Change »
Edinburgh Fringe 2000 (59)
Edinburgh Fringe 2001 (316)
Edinburgh Fringe 2002 (354)
Edinburgh Fringe 2003 (376)
Edinburgh Fringe 2004 (422)
Edinburgh Fringe 2005 (415)
Edinburgh Fringe 2006 (547)
Edinburgh Fringe 2007 (668)
Edinburgh Fringe 2008 (733)
Edinburgh Fringe 2009 (773)
Edinburgh Fringe 2010 (927)Edinburgh Fringe 2011 (963)
Edinburgh Fringe 2012 (1022)
Edinburgh Fringe 2013 (723)
Melbourne 2005 (26)
Melbourne 2006 (29)
Melbourne 2007 (31)
Melbourne 2008 (36)
Melbourne 2009 (36)
Melbourne 2010 (56)
Melbourne 2011 (36)
Melbourne 2012 (46)
Melbourne 2013 (57)
Misc live shows (203)
Montreal 2004 (6)
Montreal 2006 (10)
Montreal 2007 (15)
Montreal 2008 (17)
Montreal 2009 (17)
Theatre (28)
Tour (240)
West End run (14)
See Less »
Nat Luurtsema: In My Head I'm A Hero
Nathan Cassidy: The Frog That Says Sausages
Nathan Caton: Breakfast at Stephanie’s
Neale Welch: Exile Into Frugality
Nefertiti's Unveiled
Negin Farsad's Dirty Immigrant Collective:
Neil Hamburger
The Nelson Twins
New Art Club: Big Bag Of Boom
New Day Celebration
News At Kate 2010
News Brunch
Newsrevue [2010]
Next!
Nicholas Parsons' Happy Hour 2010
Nick Helm: Keep Hold of the Gold
Nick Mohammed Is Mr Swallow
Nick Sun: Dreamfist
Nik Coppin Presents Shaggers
Nik Coppin: Pasquinader
Nina Conti: Talk To The Hand
No Son Of Mine
The Noise Next Door: Chaos Control
Non-Conformists' Guide To Civic Responsibility
Norman Lovett: LOL :)
Nothing To Show
Nothing Up My Sleeve!
|
|
|
|
Nick Sun: Dreamfist
Dreamfist is:
a) Scattered logic + surrealist social commentary + MESMERISING stage presence.
b) ANARCHIC performance freakout.
c) LAUGH-OUT-LOUD ruminations on the human condition.
d) A PRETENTIOUS pile of s**t.
k) An hour of HILARIOUS standup comedy.
p) WHAT YOU HAVE BEEN SEARCHING FOR ALL YOUR LIFE.
u) A puppy.
i) I love you.
o) GIMME YO MONEY.
z) None OF the above.
a) ALL the above.
Youtube me. If you like, come down. If you don’t, go away.
|
Nick Sun: Dreamfist |
![]() |
![]() ‘If you don't enjoy Nick Sun, it's because you suck as an audience.’ This quote from Doug Stanhope is pride of place among the Australian comedian's promotional material and raises the stakes, if anything. But I am ultimately relieved that I can get away without sucking too much tonight. I can see what Stanhope sees in Sun, a healthy disregard for social etiquette and a paradoxically vibrant pessimism that conjures up phrases such as being ‘raped by hope’. I expect that Sun's description of the US in Third World terms must have appealed to Stanhope too. As with Stanhope, Sun is unfocussed at times but the fresh nature of routines on, for example, what the ‘YouTube generation’ really means and the origins of female genitalia, does shine through the haze of his chaotic persona. Confusion reigns further, however, in the juxtaposition of routines with set pieces such as Sun pretending to wet himself by pouring water on to his trousers, or his impression of his life as a cat. While they do resonate with his world view, one that challenges nonsense with nonsense, they don't fit with his set that well and feel tacked on. Perhaps it’s because there's a lack of energy in the set to make the leap from weary observation to performance art. One of Sun's abstract moments has him deliberately falling off a chair. I can't use this as a metaphor for the whole of his show, but there are moments that will at least make up you bob up and down in your seat with laughter. |
|
| Date of live review: Monday 23rd Aug, '10 | |
|
Review by Julian Hall |
|
No comments are currently available for this show. |

