logo
Comedian Kemah Bob milks easy belly laughs from holiday hell

Comedian Kemah Bob milks easy belly laughs from holiday hell

The Age26-04-2025

Kemah Bob: Miss Fortunate
Factory Theatre, April 25. Until April 27.
★★★1/2
Reviewed by DANIEL HERBORN
When Texas-born, London-based comic Kemah Bob's therapist suggested she take daily 'mental health walks' to help manage her bipolar disorder, it seemed like a good idea.
But when one of those walks turned into a casual shoplifting spree at a fashionable boutique, it seemed like maybe she needed to up the ante on her wellness regime.
Energised by the thought of beach time, massage and yoga, she books a flight to Thailand and is soon happily exploring her new surroundings, waving off warnings about wandering around a night market alone.
Before long, she believes herself an instant expert in all things Thailand. Then, a man who describes his job as helping independent African miners sell their gold in Asia swoops in, determined to whisk her away from the tourist trail. Apparently, he can't pay for anything, though, as he has misplaced his key card.
With Miss Fortunate, Bob tells a winding tale with upbeat warmth and easy charm. It's an unusual story and one rich in dramatic irony.
We grimace at every red flag she ignores and see through every tall tale she laps up as her plans for a chilled-out vacation are upended in a whirlwind of weed shops and extravagant spending.
It paints an engaging, wryly funny portrait of living with bipolar disorder and the frustrating unpredictability of the condition; Bob explains that manic episodes can be triggered by achieving goals, not achieving goals, life experiences (good or bad) and even the changing of the weather and the passage of time.
While sometimes more gently engrossing than hilarious, Bob's relaxed charisma keeps you on board. There are even a couple of jaunty songs, including the closing number, where she takes a sanguine look back at the holiday from hell, happy enough to have survived to tell the tale.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Inaugural art show features primary school paintings
Inaugural art show features primary school paintings

Perth Now

time5 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Inaugural art show features primary school paintings

An emerging art organisation is launching its inaugural season of programming with an exhibition featuring large-scale paintings created in collaboration with more than 250 primary school students. The first exhibition at Vessel — an independent non-profit art organisation inside The Naval Store — is by Perth-born artist Gian Manik, who has worked closely with year 1 and 2 students from local schools, including Lance Holt School and North Fremantle, East Fremantle, White Gum Valley, Richmond, Beaconsfield and Our Lady of Fatima primary schools. Primary schools in the cities of Fremantle and Melville and the Town of Cottesloe were among those who participated. Your local paper, whenever you want it. The exhibition featuring the student art opens on June 27 and runs for six weeks inside the 1935 heritage-listed warehouse that became a multi-purpose space in 2020. A concurrent artist-in-residence program by First Nations artist Amanda Bell is also under way. 'I seek to engage with others by telling stories in a way that is 'right way' for me as an Aboriginal person and artist, and to make a contribution to making spaces culturally safe in the arts and beyond,' Bell said. Local artist Nina Juniper began managing The Naval Store in 2022 and was blown away by its potential. Alongside co-executive director Will Ek Uvelius, the pair announced Vessel in February. Vessel was made possible by a $500,000 donation from board member Adam Jorlen in what the arts organisation claims is the largest cryptocurrency donation to Australia's arts industry. The organisation has been inspired by one of Australia's most significant creative industry hubs, Carriageworks in Sydney, and the pair plan to recreate the platform in WA through Vessel. The Naval Store will continue to be a multipurpose space for the community but Vessel will have structured seasonal exhibitions, with the first display opening on Friday.

Perth's iconic spots feature in indie film
Perth's iconic spots feature in indie film

Perth Now

time5 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Perth's iconic spots feature in indie film

