100 THINGS
BATS Theatre, The Dome, 1 Kent Tce, Wellington
11/10/2024 - 11/10/2024
Production Details
Created by Rebecca Mary Gwendolon
You Guys
Tāmaki Makaurau,
3 actors. 60 minutes. 100 things. Can they do it?
100 Things is the craziest new improv comedy show in Tāmaki Makaurau, and it’s coming down to Pōneke for the first time ever!
Imagine if the TV shows Taskmaster and Whose Line Is It Anyway? had a baby … it’ll be kind of like that!
How does it work? In an improv show, the improvisers typically ask the audience for a few suggestions that will inform how the show plays out. In 100 Things, the actors will write down — you guessed it — 100 things to incorporate into their show, with a little help from the audience.
ONE HUNDRED THINGS, YOU GUYS. IN A ONE HOUR SHOW.
They have to use all 100 of them, or the show will be deemed a catastrophic failure! If they pull it off, they’ll have set a world record for most ask-fors used in an improv show.
BATS Theatre, The Dome
Friday 11 October 2024
9pm
Waged: $25
Unwaged: $15
Group 6+: $22
Extra Aroha Ticket: $40
https://bats.co.nz/whats-on/100-things/
Cast will be listed here: https://my.improvfest.nz/shows/100-things
Improv , Theatre , Comedy ,
60 mins
Guiness World Records should be Devastated to have Missed it
Review by Ciarán Spencer Searle 16th Oct 2024
From the moment I walk in to The Dome at BATS Theatre, where 100 Things is being performed, there is a bubbling excitement. The three performers, all from Tāmaki Makaurau/Auckland – Rebecca Mary Gwendolon, Izzy Renton and Frankie Brown – are all dressed in denim dungarees, a roll of masking tape at the hip, and individually coloured Powerades at the ready. They are ready for a Herculean task.
Their self-imposed challenge, to incorporate 100 audience generated ‘Things’ within a 60 minute show, was apparently rejected as a contender for a Guinness World Record attempt but, as an improviser myself, the prospect certainly makes me sweat. What makes it all the more challenging, is that the players mean to stitch all of these things together into a single narrative.
We began with a list of 20 sound and lighting cues, ranging from Chartreuse lighting, to Taylor Swift Screaming Goats. It’s worth highlighting the talents of D-Woods on the lighting and sound effects desk, and Matt Hutton on keyboard and sometimes vocals, who really feels like a part of the team. The audience goes wild as Matt’s underscoring became ‘jazz’, or D turns the lights to ‘disco’, marking another two ‘Things’ off the list.
We are periodically revisited to get a few more lists of 10 ‘Things’ as the show progresses: ‘Names’, ‘Events’, and ‘Things My Therapist Said’, for example. This helps to avoid the audience and players both being quite overwhelmed, though I do sometimes find my attention drifting away from the story and back to the listed items still waiting to be crossed out, stressing out a bit as the time ticks down.
Inevitably, some of the eponymous ‘Things’ are marked off without having a huge impact on the narrative, but an impressive number of them do! Charli XCX becomes a major character based on one of the sound effects, and the players put their memories to the test with plenty of callbacks to earlier ‘Things’.
All in all, it’s fair to say that the players achieve their challenge. The remarkably coherent story comes to a conclusion moments before the buzzer. It even ends up with a pretty strong anti-bullying message, about the benefits of sisterhood – in the form of a witch’s coven.
As the players take their bows, all 100 Things have been crossed off and accounted for, plastered to the back wall like the mad ramblings of a dadaist conspiracy theorist. Guiness World Records should be devastated to have missed it.
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