7 DAYS – LIVE 2012
03/05/2012 - 05/05/2012
NZ International Comedy Festival 2012
Production Details
DITCH THE CAMERA-MAN, STICK IT TO THE CENSORS AND GO LIVE WITH 7 DAYS!
Following a 2011 sell out North Island tour the team are back with TV3’s 7 Days, LIVE on stage for three shows only at SKYCITY Theatre from May 3 as part of the 2012 NZ International Comedy Festival.
Without the restrictions of the TV cameras and the censors, the team rip the piss out of the news, the newsmakers and each other – right in front of your eyes. 7 Days stalwarts Dai Henwood, Paul Ego and Jeremy Corbett are joined by a revolving guest panel of some of the country’s top comedy talent including Jesse Mulligan, Rhys Mathewson, Urzila Carlson and Jesse Griffin for a riotous evening of local comedy.
7 Days- LIVE reviews the week that was and plays all the games from NZ’s favourite comedy show, live. Audiences will get a chance to participate in “My Audience Member Could Draw That” where someone in the audience draws one of the week’s news stories and the 7 Days team have to decipher what news story they are drawing. Everyone in the audience gets a chance to draw a picture and the team will choose the best one after half time. The best caption supplied by the audience will also win a prize on the night!
Consistently one of the most watched programmes of the week on TV3, 7 Days is New Zealand’s most successful comedy show in many years.
Be there to see what happens when the cameras aren’t rolling and ready yourselves for a fun filled night at the expense of whoever’s ended up on the news that week, with 7 comedians, 2 teams, 1 stage and 2 halves … with 7 Days – LIVE!
BOOK NOW FOR THIS LIMITED SEASON – 3 NIGHTS ONLY!
7 Days – LIVE plays
Thu 3 – Sat 5 May, 7pm
Tickets – $43 – $48 (service fees may apply)
SKYCITY Theatre, Auckland
0800 TICKETEK (842 538) www.ticketek.co.nz
A wild social experience plus comedy gold
Review by Kate Ward-Smythe 04th May 2012
Judging from the crowd’s reaction last night, fans of TV3’s popular 7Days will relish the opportunity to see their comedy heroes entertain for a full uninterrupted 90 minutes, at a far more relaxed pace than the quick-cut half-hour on-screen version.
Those familiar with the TV show will be pleased to know that the on-screen format is preserved: from opening title music, to the games, to audience participation through ‘Caption This’ (for a prize) and ‘My Audience Could Draw That’ (AKA ‘My Kid Could Draw That’).
The entertainment value is not in the least diminished with the slower pace – I laughed till my sides hurt, I had tears in my eyes and I thought my head was going to explode. Very dangerous for your health and sensibilities.
Regarding the latter – warning – the live version is loose and uncensored; the language and content is at times, very very rude. While the uninitiated may be shocked, those who know and enjoy how far these guys will push the comedy boundary will be satisfied.
The thing I found most interesting about last night is how much of a two-way dialogue this format is. Because the comments and contributions are loose, ad-lib, uncensored and free flowing; the comedians get to test the audience’s tolerance of raw and rude, by following up their most risky punch lines with, “Too soon?” “Step too far?” “Oh, so that’s the line? Right, got it.”
In a way, the whole night is about finding that line, and pushing it back and forth. It’s a very open, fascinating conversation – like a social experiment, where we become the censors, the upholders of any moral boundary.
If your crowd is like Thursday’s, that boundary is very very low; essentially, our group dynamic decided that ‘anything goes’. We collectively laughed royally when ‘Caption This’ went as low as Queen Lizzie’s private bits and Princess Kate’s fishy breath.
Mind you, the public’s tolerance for rudeness and shock value is certifiably high right now, across all entertainment platforms: For example, twice as many people ‘like’ GC than hate it, if social media’s response to TV3’s latest reality TV show is a true representation of all of us.
Don’t get me wrong – The GC and 7Days are leagues apart – 7Days‘ shock one-liners come from endowing well-known people into ridiculous situations and story lines, for humour and mockery (usually deserved). The GC’s shock value is a sad reality check.
Content-wise, 7Days’ tone gets a bit ‘boys-own’ (all male cast on our night) – thank goodness Labour Party politician Jacinta Ardern was able to raise the bar during ‘Yes Minister’, even after Paul gave her a porn name. She entered into the spirit of 7Days and held her own with grace and honesty.
Recurring themes include Dotcom, John Banks and fat people in general, but it is the odd completely obtuse moments that really get me – like Paul Ego’s yodelling Samoan.
Casting wise, on our night, Captain Paul Ego is teamed up with Lindsay Webb from Australia (who gives a fantastic Australian perspective on the ACT Party, likening it to a B-grade celebrity scrambling for cred) and Jessie Mulligan from Hamilton (who, like Jeremy Elwood, quietly contributes insight and obscurity, whenever they can grab airtime, plus they are both masters of reincorporating a theme to comic effect.)
While tap dancing on the edge of rudeness a lot of the time (in fact at one stage he admits under his breath. “Ooh sorry, I’m really dirty tonight”), Dai Henwood is a crowd favourite. Dai shines in this format, as he’s always happy to share bizarre childhood memories, slightly flawed analogies, and act out the humour in his head with boundless wild physicality. Even the fact he cannot see over the desk to view the TV monitors, is comedy.
Alongside Dai are Jeremy Elwood and wordsmith Rhys Mathewson, whose clever quips and humorous self-deprecation go down a treat. (Thank you Rhys for continuing the show in the elevator: being in a lift full of star-stuck fans giggling on cue is the perfect end to the night).
It feels like none of the comedians self-edit before they speak: I think that is because the platform is such a safe environment – the cast trust that someone else will polish up their contribution, if it isn’t quite fully formed when it leaves their mouth… which in the case of wonderfully wacky Dai, is quite often. With their collective strengths, quirks and flaws, they continually pick each other up, and then cut each other down –all in the humour vein.
The role of Jeremy Corbett as the host / ring-master – cannot be underestimated – He’s responsible for pace, and for keeping the overall journey on track, so that from our perspective, it all just rolls into one night of great entertainment. He does it so very well – and is not afraid to say things like “I’m not answering your ridiculous question,” in order to move the evening on. He absorbs the occasional flat moment easily with a deadpan comment, and then segues on to something new.
Last night was both a wild social experience, plus comedy gold. Is it too soon to say this show has reached cult status?
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