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Tag: complaints letter

Honest Liars Bring Winter Laughs to Tauranga

Honest Liars Bring Winter Laughs to Tauranga

A Cold Winter Night, a Warm Theatre, and Plenty of Laughs

Winter may have officially arrived in Tauranga, but inside the 16th Ave Theatre for the first show of winter, there was nothing chilly about the atmosphere.

As audience members escaped the cold evening air and settled into their seats, the theatre quickly filled with warmth, anticipation, and plenty of friendly chatter. By showtime, the venue was packed, creating exactly the sort of energy improv performers love. When the Honest Liars cast burst onto the stage to enthusiastic applause, everyone knew they were in for an entertaining evening.

One of the opening games was a great warm-up for the players. I Can Do It Better. This fast-paced challenge sees performers attempting to outdo one another in increasingly ridiculous ways, with confidence levels soaring far beyond actual ability. It set the tone perfectly for the rest of the night and had the audience laughing from the outset.

The evening soon moved into an audience favourite called Pocket Note, where a seemingly ordinary workplace became the setting for extraordinary nonsense. The location suggested by the audience was the Huntly power station, where workers were supposedly responsible for keeping the country’s lights on.

As often happens in improv, things didn’t stay sensible for long.

The workers appeared to be struggling with their coal-shovelling duties, resulting in power outages across the country. Meanwhile, the series of mysterious notes, written by the audience, were inserted into the story. Each containing increasingly bizarre messages. Among the gems were warnings such as “Don’t eat that pizza,” declarations like “I don’t have a passport,” and some highly questionable dating advice involving one-night stands and swiping left.

The mystery finally unravelled when it became clear that the workers weren’t feeding coal into the boiler at all. Instead, they had somehow been shovelling chocolate. As explanations go for a nationwide power crisis, it was certainly one of the more memorable ones.

Another highlight was Complaints Letter, a game that demonstrates just how difficult — and hilarious — communication can become when four improvisers are responsible for writing letters one word at a time.

The audience suggested a complaint about ring binders, and the players embraced the challenge. The resulting letter informed our MP, Mr Peters, that the binders were buckling under pressure and desperately needed strengthening. Matters escalated dramatically when the complaint revealed that a previous binder failure had resulted in a rather unfortunate summer injury involving a gouge to the writer’s left testicle.

As if that weren’t enough, the reply letter somehow managed to become even more absurd. The correspondents confidently identified the source of the problem as a man named Richard, who apparently had no business designing stationery in the first place. The response concluded with appreciation for the customer’s contribution to Mr Peter’s political party and the promise of a special medal shaped like a testicle.

Customer service has rarely reached such heights.

The second half featured Puppets, one of Honest Liars’ most delightfully chaotic games. Inspired by an audience suggestion reminiscent of an Avatar-style movie, the performers, with help from puppeteers chosen from the audience, found themselves in a fantastical world facing an unexpected threat: penguins.

Lots and lots of penguins.

What followed was exactly the sort of mayhem audiences have come to expect from improv comedy. Characters struggled heroically against their feathered invaders, storylines twisted in unexpected directions, and performers somehow managed to keep a straight face as they navigated the increasingly ridiculous situation. The audience certainly didn’t.

And a new game, the Relay, was introduced to the audience. With five players taking turns to tell the story, it certainly was a rollicking good yarn. See for yourself with the video.

As the evening drew to a close, the audience left with smiles on their faces, still discussing favourite moments as they headed back into the winter night. The performers took their final bow to generous applause, knowing they had shared another memorable evening with the Tauranga community.

One of the joys of improv is that no two shows are ever the same. The performers begin with only a handful of audience suggestions and create entire scenes, stories, and characters on the spot. Sometimes the results are clever, sometimes they are chaotic, and occasionally they are gloriously nonsensical. The Honest Liars’ shows manages to be all three.

Most importantly, they deliver exactly what people come for: laughter.

If you missed this show, don’t worry. Honest Liars will be back next month with more unscripted comedy, unexpected twists, and plenty more opportunities for audience suggestions to send the performers down wonderfully ridiculous paths.

