JOSEPH HARPER in MARCHING TOWARD DEATH WITH WOBBLY LEGS LIKE A VELOCIRAPTOR

Tararua Tramping Club, 4 Moncrieff St, Mt Victoria, Wellington

03/05/2012 - 04/05/2012

The Wine Cellar, St Kevins Arcade (K Rd), Auckland

10/05/2012 - 11/05/2012

NZ International Comedy Festival 2012

Production Details



Hello. 

my name is Joseph Harper. i have a new show that I have made for the 2012 New Zealand international comedy festival that is on may 3rd and 4th in wellington and may 10th and 11th in Auckland. It’s called “Billy pilrgim; or marching toward death with wobbly legs like a velociraptor”. I am hoping you will read this thing and want to interview me about my show or something. I’ll understand if you don’t (i realize there are probably much more interesting comedians/shows than me/my show (but, yknow, might as well send this thing right?).)

This show is about death and is a fairly earnest attempt to negotiate and subvert the idea of ‘death’. Hopefully people will watch it and then think about it when people/pets/beloved plants die. It’s a pretty heavy departure from my previous two shows, which have been about bikes. One of them, ‘bikes I’ve owned versus girls I’ve fallen in love with’ was nominated for the Billy t award and has played to friendly and full houses in Auckland and wellington over two seasons (in each place). it was described as “endearing, witty, and charming”

for this show I’ve been talking mostly to old people and little kids, but also members of my family (my mother has ms). i think this show will be pretty good. I tried out some of it last year at this story-telling event and it went pretty well. i mean, a bit sad, but pretty funny too. The name comes from a Kurt Vonnegut novel and the way my brother and i joked about my mother’s gait when she first started using a walking frame.

Thanks for reading. I’d love lots of people to come so that I can make heaps of money. Just kidding. Seriously though I’d like lots of people to come. People should. It’s free (sort of (koha entry)) and the venues i perform at are way cooler than the other festival venues i think.

from Joseph 

As part of the NZ International Comedy Festival 2012 

JOSEPH HARPER IN MARCHING TOWARD DEATH WITH WOBBLY LEGS LIKE A VELOCIRAPTOR

WELLINGTON
dates:  Thu 3 – Fri  4 May, 8:30pm
venue: The Tararua tramping club, 4 Montcrief st, Mt Victoria
tickets:  Koha
bookings: 0273924447, jeharper0088@gmail.com, or just turn up.

AUCKLAND
dates: Thu 10 – Fri 11 May, 8:30pm
venue: The Wine Cellar, St Kevin’s Arcade, K rd
tickets:  Koha
bookings: 0273924447, jeharper0088@gmail.com, or just turn up (this one might fill up though)

For a full line up of performances, booking details & more information, visit www.comedyfestival.co.nz  




A generous giving of self

Review by John Smythe 04th May 2012

Few performers would contemplate developing a 45-minute comedy festival show around their mother’s multiple sclerosis (MS) but Joseph Harper has always come at writing and performing from an unusual angle. As always, Marching Toward Death with Wobbly Legs Like a Velociraptor is extremely personal.

If you thought the title meant he was back on his bicycles (cf: Bikes I Have Known versus Girl I Have Fallen In Love With and The Boy and the Bicycle ) – no: that’s velocipedes. The Velociraptor simile, derived from Jurassic Park, references his mother’s mode of movement these days, and is Harper’s self-confessed way of using humour to negotiate one of the milestones most of us have to reach at some point.

Our relationship with death invariably changes as we grow up, never more profoundly than with the first death of a parent. For me it was my father’s sudden and unexpected departure at 57; the vanishing an immutable and reliable part of my known universe which threw me off an axis I’d totally taken for granted. Everyone’s experience is different in detail but “wobbly” probably fits most in some way.

What’s unusual about this one is that both of Harper’s parents are still alive but the nature of his mother’s slowly approaching death is totally predictable for her and everyone else, and the wobbles are currently hers, at least in their physical form.

In my review of Harper’s most recent show, Honey, in this year’s Fringe, I called his style ‘theatre by stealth’. It would be remiss of me not to mention there is no ‘theatre’ of that kind in Marching Toward Death with Wobbly Legs Like a Velociraptor. It’s just Harper talking; apologising initially for not being one of the much more high-profile comedians on stage around town, then sharing his experiences, feelings and observations about death vis-à-vis his mother.

As we hear about how death has turned up in his life, we cannot help but recall our own experiences, which of course enhances the sense of engagement. His first funeral experience is comically poignant. The question of what sort of death we would choose if we could is darkly whimsical.  

But it’s his youthful attempts to explain exactly how it feels to be in his shoes, to find an equivalent in literature, and to help us comprehend ‘the fourth dimension’ and find comfort in that, through participation in a simple ‘thought experiment’, that makes this ‘show’ special.  

It could so easily have been self indulgent and/or maudlin but Harper has a wilfully honest way of doing things that makes you realise, in retrospect, that – even if you want to tell him to get off his ‘me-myself-and-I treadmill’ – he has been generous in giving of himself, so that we may better understand our selves and our world.

And he only asks for a koha afterwards if we think it was worth it. His loyal following on opening night certainly seemed to think it was. 

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