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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 Delivers Big Laughs

Honest Liars Improv Comedy Delivers Big Laughs

Full house, wild stories, and non-stop laughs!

The chilly Tauranga evening on Saturday 2nd May 2026 was the perfect setting for a night of spontaneous chaos, quick wit and belly laughs as Honest Liars Improv took to the stage at the 16th Ave Theatre. Beneath clear skies and a massive full moon, players and audience alike arrived ready for a night where absolutely anything could happen — and, as always with improv comedy, it certainly did.

Despite the long ANZAC weekend, the theatre filled quickly, creating a warm and buzzing atmosphere that contrasted beautifully with the crisp autumn night outside. There’s something special about a packed improv crowd. Everyone knows they’re about to witness stories being created out of thin air, and part of the fun is knowing the performers are making it all up on the spot, often with no idea where things are heading themselves.

The evening launched straight into laughter with the game Objections, a fast-paced, interruption-based game where ridiculous reasoning is all part of the fun. It set the tone perfectly for the night ahead, showcasing the players’ ability to think quickly, commit fearlessly and somehow turn complete nonsense into comedy gold.

One of the evening’s crowd favourites was Change Game. The format is deceptively simple — the scene keeps changing direction at the emcee’s command — but the results are gloriously unpredictable. At the beginning, Ryan found himself trapped underneath an ottoman while Kathy, playing his mother, attempted to rescue him in increasingly dramatic fashion. As with the best improv scenes, the players’ commitment made the absurdity even funnier, with the audience roaring at every new twist.

Watch The Change Game:

Then came Pocket Note, a game fuelled entirely by audience suggestions written on scraps of paper. The players must randomly pick up the notes and somehow weave them into a coherent story. “Coherent” may be a generous term, but that’s half the joy.

This particular tale transported the audience to a mountain-top salsa-dancing adventure featuring Kelly and Mark on their honeymoon, with Jon serving as their enthusiastic guide. The couple had met in Mexico, danced all night and apparently built a relationship on romance… until Mark casually revealed, “I’m just here for the money.” Another audience note became an oddly inspiring mantra: “I think we’re along now.” Whether anyone knew what it meant didn’t matter — it became hilariously meaningful by sheer repetition.

As the story unfolded, Jon’s guide character confessed he had also met Mark in Mexico and warned Kelly with heartfelt sincerity that “He’s not worthy of you.” In true improv fashion, the story then swerved entirely off course with an unexpected ending: Mark and Jon running off together instead. The audience loved every ridiculous second of it.

Pocket Note Improv comedy

 

Another standout was the brilliantly chaotic He Said, She Said game, featuring Jon and Kathy racing to the reading of a will while somehow getting caught up in a car chase. The beauty of this game lies in the split-second timing and teamwork required between performers as each directs the other. Every line builds pressure, confusion and hilarity all at once, and this scene had the audience in stitches from start to finish.

The ever-popular Clap Game brought a rapid-fire collection of miniature stories and wildly different characters. Sue and Kathy found themselves running a fish and chip shop while smelling permanently of grease. Shawn and Mark tackled an action-themed scene as butter-covered bank robbers attempting to squeeze through a fence during their getaway. Meanwhile, Jon and Gala created a wonderfully awkward story involving Gala’s dreams of becoming a singer, only for Jon to inform her that, because she sounded nothing like her mother, she would probably need to perform with a bag over her head. Brutal? Absolutely. Hilarious? The audience certainly thought so.

clap game comedy improv

The final game of the evening introduced something entirely new for the audience: Day in the Life. This format takes inspiration from a real audience member’s day and transforms it into an exaggerated, improvised retelling. On this occasion, brave volunteer Paul shared the story of attending a chilli-eating contest — a decision that quickly spiralled into theatrical chaos once the Honest Liars players got hold of it. What began as a simple recount of events became an epic journey of spice-fuelled suffering, dramatic reactions and over-the-top storytelling that closed the night on a high.

What makes Honest Liars so entertaining isn’t just the comedy itself, but the atmosphere they create. Every audience suggestion becomes part of the show, every mistake becomes an opportunity, and every performer commits wholeheartedly to even the most ridiculous scenario. No two shows are ever the same, which is exactly why audiences keep coming back.

By the end of the evening, the 16th Ave Theatre was still echoing with laughter as people spilled out into the cool Tauranga night smiling, quoting favourite moments, and wondering how on earth the performers managed to invent all of that on the spot.

If the Honest Liars proved anything on 2nd May, it’s that improv comedy is alive, thriving and wonderfully unpredictable in Tauranga.

ANZAC Remembrance:
We remember with gratitude and respect the courage, sacrifice and enduring spirit of all those who served for our freedom.

