Review – People of Letters
The Women of Letters concept, the brainchild of Marieke Hardy and Michaela McGuire, has developed a rabid following in recent years, due in large part to the unpredictability of the show.
The Women of Letters concept, the brainchild of Marieke Hardy and Michaela McGuire, has developed a rabid following in recent years, due in large part to the unpredictability of the show.
If you have any Backstreet Boys CDs hiding in your closet, going to see this show may begin to cleanse your soul.
Sarah is a small player at this year’s Fringe — a relative unknown, and fairly new to comedy — but her knack for these sort of quirky observations reveal her to have a mighty potential.
Big Kids Night Out is probably the best show I have seen all Fringe.
The cruel streak aimed at his family aside, Jimeoin delivers a show of very likeable stand-up that reminds us why his observational comedy is still as funny as it was in the nineties.
So, this show is pretty much exactly what the Fringe is about. A group of young artists bringing audiences something off-the-wall but utterly real.
A Simple Space by Adelaide collective Gravity and Other Myths turns the showy bells and whistles circus genre completely on its head.
The factory theme is appropriate, because this is a refined act; aesthetics are kept to an absolute minimum, and Dan and Simon work off each other like clockwork as they churn out the skits.
Each member of the audience is offered a strip of wet flannel and a piece of dark chilli chocolate…
There is always something to applaud about a production that raises awareness of health and social issues.
DeAnne Smith is down in Australia, she’s full of energy, and she’s going to do this! She’s going to nail it!
With songs about topics ranging from where your boyfriend should and shouldn’t go to the ever fantastic Bill Murray, these kids get you giggling.
Fringe organisers, in the future, give this young woman a space worthy of her talent please.
It’s a sweet, touching, hilarious show, and it’s too late to see it.
As each comedian does their set, Hadley Donaldson doodles their stories on a projector screen. The results are often hilarious, as comic and illustrator jostle for laughs.
What the masses said