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Kiwi Rhys Darby has worked the stand-up circuit well by littering
his set with uncannily accurate sound effects. It's given him
a gimmick that sets him out from the other white male comics
with antipodean accents on the scene.
With this year's Edinburgh show, Darby charts his life story
so far, beginning with the time at school where he realised he
could first mimic well, pretty much any noise you can think of.
He begins with a suitable demonstration of how he used to play
war as a kid with all the Apocalypse Now-style noises from machine
gun fire to helicopters.
Moving forward a few years he takes us through his calamitous
first date ill-advisedly spent at a skating rink, considering
he couldn't skate. Then there's a following unfortunate night
down the disco where he had a second attempt at impressing the
object of his fancy that results in the police taking him home
and him joining the New Zealand army.
Darby's days spent in the armed forces are the funniest sections
of the show. Clearly not cut out for the military, Darby, then
a nerdy joker, bounces from one disaster to the next; thinking
he's spotted a yeti in the woods and getting lost on the way
back to camp.
The overall show is enjoyable though feels a little lacklustre
in places though maybe this was due to the heat in the (one of
the many) Pleasance Portakabins or just audience malaise.
Nevertheless there are sparks of brilliance to be found in
the show, particularly as he rounds up by bringing his story
bang up to date with the aid of a statue performance artist and
an ejector seat.
Marissa Burgess