James Nokise: Beige Against The Machine

The Classic Studio, 321 Queen St, Auckland

19/04/2008 - 26/04/2008

Bluenote Bar, Wellington

29/04/2008 - 03/05/2008

NZ International Comedy Festival 2007-09, 2013

Production Details



LAUGHING IN THE NAME OF…

James Nokise, New Zealand’s favourite Samoan/Welsh stand-up comic, returns for the New Zealand International Comedy Festival 2008 to present his new one hour show Beige Against The Machine.

As the first Pacific Islander to work fulltime on the United Kingdom stand-up comedy circuit, taking Pacific culture to the other side of the world, James Nokise is now bringing some culture back to New Zealand with him.

Fresh from the streets of London, and gigs in the UK’s hottest comedy clubs, James Nokise will perform a show that will satisfy even the most insatiable of punters. Those who are hungry for a night of classic comedy will find themselves sated as Nokise explores Murphy’s Law that anything can go wrong… will end up in his show.

Condensing hours of hilarious encounters with fools, bureaucracy, and bureaucratic fools around the globe, Nokise’s slick show will paint a story of a young male from the South Pacific trying to find his way in the world, with plenty of customs agents and sports fans in the way. Cultural differences collide as the French try to understand that he is not half-Salmon, the British wonder where Samoa is, and James tries to make sense of it all with his hilarious outtakes on life in the fob-lane.

With over a year on the UK stand-up comedy circuit under his belt, James Nokise is currently writing for The United Colours of Comedy Sketch Show, and will feature in a showcase to be held at London’s esteemed Hackney Empire 29 February 2008.

Twice nominated for New Zealand’s top comedy award, James Nokise is also a veteran of two Edinburgh Fringe festivals including hosting and headlining duties during the inaugural "Best of Kiwi Showcase" in 2004. Since then he has risen to be one of the top young comedians in New Zealand, performing hugely successful one hour solo shows in three New Zealand International Comedy festivals.

"Funny – really funny" – Magneto Magazine

"Go now, see him now" – Salient

AUCKLAND
Dates: April 19th and 23rd – 26th, 10pm
Venue: The CLASSIC Studio, Level 1, 321 Queen St, Auckland
Tickets: Adults $20, Concessions and Groups of 10+ $16 (service fees may apply)

WELLINGTON
Dates: April 29th – May 3rd, 7pm
Venue: Bluenote Bar (Corner Cuba and Vivian Streets), Wellington
Tickets: Adults $18.50, Concessions and Groups of 10+ $15 (service fees may apply) 




1 hr, no interval

A unique flavour of street smarts

Review by Sian Robertson 21st Apr 2008

This Welsh-Samoan youngster from New Zealand living in London has a unique position on race relations and cultural perceptions around the world. He seems to be playing up the Samoan angle for us Kiwis – which is great because there are enough comics in the festival who are going to be slagging off London (not that it isn’t funny to do so) and in my experience the funniest thing anyone’s ever said about Welsh people is that they like cheese on toast – a lot.

The 25-year-old bounces onto the stage with the fashion sense of a tacky game show host (yes, James, when you asked if anyone liked your shirt I was the lone voice in a sea of stunned mullets that piped up "Nah" – I have to agree the velcro is pretty cool though) and after a courteous welcome, launches into some Samoan-style crooning "to get the energy up" – i.e. playing the ladies’ man to the acute embarrassment of a few singled-out audience members and everyone else’s glad-it’s-not-me mirth.

Mid-song, in a camp display of passion, a ‘strip-tease’ rids him of the most offending articles of clothing, managing in the process to embarrass an obviously straight bloke near the front. There are a few costume changes. Now in T and black hoodie, he divulges his own bizarre theories on how come domestic violence is a problem in Samoa, and ridicules ‘reverse’ racism in New Zealand politics.

The Classic Studio in my opinion doesn’t do a performer any favours. Jammed in the corner of a small, tucked away room, they invariably look like cornered prey even before they’ve got past the sympathetic applause.

Despite the ‘Studio Syndrome’, Nokise’s initially nervous energy quickly becomes the fuel for cleverly delivered songs and conversational repartee on: being beige ("the features are right but the skin is white"), childhood anecdotes, government politics, the KFC god, teenage pregnancy. He’s in his element on the subject of Samoan culture in New Zealand. On the other hand, some of his political commentary, though shrewd, has intense moments where you forget you’re watching comedy and it feels instead like talkback radio.

Being a pasty part-Samoan who’s spent a fair amount of time in London, Nokise wields a unique flavour of street smarts – a bit nancy, but sharp as a tack, self-assured, and able to switch personas from English toff to London lout to south Auckland wannabe gangsta as suddenly as he changes outfits.

There are times when Nokise loses faith in the direction of a joke and lets it fizzle, moving quickly to something else and, while I commend the self-awareness to know when he’s not connecting with us, it comes across as faltering confidence. This is part of his charm though – a self-conscious youthful enthusiasm that sometimes has him getting ahead of himself, stumbling on words and saying ‘like’ a lot. 

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