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

 

 

A laughter-filled show

A laughter-filled show

On the evening of Easter Saturday 2026, the Honest Liars troupe arrived at the 16th Ave Theatre in Tauranga

They were facing what could politely be described as “stiff competition.” Across the city, the Jazz Festival was in full swing, BayPark was buzzing with basketball energy, and somewhere engines were roaring at the Speedway Demo Der-Bay. It was a night packed with noise, rhythm, and adrenaline.

And Honest Liars? They had eight tickets sold.

Eight.

To their credit, there was no dramatic sighing, no theatrical despair (well… perhaps just a touch). Instead, the players did what improvisers do best: they showed up, warmed up, and committed fully. Because whether it’s eight people or eighty, the show goes on—and ideally, it goes on with flair.

Then something rather delightful happened.

People started arriving.

Not with tickets neatly in hand, but with that slightly mischievous energy of people who’ve made a last-minute decision: “Actually, let’s do something fun.” One by one, then in clusters, they trickled in until the theatre filled with chatter, anticipation, and that unmistakable hum of a crowd ready to laugh.

Apparently, trumpets, tyres, and nets had met their match.

The show kicked off with Objections, where something as innocent as sunscreen became the subject of spirited (and increasingly absurd) debate. It’s always impressive how quickly a sensible topic can spiral into something delightfully ridiculous in the hands of skilled improvisers, ending in a chaotic verbal shouting match.

Next came Alphabet, a game that demands quick thinking and even quicker wit. Gala and Ryan took the audience on a journey that began with plans to land on the moon and somehow detoured into the idea of a Gisborne bach with seven children, only to quickly change to a bach on the moon. Logical? Not remotely. Entertaining? Absolutely.

Alphabet improv

And really—who wouldn’t consider a bach on the moon? Prime real estate, minimal neighbours.

Pocket Note brought a traffic stop with a twist. Jon and Sue found themselves pulled over for speeding, only for Kelly’s officer to suggest a rather unconventional resolution involving a trip to the station… and let’s just say the power dynamic took an unexpected turn. Improv has a knack for flipping the script in the most unexpected ways, and this was no exception.

Then came The Dating Game, which is less about romance and more about glorious chaos. Rather than attempt to explain the characters (a near-impossible task), it’s best experienced visually—each reveal stranger and funnier than the last.

A crowd favourite, Sign Language Interpreter, had Kelly contorting herself into increasingly improbable positions while translating an “expert” discussing the fine art of training beavers to play polo. Yes, you read that correctly. And yes, it was every bit as ridiculous—and hilarious—as it sounds. The audience laughter came easily and often.

Comedy improv

The night wrapped up with the classic Puppets. Two brave audience members took to the stage to “control” Brett and Kelly, turning them into human marionettes in a story centred around a cage fight between Darth Vader and The Rock. The result was a chaotic, side-splitting narrative that only improv could deliver—equal parts absurd and oddly compelling.

Improv comedy

What began as a potentially quiet evening turned into something far more special. There’s a certain magic in a show that nearly wasn’t—where expectation sits low, only to be gleefully overturned.

For the players, it was a reminder that commitment matters more than numbers. For the audience, it was proof that sometimes the best nights are the ones you didn’t plan in advance.

And for Tauranga, it was one more evening where laughter won out over everything else.

Not bad for a show that started with eight tickets.

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

 

 

Autumn Laughs Kick Off Honest Liars’ 2026 Season in Tauranga

Autumn Laughs Kick Off Honest Liars’ 2026 Season in Tauranga

Autumn Season Begins with Laughter at the Honest Liars Show

A calm, mild evening set the perfect tone for the first Honest Liars improv comedy show of the autumn season on 7 March 2026 at Tauranga’s 16th Ave Theatre. While the sky outside was tranquil, inside the theatre, the energy was quietly building as the players finished their warm-ups backstage and the audience began arriving.

It soon became clear the evening was going to be a busy one. More people arrived than had booked tickets, which meant the team quickly scrambled to bring out extra chairs. By the time the show began, the theatre was comfortably full, always a wonderful sign that word about the Honest Liars’ unique brand of comedy continues to spread.

The players burst onto the stage to warm applause, greeted by plenty of familiar faces returning for another evening of unscripted chaos.

The opening game, Categories, is always a great way to get both performers’ and the audience’s brains firing. Starting with different types of fruit, the players raced to keep the ideas flowing without hesitation. Apples and bananas were soon joined by more obscure entries before the category suddenly shifted to cats. What followed was a whirlwind of feline creativity — from moggies to panthers, from the Cat in the Hat to the slightly questionable (K)cathmandu. It may not all have been zoologically accurate, but it certainly got the laughter flowing and the players thinking on their feet.

categories

Next came the ever-popular Pocket Note, where audience-written phrases must be slipped naturally into a scene. This time, the setting was a rather tense situation. Sue played a surrogate mother, while Ryan and Kathy appeared as the hopeful parents awaiting their baby’s arrival.

