Sunday 3 October 1999

Terra Wilius by Will Anderson, Oct 3, 1999


At The Diggers' Room,North Melbourne Town Hall until October 9, 1999
Reviewer: Kate Herbert

Don't kiss Will Anderson. He's got glandular fever. It's amazing he can stand up at all much less do stand-up comedy. Death wish?

Anderson is really funny and overwhelmingly charming, even with the teenage kissing disease. His brand new show, Terra Wilius, is peppered with frequent "I've been sick" excuses that are completely unnecessary.

The new material is built around Australian history, a subject that seems to have left the national curriculum entirely. The Diggers' Room, which hides out the back of the North Melbourne Town Hall, is the ideal venue.

It is the meeting room of the Armed Forces League, the organisation which competes with the RSL for amputation stories and jingoism. Anderson cleverly milks ten minutes of gags out of the Aussie flag, the armed forces memorabilia and an authentic sign which reads, "No Swearing in this Room."

Anderson has a rapid response time that is barely affected by his illness. Before he rolls headlong into the history, he preambles around TV game shows such as Catch Phrase and the mindless Who Wants to Be a Millionaire. Eddie Maguire gets a well deserved pasting.

He paces like a caged lion, pinning audience members with earnest eyes and winning looks (and a far too seductive hand on the reviewer's knee!) as well as doing clever and socially relevant material. He has a go at the Aussie bloke and his homophobia then bumps into history again, managing to prove, by a circuitous route beginning with convicts, that 96% of the population is potentially bisexual.

He challenges our ignorance. "Does anyone know the name of the first Australian Prime Minister?" "Who wrote the constitution?" Through his comedy, he alerts us to our apathy and inertia. We might mumble, "Who cares?" but Anderson nudges us to feel guilty and a bit embarrassed at our disinterest.

He has a sharp intellect, an informed mind and a quick wit. I suspect he has more acerbic social and political satire up his sleeve, or in his little notebook. I also suspect that, more often than he would like, he succumbs to the lower common denominator of comedy because the laugh is quicker and louder.

 The average age and IQ of his audience would probably leap by tens if he upped the amount of sophisticated humour. He deserves a wider audience.

by Kate Herber

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