A Perth-based filmmaker is set to premiere his indie-punk thriller film 'Skeleton Girls. A Kidnapped Society' at the Perth Revelation International Film Festival in July. PRIFF is an 11-day event that showcases more than 200 international films and is a 'fierce advocate for adventurous independent cinema and Australian screen culture'. It includes Skeleton Girls, follows Anna Kaiser who is on the run after a fatal incident and pursed by 24-hour TV. Your local paper, whenever you want it. As events unfold Anna finds herself drawn into the dark underbelly of a world populated by girl gangs and louts. It is directed and written by Bedford local Richard Eames, who co-created it with wife Helena who juggled multiple roles behind the scenes. 'She's also produced it, but also was kind of the art director, the production designer, and set designer — and a lot of other things as well,' Eames said. The gang marching through a set called 'Rats Nest'. Credit: Supplied 'I'm very much into experimental film, indie movies and cult films, films that just have a strong voice and aesthetic and try to do things differently. 'That's what inspired me to make something like the kind of work I like to watch. 'The film is very much about where the world is and is heading … it explores a lot of issues of polarisation, and this feeling of the world being pushed into conflicts.' Alla Malakhitova, who plays Anna Kaiser, with director Richard Eames and cinematographer Meredith Lindsay. Credit: skel The feature was filmed over nine months and was finished off with a lengthy post-production period which involved adding animation and VFX. The 107-minute film is entirely shot in WA and features many of Perth's most recognisable backdrops, from West Leederville's semi-industrial streets and Oxford Street Reserve to grungy inner-city laneways such as Wolf Lane. The team even managed to get permission from Perth Concert Hall to use a secret tunnel underneath St Georges Terrace. 'It was 100 per cent self-financed. Just years of hard work, sacrifice and living very frugally to save the funds,' Eames said. 'Even when I thought I had enough money, we blew through the budget, so I had to go back to work to fund the next bit of filming. 'We had a lot of people involved who were just really passionate about it and contributed their time either for free or at reduced rates.' According to the Revelation festival, Skeleton Girls plays 'like the mutant off-spring of Run Lola Run, Suburbia, Subway, Repo Man and Green Room, all shot through with a bold, luminescent palette, and driven by a punk and post punk score'. 'Our film really feels at home in that festival, and it just so happens to be a local festival as well, and they've been just really supportive of the film and what we were trying to do, and just really understand the vibe and the voice of the film, so we're really excited to be a part of the festival this year,' Eames said. Anna Kaiser digs deeper. Credit: Supplied The film will be shown on Thursday, July 10, at 8.10pm and Saturday, July 12, at 9.10pm at the Luna Cinema in Leederville. Tickets can be purchased via movietkts.

The Paddington Bear Experience: Unusual rule behind the London attraction's magic
The Paddington Bear Experience: Unusual rule behind the London attraction's magic

News.com.au

time9 hours ago

  • News.com.au

The Paddington Bear Experience: Unusual rule behind the London attraction's magic

IN LONDON From concerts to social catchups to even just a relatively attractive sunset, there's not a lot we don't feel compelled to capture on our phones. But for the tens of thousands of people who enter the immersive world of Paddington Bear in the heart of London, it's as though they're back in the pre-screen era. The Paddington Bear Experience, which just celebrated its first birthday, takes visitors into a multi-sensory adventure through a series of rooms, all inspired by locations within the original stories. It's huge, and colourful, and fun – exactly the kind of place you'd usually be snapping endless pictures. But a huge part of the magic is the utter lack of screens – a policy forewarned on signs from the moment you board the 'Paddington Station train'. 'You're immersing yourself in it – for that [hour], you're just there and you're just living it. You're part of Paddington's world and you are a part of that experience,' Nathan Brine, the Path Entertainment Group producer behind the Experience, told 'What's lovely is when people actually say, 'you know what? I was there, and I wasn't there through a screen'. Because in truth, if you want to watch that on the animated series or the films, you can do that at home. 'This is about being there, and being visceral and being able to touch everything and be involved in everything.' Taking my exuberant four-year-old Paddington-obsessed son through the immersive, actor-led adventure, I myself quickly lost the urge to pull out my phone, as most parents are usually programmed to do during moments of excitement and joy. Instead, the pair of us just got swept up into the Brown's home in Windsor Gardens, Peru, and all the extraordinarily-detailed bits in between – a rare break from technological connection. Crafting the Experience to pay due tribute to the beloved franchise, first created by author Michael Brown in 1958, was no small feat – but with the help of a 'huge volume' of props from the films, loaned by Studio Canal, it basically feels like you're visiting the real Bear and his pals. The iconic home of the Brown family, featuring the painted tree snaking up the staircase wall, is where most of them ended up. Some pieces from the film sets though, according to Brine, were simply too valuable to borrow. '[Things that] cannot be touched, cannot be broken, basically need to be insured for a lot of money … some of those are like, 'Okay, you keep holding on to them',' he told with a laugh. Six years in the making, the effort behind the Experience is evident around every corner. Whether a diehard or medium fan, or even just remotely interested in Paddington Bear and its cultural significance in the UK, it's impossible not to smile at the charming curation of his world at every turn. Finding the exact right location for it, though, was initially quite a challenge, but it ended up nestled along the Thames in the tourist hotspot which also hosts The London Eye, Shrek's Adventure and the London Dungeon. 'It was a bit of a crazy space, but we walked out of what is now Mr Gruber's antique shop, and out onto the South Bank and looked directly at Big Ben and were like, 'this feels weirdly familiar',' Brine recalled. 'And then we revisited the [Paddington] film posters and one of them is Paddington sat on that exact wall outside our entrance, with Big Ben behind. So it felt a little bit like destiny, like this is where he should be.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store