After all, you never know when a national power outage might turn out to be caused by chocolate.
Thanks to:

The Players

The Crew

Jon + MC

Kathy + MC

Sue

Gala

Ryan

Shawn

Steve

Admin:

Fee


Tech:

Callum

Book your tickets for the next show and join the players for loads of laughs.

1st Saturday of every month.
16th Ave Theatre.
16th Avenue, Tauranga.
Show Starts: 7.30 p.m.
Licenced bar available.

honest liars improv

honest liars improv comedy

 

 

 

Honest Liars Improv Comedy Kicks Off 2026 in Tauranga

Honest Liars Improv Comedy Kicks Off 2026 in Tauranga

The Honest Liars Turned Up the Heat (and the Absurdity) at 16th Ave Theatre

The first Honest Liars Improv Comedy show of 2026 arrived with impeccable comic timing: right in the middle of a classic Tauranga heatwave. The sort of day where even your thoughts feel slightly wilted. But heat, it turns out, is no match for a group of improvisers armed with water bottles, determination, and an alarming willingness to make absolute fools of themselves for public enjoyment.

Despite competing with a UB40 tribute show and Shakespeare at the Quarry (which feels unfair, given that they are two very different but equally powerful cultural temptations), the audience still turned up in strong numbers at the 16th Ave Theatre. Many were brand new to improv, which is always a delight. There’s nothing quite like watching someone discover, in real time, that yes, this is all made up, and no, there is absolutely no safety net.

Thankfully, the theatre’s air-conditioning had been cranked up before the audience arrived, meaning brains could fire properly and no one slid out of their seat mid-scene. A strong start already.

The show opened with the ever-popular Good, Bad & Ugly, a game that proves once and for all that asking improvisers for advice is a bold and deeply questionable life choice. One brave audience member asked how to decide which ice cream flavour to choose. What followed was a masterclass in escalating logic.

  • Good: Go every day and choose a different flavour. Sensible. Optimistic. Dairy-forward.
  • Bad: Get a job at the ice-cream shop, volunteer to close, and lick every flavour until clarity arrives. Questionable hygiene, but thorough.
  • Ugly: Have a frontal lobotomy so you never have to make a decision again. About ice cream. Or anything. Ever.

And just like that, the audience knew they were in safe, if slightly unhinged, hands.

An audience favourite, Pocket Note, followed, transporting everyone onto a cruise ship that somehow ended up stuck in a cave. The joy of this game lies in watching players attempt to justify increasingly impossible circumstances with absolute conviction and seamlessly weave in the audience-provided notes. If you haven’t already, the video below is well worth a watch, pure, nautical nonsense at its finest.

Next up was Complaints Letter, featuring Steve and Shawn painstakingly writing a letter one word at a time to Auckland Zoo. The grievance? The elephants are too wrinkly. According to the letter, these excessively wrinkled elephants exude bad vomit over visitors, which is apparently “just not good enough.” The complaint was formally signed by the unforgettable H. R. Benjamin Esq.

The Zoo’s reply (courtesy of Kathy and Ryan) was gloriously defensive and completely baffled. The elephants, they explained, were perfectly fine. In fact, all the animals receive Botox to combat wrinkles, including the scorpions. Particularly helpful, as it stops them from being sweaty. The Zoo suggested, quite reasonably, that H. R. Benjamin Esq. never visit again.

A brand-new game made its debut: Time Warp. Kathy and Steve began a scene visiting the in-laws (already a dangerous premise) before Jon rang a bell and hurled them backwards and forwards through time. The result was joyful chaos, emotional whiplash, and a growing appreciation that this game is far easier to watch than to explain. The video below will clarify everything.

The show closed with Puppets, a guaranteed crowd-pleaser. Two audience volunteers served as puppet masters, physically positioning a player each as they attempted to play out a scene in which the Eiffel Tower collapsed during an earthquake. Grace was not the goal. Commitment was. And commitment was delivered in spades.

Puppet masters in full force.

puppets improv game

The night wrapped up with big laughs, warm applause, and that particular post-improv glow where everyone leaves a little lighter than they arrived. A cracking way to launch 2026, hot weather, cool air-con, brand-new audience members, and improvised nonsense doing exactly what it does best.

