He covers a lot of ground in his 15 minutes – Avatar, smoking, customs cavity searches, animal testing on racist sheep, and still finds the time to practice his Kiwi accent on us and list his favourite phobias.
3rd up, 2nd local Chris Cook. With fudged-up hair and a wry grin borrowed from Paul Ego, he begins with the suggestion we don’t set our expectations too high. He then sets out to prove the soundness of this advice by apologetically meandering through a selection of vaguely humorous gags the best of which involve fathering an infant and eavesdropping.
Rounding off the night, Brit # 2 and sole female Stella Graham, a half Sri Lankan lass from
She draws enough chuckles however, and her observations on texting emoticons and the pitfalls of Cockney rhyming slang are well pitched with requisite wit.
This is the only second-night performance I’ve reviewed this festival, and it certainly is a different beast particularly for a rookie ensemble – smaller crowd, fewer comps, altogether harder to please.
The Four Heads manage to keep their chins up throughout as, with rather diverse personalities, they test out their developing material with hit-and-miss results.
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Comments
nik smythe May 19th, 2010
Thanks for commenting; I'm glad that they got a good sized crowd and that ones who struggled on the difficult second night had their chance to shine. This is indeed the nature of the standup beast, particularly with late-night newcomer ensemble shows like this, and your comment nicely illustrates this fact.
Catherine Laurie May 17th, 2010
I cannot comment on the night you went to, but it sounded like a small audience. I went on the Friday night which was packed. This obviously made a difference because I thought it was a terrific show! I wasn't alone because everyone around seemed to have a great time as well.
I thought that all the performers did a great job, but Chris Cook stole the show in my opinion. The performance that we saw doesn't remotely sound like the one you saw because this guy had the audience by a string! He was last on and capped off a great night.
I agree with your comments about the guy from Carlisle. His Avatar material was brilliant.
Sure it wasn't perfect, but they are 4 rookie comedians, and it was an affordable show. Lot's of variety, and we had a great time.