Tag Archives: Camden Fringe Festival 2023

avocado presents

Avocado Presents

★★★

Hen and Chickens Theatre

AVOCADO PRESENTS at the Hen and Chickens Theatre

★★★

avocado presents

“there’s a soulful melancholic undertone to many of the characters”

 

Avocado Presents is a two-man improv sketch show, pulled entirely from thin air. The two performers, Hamza Mohsin and Jake Migicovsky, begin by pacing around the space, feeling one another’s energy. Once they feel ready, and they’ve placed their two chairs in position, they launch into a sketch. It’s impressive to watch, though the results are a little mixed. It’s surprising that this duo has been working together for several years; their energy is not entirely in synch and they seem to lack the enthusiastic zeal for the game which characterises so many improv shows.

Mohsin’s comedy comes from a long and silent stare – it’s all in his facial expressions. At times this means he’s hilarious, but it clearly makes it hard for Migicovsky to improvise with. There are several moments where Migicovsky is working really hard to get a comic bit going, and is shut down by Mohsin’s energy. Both men are funny, and they both get a solid laugh over the hour, but there’s a lack of teamwork at times, which is surprising for a show like this.

The sketches are oddly poignant. We leave with questions about modern day masculinity, and what it means to be a man in 2023. A divorced father gives advice to his teenage son – offering him cigarettes and encouraging him to throw the first punch at anyone who side eyes him. In court mandated therapy a young man questions his arson charge, and attacks his therapist for being a future version of himself. A divorce lawyer comes to terms with the fact everyone thinks he’s a creep. Obviously, these sketches are different every day, but there’s a soulful melancholic undertone to many of the characters, which is fascinating, if not exactly funny.

The best bits are when the duo let themselves go and get really silly with it. A strip tease to remove a shoe – a long mimed struggle with a leather jacket – an unexpected proposal, where the bride has brought her own ring. These are moments where the performers shine, and the show really takes off. They’re just a little few and far between.

Avocado Presents is more complicated than a typical improv show, which sometimes works in its favour, and sometimes drags it down. There’s an awkwardness, and a weirdness to it, which is both uncomfortable and strangely arresting. The duo is everywhere, and if you like your improv with a side of peculiar but thoughtful character analysis, it’s worth catching this show.


AVOCADO PRESENTS at the Hen and Chickens Theatre

Reviewed on 3rd August 2023

by Auriol Reddaway

 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

 

Glad To Be Dead? | ★★ | July 2023
Maybe I Do? | ★★★★ | July 2023
Lautrec | ★★★½ | August 2022

Avocado Pesents

Avocado Presents

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Kate-Lois Elliott: Gentrif*cked

Kate-Lois Elliott: Gentrif*cked

★★★

Museum of Comedy

KATE-LOIS ELLIOTT: GENTRIF*CKED at the Museum of Comedy

★★★

Kate-Lois Elliott: Gentrif*cked

“Leaning into her charms, rather than rebelling against them, will see this show develop from strength to strength”

 

Kate-Lois Elliott wants us to know a secret about her. Something she’s only just discovered herself. Something punters may have guessed just from the double barrel first name but wasn’t obvious to her. She’s actually quite middle class.

Gentrif*cked, Kate-Lois Elliott’s debut, work-in-progress show, delivers as much swearing and millennial angst as you might expect from the title. She takes us through unsuccessful dating histories, loathing for estate agents and career woes. What you probably wouldn’t expect is that her mum grew up in a cult.

Elliott draws us in with this revelation and continues the family theme, telling us about her absent father. An observation on how dad’s pass on their wisdom draws some good, early laughs, particularly from some chortling dads in the crowd. She doubles down with a light foray into audience participation which works like a charm and provides some material for a quality call-back in the closing moments of the show.

Once she gets going, Elliott’s delivery is quite charming. She commands the stage of the intimate Museum of Comedy with her animated, high-energy performance. There are moments of brashness which for the most part don’t land. Probably because we don’t quite believe them. The overall impression we are left with is someone who is really quite sweet and middle class, who you just can’t imagine doing as many drugs as she wants you to believe.

But back to the cult. On the surface it’s the most original element in the otherwise well-trodden material, and a recurring theme that comes back throughout the show. Despite informing us that it was actually quite a boring cult by Netflix standards, it seems she wants to talk about her mum’s experience as this sounds intriguing. Much of the humour of it all does in fact come from the banality of the rules keeping the cult members in check, and the unexpected paths those who leave seem to take.

But here Kate-Lois is mistaken. Her strongest material is taken not from her mother’s experiences, but from her own, theatrical ones. She seems most at ease recounting her experiences teaching Shakespeare and telling us about the evolution of human storytelling. I left wanting more of this, as she clearly has some of her own unique stories to tell.

Gentrif*cked is safe but enjoyable fun that will no doubt improve after the work in progress feedback. Leaning into her charms, rather than rebelling against them, will see this show develop from strength to strength.


KATE-LOIS ELLIOTT: GENTRIF*CKED at the Museum of Comedy

Reviewed on 3rd August 2023

by Amber Woodward

 

 

 

Recent five star reviews:

The Lord Of The Rings | ★★★★★ | Watermill Theatre Newbury | August 2023
Sh!t-Faced Shakespeare®: Much Ado About Nothing | ★★★★★ | Leicester Square Theatre | July 2023
Bloody Elle | ★★★★★ | Soho Theatre | July 2023
Operation Mincemeat | ★★★★★ | Fortune Theatre | July 2023
Gypsy | ★★★★★ | The Mill at Sonning | June 2023
Henry I | ★★★★★ | Reading Abbey Ruins | June 2023
Possession | ★★★★★ | Arcola Theatre | June 2023
Tarantino Live: Fox Force Five & The Tyranny Of Evil Men | ★★★★★ | Riverside Studios | June 2023
Brokeback Mountain | ★★★★★ | Sohoplace | May 2023
How To Succeed In Business … | ★★★★★ | Southwark Playhouse Borough | May 2023

Kate-Lois Elliott: Gentrif*cked

Kate-Lois Elliott: Gentrif*cked

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