Same time, same chaos—see you at the next one.

Thanks to:

The Players

The Crew

Jon + MC

Kathy + MC

Sue

Gala

Ryan

Shawn

Steve

Admin:

Fee


Tech:

Callum

Book your tickets for the next show and join the players for loads of laughs.

1st Saturday of every month.
16th Ave Theatre.
16th Avenue, Tauranga.
Show Starts: 7.30 p.m.
Licenced bar available.

honest liars improvhonest liars improv comedy

 

Honest Liars Improv October 2025 show

Honest Liars Improv October 2025 show

Laughter Beats the Black Caps at 16th Ave Theatre

You’d think the international cricket would have stolen the crowd — Black Caps versus Australia at the Bay Oval is no small distraction — but it turns out that laughter wins every time. A lively audience packed into Tauranga’s 16th Ave Theatre for the October show, to see the Honest Liars in action, and what a night it was.

From the moment the lights came up, the room buzzed with energy. The warm-up game, Categories, had everyone calling out suggestions faster than a ball bowled at ninety miles an hour. “Shades of red!” and “Types of relationships!” set the tone for a night of quick thinking, clever wordplay, and the kind of chaos only improv can create.

Then came The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly, with Gala, Steve, and Ryan offering their “expert” advice on life’s great dilemmas. When frostbite was suggested, the wisdom ranged from sensible medical help to fashion advice involving “accessorising with blackened fingers.” But the audience really lost it when the topic of boredom in retirement came up. The good advice was wholesome — “find a hobby or try meditation.” The bad? “Get involved in everyone else’s drama at the retirement village.” And the ugly? “Follow someone like Jeffrey Dahmer — just leave out the serial-killer part!” It was wickedly funny and entirely unrehearsed, proving that even questionable advice can be comedy gold.

Honest Liars Improv October 2025 show

The pace never slowed. In Change, players had to instantly switch their lines whenever the MC called “Change!”, leading to an unforgettable argument about Guy Fawkes. Then it was time for Pocket Note and a hysterical plane scene where Jon and Steve’s “pilots” had no idea how to fly, getting lost in each other’s eyes, seeing a pregnant woman in labour floating down with a parachute and leaving Sally to literally save the day. The audience’s suggestions were incorporated brilliantly, with the final note, “Another one bites the dust!” wrapping up the scene perfectly.

But the highlight of the night? The now-legendary Complaints Letter. The suggestion: the U.S. government. Gala and Ryan took turns writing the letter one word at a time, creating a wonderfully bizarre complaint to Donald Trump. Jon and Steve’s “official reply” went delightfully off-course into a debate about different types of cheese. By the end, the audience was in stitches, clapping and cheering for more.

See the first letter here (contains offensive language):

 

As the curtain came down (so to speak), the crowd left with grins wide enough to rival the Bay Oval floodlights. Cricket may have had the headlines, but for those inside 16th Ave Theatre, there was no contest — comedy won by a landslide.

If you missed out this time, don’t worry — the Honest Liars will be back next month with a fresh batch of games, unpredictable hilarity, and maybe even a few new “ugly” bits of advice. Sign up for our newsletter to get info on the next show: Newsletter

Thanks to the players

The Players

The Crew

Jon + MC

Kathy + MC

Sue

Gala

Ryan

Shawn

Steve

Admin:

Fee


Tech:

Callum

Book your tickets for the next show and join the players for loads of laughs.

1st Saturday of every month.
16th Ave Theatre.
16th Avenue, Tauranga.
Show Starts: 7.30 p.m.
Licenced bar available.

buy ticketshonest liars comedy improv

Improv Comedy Night Delivers Unscripted Laughter

Improv Comedy Night Delivers Unscripted Laughter

Another beautiful Tauranga evening as the players went to the 16th Ave Theatre for a fun-filled improv comedy night.

The show opened with a new game, ‘My Movie.’ It’s for all the players and designed to be fun for the audience and brain-activating for the players. Two or three letters from the alphabet are gleaned from the audience, and the players are then asked for a film title. The chosen film must offer a tagline and a wee snippet from the film. Some of the titles were bizarre, to say the least!

