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First Man Standing
Trades Hall, Melbourne; Rob Quantock
Thursday, August 7, 2008. Opening Night Performance. Review by ANNE-MARIE PEARD.
Until September 6. Bookings: www.comedyattrades.com.au.
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1968 was a year of change,
protest and assassination. Nixon was elected, Hussein came into power and someone left the
cake out in the rain in McArthur Park. Back in Melbourne, a young architecture
student took some jokes to the review stage, and he hasnt left yet.
Rod Quantock has been nudging our sensibilities for 40 years. As I was born in 1968, I am
rather fond of that year. Were the love children of the 60s, we managed a year or
two of free tertiary education (which I spent in the uni bar), and we still cant
believe that anyone seriously supported little Johnny Howard. Were not Baby Boomers,
but were too old to identify with Generation X. So, Im declaring us Generation
Rod.
Hes been there all our life. We probably first saw him on the 80s sketch comedy
Australia: youre standing in it, or it might have been a Captain Snooze ad. As we
started hanging out at Fringes, there was Rod, fuelling our leftie anger as we enjoyed our
middle class arts festivals. The luckiest ones have been on a Bus trip and met Trevor the
rubber chicken. (I would have been there, if I hadnt been living in Adelaide at the
time.)
In First Man Standing, Rod celebrates the last 40 years. Theres a lot of
reminiscing to be had. Victorians revelled in the Jeff era, but Rods most heartfelt
thanks was to Little Johnny the man who wrote every one of his jokes for 11 years.
Then he gives us another chance to cheer because the little critter was voted out of his
own seat. Kevin07 isnt funny enough yet to take Johhnys place, but Rod knows
the tide will turn. In the meantime, Peter Garrett is doing a fine job of becoming our
most embarrassing politician. (Us Generation Rodders are burning our Midnight Oil vinyls
in disgust.)
Rods style doesnt change much, but he has moved from blackboard and chalk to
laptop and mouse. (However, he uses technology like someone who still cant believe
that computers really exist.) If you saw his recent Melbourne Comedy Festival show will be
thrilled to see the late comers and audience statistic graphs have developed. And
latecomers well you have been warned.
The best comedy comes from truth. Sure, we laugh at Jeffs phallic sculptures, and
Bracks and Brumbys round tunnels, but were only laughing because the other
option is crying. Rods comedy is as sharp, intelligent and bitingly hilarious as
ever.
One of the great things about his shows is the audiences. Its rare to see people in
their teens and in their 60s cacking themselves at the same material. Young ones in the
audience (anyone under 45) can look forward to a very special moment. If you screamed at
your parents, marched in protest, or re-used plastic bags before it became cool: Rod leads
the Baby Boomers present in an apology to the generations Rod, X and Y. But do we feel any
better knowing that our projections of environmental disaster have come to
fruition
Sometimes it might be nicer to be proven wrong.
If youve enjoyed Mr Q at anytime over the last 40 years (even if it was just as
Captain Snooze), get down to Trades Hall for First Man Standing you
wont be disappointed. If youve somehow managed to miss him in the last 40
years, its time you found out what all the fuss is about. |