For example, the letters K and H became the film Kinky Hamburgers.

my movie comedy improv

The ‘Returns Desk’ saw Jon trying to elicit information from the ignorant consumer about what and why they were returning their object.

Kelly marched right on into Victoria’s Secret to return a shark-toothed thong. She told Jon that her mother had been very disappointed with the gift she’d given her, which made the audience react with delighted laughter. Well, can you imagine it?

comedy improv

Kathy was an old lady returning a microwave that only cooked cold, and what a shambles that turned out to be at her garden group. Steve, as Frankenstein’s assistant, Igor, dragged in a Space X rocket that only operated underwater, which the master was not happy about!

It was time for ‘Letters from the Civil War’. This game involved Colonel Jeremiah Humperdink and his sweetheart, Cecilie, who wrote letters to each other.

The theme suggested by the audience was a Dear John letter, and the Colonel was very, very drunk when he wrote it. Oh dear, whatever did he say?

Well, take a look for yourself and see what he wrote and what the response was:

 

See the full game on our YouTube – Civil War Letters

An excellent ‘Sign Language Interpreter’ had the audience in stitches as Kelly interpreted the interview between Jon and Ian, the woolly mammoth trainer who found frozen woolly mammoths in Canada, brought them back, put them into a swimming pool to defrost, and discovered they came to life performing synchronised swimming! This was a rather challenging interpretation for Kelly, who ended up jumping and falling and trying to synchronise actions in a pool.

improv comedy night

No show is complete without ‘The Twitch’ game, and, once again, Jon was in the hot seat, having to mimic all the twitches each applicant had as they came in to be interviewed for the dentist position. This had Jon exhausted by the end, much to the audience’s delight. A great game to finish up another fun improv comedy night.

Thanks to players

Jon & MC
Steve
Kathy
Kelly
Gala
Mark
Ian

Thanks to
Admin: Fee
Sound engineer: Anthony.

Book your tickets for the next show and join the players for loads of laughs.

1st Saturday of every month.
16th Ave Theatre.
16th Avenue, Tauranga.
Show Starts: 7.30 p.m.
Licenced bar available.

buy ticketshonest liars comedy improv

Even a Forgotten Theatre Key Doesn’t Stop the Honest Liars.

Even a Forgotten Theatre Key Doesn’t Stop the Honest Liars.

The evening started with a small panic over the forgotten theatre key.

Phone calls and a quick dash to meet halfway soon got the theatre key back in safe hands, and the doors were opened. The players quickly got the chairs out, signage up, and then onto the stage for a good warm-up and run-through of the games.

Once the audience had settled in with their drinks and expectations of a good night, the players ran out and onto the stage to loud applause.

After the first game of Objections, it was on to the ‘Change’ game. Ryan and Kathy stood in line to get on the roller coaster. The conversation kept going off in different directions because as Jon dinged the bell, the line they last spoke had to be changed.

comedy improv the change game

 

‘Pocket Note’ saw Jon, Kelly, and Sally breaking out of a Youth Hostel. The scene was set as the two girls puffed away on a not-so-decent bit of weed. But they decided they had to break out because the food was only baked beans. At that point, Jon entered as the warden. As the story progressed, it revealed that both girls were backpackers who thought they were in a normal hostel and couldn’t understand why they couldn’t leave.

comedy improv pocket note

Another popular game, the ‘Returns Desk,’ had three players returning items they had no idea about. Operating the desk, Jon was responsible for giving clues, which he did very well. Ian’s Santa costume was green, so Jon started off with an Irish accent, saying, “Welcome to Paddy’s Festive Store. How can I help you?”

Next, Sally had a custard square made of mustard that she wanted to return, and finally, Brett pulled in the Grand Canyon to return as it was full of Skittles. The audience loved this game as it was through their suggestions that the crazy items were created.

To see an example of this game, go to our YouTube. In this clip, the item being brought back to the returns desk is an electric bus with a flat tyre.

Once again, Kelly made the audience laugh in the game ‘Sign Language Interpreter’ as she visually tried to interpret the conversation between Ian and Brett. Ian, the host, Mike Hunt, was interviewing Brett, Dr Dick Lively, who was creating an octopi Olympics.

Take a look at a wee snippet of this fun game.

 

 

At the end of intermission, David, the trusted barman, got onto the stage to pose a question to the audience: “Would you like to be in a box?” and with that, he expanded on the many reasons why you would even be in a box. Very entertaining.

forgotten theatre key

With all the Honest Liars present, the stage became filled with innuendos as the game ‘Sex With Me’ had the players stepping forward and declaring why sex with me is like brushing my teeth – yoga – and driving to work. For example: “Sex with me is like driving to work, it takes me forever to get there.”

The ‘Complaints Letter’ game had Ryan and Kathy writing to the Tauranga City Council to complain about the Lime Scooters. As the letter is written one word at a time, it can go off in all directi

ons, as you’ll see in the video below.

The last game of the evening was ‘Puppets’. Two wonderful people from the audience, Andrea and Kim, came up for this and quickly learnt how to be the puppet masters of Kelly and Brett. The theme of the story was James Bond being chased by a baddie down a mountain. It didn’t take too long before James Bond was nabbed, but he quickly got away, and the pair skied down the mountain.

comedy improv puppets

All too soon, the show was over. The audience went home, the Honest Liars unwound with a drink from the bar, and then it was lights out for the penultimate show of 2024.

Thanks to players

Brett
Ian
Jon – MC
Kelly
Kathy
Sally
Ryan

Thanks to
Admin: Fee
Sound engineer: Anthony.

Book your tickets for the next show and join the players for loads of laughs.

1st Saturday of every month.
16th Ave Theatre.
16th Avenue, Tauranga.
Show Starts: 7.30 p.m.
Licenced bar available.

book now

It’s Always Good When It’s A Full House

It’s Always Good When It’s A Full House

Extra chairs were called for, and it’s always good when it’s a full house!

After sunny skies, rain descended, but, once again, it did not deter the Honest Liars from getting to the theatre on time. Warm-up vocals and a run-through of the show’s games were done before it was time to leave the stage and head off to a side room as the audience arrived.

The patrons purchased their drinks and found seats, although extra seats were brought in for this show, with so many walk-ins, the Honest Liars had to create another row of seats.

Right out of the box was the first game of ‘I Can Do It Better’. This starts with two players who set the scene, but then all the players have the chance to jump in, exclaiming, “I can do it better!” and take the place of one actor. A load of fun and with the suggestion from the audience of ‘shoplifting’. It started with the perpetrator in a toilet cubical with all sorts of goodies and the store detective peering over the door. The stolen items ranged from condoms to camels to razor blades. The arrest was violent, and the characters ended up vampires. That’s comedy improv; you never know where it will lead!

comedy improv I can do it better

The next game was ‘Pocket Note’. This one relies on the suggestions from the audience, who offer up sentences that are written down on notes (see a few of them in the image below)

comedy improv pocket note

The scene was set with Jon, Brett and Sue surviving a plane crash. Sue’s dog, Fluffy, was desiccated entirely, so the first note was read from the 1st Aid Manual: “Eat all the cats and dogs”. Having injured her arm, Sue conveniently picked up the note “Where are the drugs kept?” which was both appropriate and timely and sent the audience into roars of laughter. The notes were weaved in as the story continued, but it was the last one when they were discussing Fluffy that stole the show – “well potty trained, not flees, free to a good home”.

pocket note

‘Returns Desk’ operated by Jon saw Brett, Ryan and Steve returning damaged or non-functioning items of which they had yet to learn what they were. These small, medium and large-sized items were a vape which made you fart, a breast pump that delivered dust and a rocket made of chocolate. In order to guess, each one asked a series of questions to Jon, who also gave clues, but the questions that brought out the most laughter were “my children were not impressed” (the rocket), “this doesn’t taste anything like it should” (the breast pump), and with the Vape Jon said there were different flavours including “Fluffy” – a great reference to the earlier game.

After intermission, a quick round of ‘Sex With Me’ warmed up both the players and the audience, and then it was into ‘Complaints Letter’. This had Sue and Brett writing a letter of complaint one word at a time to a vasectomy clinic. They complained that, among other things, they were left in a shopping mall, that it was all so complicated, and all they wanted was a plain vasectomy with no frills. They ended the letter saying they didn’t know what would happen “when this explodes in my face”. They demanded chocolate and McDonalds as compensation.

The clinic responded, starting with a restraining order and continuing with all sorts of denials and accusations. They did, however, offer one concession: a single Happy Meal, which would consist of one nugget and three fries.

A few more games were played before the show ended with the brilliant ‘The Twitch’ game. Jon was on form copying all the twitches until, in the end, confusing them up, sending the audience into loads of laughter.

You can see how he handled interviewing for a parking attendant on our YouTube channel, The Twitch.

Check out more photos from the show in our Gallery.

Thanks to players

Brett
Jon MC
Gala
Ryan
Mark
Steve
Sue
Kathy – MC

Thanks to
Crew:
Admin: Fee
Sound engineer: Ian

Book your tickets for the next show and join the players for loads of laughs.

1st Saturday of every month.
16th Ave Theatre.
16th Avenue, Tauranga.
Show Starts: 7.30 p.m.
Licenced bar available.

book now

A Springtime Show

A Springtime Show

Spring was in the air, so it was time for another Honest Liars show.

Although the day was overcast, the players brought the sunshine as they arrived at the theatre, ready for the springtime show they were looking forward to performing.

Laughter abounded during the warm-up games as the players practised the rules of the different games. But it wasn’t long before the first audience member arrived, so it was off to another area to continue loosening up.

The audience settled into their seats after getting their drinks and chatting to friends. The lights dimmed, and Jon, the emcee for the night, ran onto the stage to begin the evening’s entertainment.

After introducing the fellow players, it was time for the brain-storming game of ‘Sex With Me’. The first audience suggestion was “washing dishing”, which proved excellent. The players came up with:

  • “Sex with me is like washing dishing – my wife and I avoid it all week.”
  • “Sex with me is like washing dishing – I have to wear rubber gloves.”
  • “Sex with me is like washing dishing – I have a machine to do most of the work.”

Then it was onto “shouting at kids” with lines such as:

  • “Sex with me is like shouting at kids – I’m now allowed to do it in playgrounds.”
  • “Sex with me is like shouting at kids – only old people are interested in doing it.”

And so it went on, making it very obvious why the Honest Liars must rate their shows R18.

The first game, Pocket Note, always a firm favourite, brought out some epic one-liners from the audience. One suggestion after Jon asked the audience a question was, “Can you say that again?” Jon repeated the question, not realising that was the suggestion. Sometimes, the audience participation brings just as much laughter as the players do.

pocket note

“He Said, She Said” was set in a New York train station, but Kelly and Brett took it in a very different direction as they played the game of directing each other’s stage moves. Please look at a quick snippet of the game to get an idea of how it’s played.

 

In the “Complaints Letter”, Ian and Jon wrote (well, spoke one word at a time) a complaint letter to a mobile/broadband/power company complaining that their products suck. They went on to explain that the internet was too slow, especially watching porn.

The company, Gala and Mark, wrote back saying they were crazy and didn’t know what they were talking about as their company did not provide pornographic internet.

Then, it was the turn of the interview of an expert, with Kelly being the ‘Sign Language Interpreter’. Jon interviewed Brett, an expert at teaching bison the art of fishing. During the interview, it soon became apparent how it was done. A small bison was lowered over the side of the boat in search of sharks. Two larger bison linked elbows (🤔) to use the winch (bison don’t have fingers!). Sadly, the small bison became food for the sharks, and no fish were ever caught. Jon suggested teaching the bison how to pack shelves at Pak’ n Save would be better and probably easier.

Here’s a medley of Kelly’s interpretation of the interview – quite the workout!

After the intermission, ‘The Dating Game’ saw Steve, who had a hobby of collecting nipple tassels, Gala morph into a goat, and Mark, a professor of broccoli. Ian, who was Sven from Sweden, had to discover these quirks by asking each contestant three questions. He finally decided that the nipple tassels were going to be a much more exciting date than any of the others.

A couple more entertaining games followed, including ‘Foreign Film Dub’, which saw Kelly and Jon in the 1978 Estonian classic ‘Education of a Mother’. As the film was in the Estonian language, better known to the Honest Liars as gobbly gook, Steve and Brett had to interpret what the actors were saying. The movie took twists and turns that even the film actors were unaware of. But through much laughter, a story was told.

Finally, it was time for the last game of the evening, one that saw Jon having to remember and do all the different ‘twitches’ the players came up with for their interview. The job was for a horticulturist, but it wasn’t until the last applicant arrived that the position was filled. In the meantime, it was fun to watch Jon saluting, pointing, bobbing, and spinning each one with its verbal outcry.

twitch interview

 

The audience had been brilliant with their audacious suggestions, raucous laughter and loud, appreciative clapping. And so they left the theatre, vowing to return another night.

Thanks to players

Jon (MC)
Steve
Mark
Gala
Ian
Kelly
Brett

Thanks to
Crew: Fee
Sound engineer: Anthony.

Book your tickets for the next show and join the players for loads of laughs.

1st Saturday of every month.
16th Ave Theatre.
16th Avenue, Tauranga.
Show Starts: 7.30 p.m.
Licenced bar available.

book now

A Raucous Night for the Honest Liars.

A Raucous Night for the Honest Liars.

Another crisp evening as the players made their way to the 16th Ave theatre.

It proved to be another raucous night for the Honest Liars starting from the moment they arrived. After setting up the chairs and warming the room, the players jumped onto the stage for warm-up time. And so the fun began.

They took their laughter into the next room as the audience started to arrive. Getting their drinks as soon as the bar opened and finding their seats, it wasn’t long before there was hardly a spare seat in the house. The lights dimmed, the music was up, and Jon (MC) came out to applause to start the show.

The first game was Sex With Me—always a good start. Of course, the Olympics was suggested, and some of the statements were definitely outrageous enough to win medals.

‘Pocket Note’ saw Sally, Jon, and Mark at an amusement park, with Mark most upset that his lowly cleaning position meant he had to deal with a “code brown” and a defending mother. His boss, Jon, arrived to save the day, but with the usual twists and turns that only happen in improv, the offending poo was finally removed, and the mother ran off with the boss.

pocket note improv

Another audience favourite, ‘The Returns Desk’, had Gala, Steve and Ryan returning items they had no clue about. The only clues came from Jon, who was manning the desk. For example, as Steve walked into the store to return a vibrator that didn’t vibrate, Jon immediately said, “Any Erotic Experiences! How can I help you?” That had to give Steve an idea where he was, but his first line, “This ruined my child’s birthday party!” had the audience erupt with laughter.

The other two items being returned were an armchair that vibrated when it shouldn’t and an aeroplane on fire.

Speaking of aeroplanes on fire, in the ‘The Change’ game, Sue and Sally were two pilots with a burning aircraft. The MC constantly made them change their lines, so with parachutes on and off, doors open and shut, and cabin crew that went from being sexy to ugly, it was a game of twists. Finally, one pilot phoned (yes, phoned, not radioed) for help and ended up ordering pizza instead.

change game improv

After a short intermission, giving people time to order more libations, the ‘Objections’ game brought the audience back to laughing and fired up the players again. Discussing mortgage interest rates proved a great topic, but in the end, it turned into a chaotic mess of everyone shouting “Objection!!”

‘Complaints Letter’ followed – check it out on our YouTube

complaints letter improv

This next game had two brave members from the audience come up on stage to participate in the ‘Puppets’ game. They had the task of putting the players into different poses by which they could control the story. This time, the scene was a police chase through a shopping mall. However, the actors were in for a great surprise as the positions became more bizarre. Everyone was laughing so much that the actual storyline got utterly lost. See for yourself:

 

The show wrapped up, and the audience filed out, laughter still ringing in their ears. The players were treated to a well-deserved drink before finally heading home to sweet dreams of fun stories.

Thanks to players

Jon
Ryan
Mark
Sally
Sue
Steve
Gala
MC – Jon & Ryan

Thanks to
Crew: Fee
Sound engineer: Anthony.

Book your tickets for the next show and join the players for loads of laughs.

1st Saturday of every month.
16th Ave Theatre.
16th Avenue, Tauranga.
Show Starts: 7.30 p.m.
Licenced bar available.

book now