However, as the scene unfolded, a rather inconvenient truth emerged. Ryan and Sue had been having an affair. The scene spiralled into delightful chaos as the players worked in their mystery lines, including “They weren’t supposed to do that,” “Baby I’m into you,” “Sit on one and rotate,” and the beautifully cutting “That’s rich coming from someone like you.” Each line landed perfectly, sending waves of laughter through the audience.

pocket note

The show continued with Rant and Rave, in which performers deliver passionate speeches on unlikely topics. This time, it took a particularly surreal turn with the audience suggestion involving Donald invading Iran. The resulting rants and reactions ranged from political satire to wildly imaginative theories. You can see a snippet of the mayhem in the video below.

 

Next up was He Said, She Said, featuring Jon and Kathy transported to a Renaissance fair. Medieval references quickly gave way to wonderfully odd moments — from cries of “bring out your dead” to the concept of naked jousting. The scene finished with Kathy delivering what might have been the line of the night: “I just love Thursday night dress-up.”

The ever-popular Dating Game followed, with Gala playing the charmingly curious Little Miss looking for her forever friend. Her potential partners were certainly memorable: Jon, a vegan abattoir worker; Mark, who collected granny underwear from clotheslines; and Ryan, whose personality shifted between cheerleader enthusiasm and something far more sinister.

When asked their favourite food, the answers were predictably strange. Jon cautiously replied, “Not sausages.” Mark suggested tea and scones near retirement villages, and Ryan launched into a cheerleading chant of “Give me a pea, give me a cucumber, give me a carrot!” before abruptly sitting down again.

After several rounds of questioning and much laughter, Gala chose Bachelor Number One. Whether the romance blossomed remains a mystery, but the audience certainly approved.

The evening continued at a cracking pace with more games, quick thinking, and spontaneous silliness. We’ll leave you with a video featuring a brand-new game titled “But What You Didn’t See.” If it sparks your curiosity or simply makes you laugh, perhaps it will inspire you to join us at the next Honest Liars show.

After all, no two improv nights are ever the same — and that’s exactly the fun of it. 🎭

A great, fast-paced night!

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 Show Tauranga

Honest Liars Improv Show Tauranga

Supermarket Chaos and Speedy Weddings: Honest Liars’ November Improv Show

The penultimate Honest Liars show of 2025 kicked off the moment the players arrived at 16th Ave Theatre. The pre-show warm-up was buzzing with coffee cups in hand, and jokes flying faster than the early evening sun streaming through the rehearsal room windows. Spirits were high, minds sharp, and by the time the audience filed in (and the bar opened), Tauranga was primed for another night of spontaneous hilarity.

The first game, “Objections,” set the tone for the evening. The audience suggestion “coin-operated supermarket trolleys” quickly descended into glorious chaos. What began as a simple policy debate turned into a full-blown trolley riot, as the players jostled to make their objections heard. The laughter rolled like a runaway cart down the aisles of Countdown, and the crowd was immediately hooked.

Honest Liars Improv Tauranga

Keeping with the supermarket theme, later came “Pocket Note,” a crowd favourite for its unpredictable twists. The suggestion: “a meteor has struck a supermarket”. Only three survivors remained — Gala, a painfully slow till operator; Sue, who was in a hurry because, well, it was the end of the world; and Kathy, who had hoarded all the toilet paper and still wanted more. Between them, they picked up from the floor mysterious pocket notes reading lines such as: “I love working weekends,” “I didn’t do it,” and “I like big butts and I cannot lie.” The resulting story was part disaster film, part absurd supermarket comedy, and entirely hilarious. Were these lines seamlessly incorporated into the story? Of course they were – these are Honest Liars!

Then came “The Time Warp.” Kathy and Steve played a couple locked in a domestic battle over the dishes, with Jon as the all-powerful timekeeper. At his command, scenes leapt back and forth through their relationship. They ranged from first date to wedding to honeymoon, and in all of them, it became clear that Kathy was, in fact, a speed freak who did everything at lightning pace. The audience howled as their life together unfolded in chaotic, fast-forward and backward sequences, from suds to vows to honeymoon antics.

Things got delightfully weirder with “The Change Game,” where Kathy and Ryan prepared an elaborate doggy wedding. Enough said.

honest liars improv

And of course, the night wouldn’t be complete without “The Dating Game,” a cheeky send-up of the old 1970s TV show. Contestant Gala (as a free-spirited hippy named Toyota Caravan) had her pick of three… let’s say unique suitors: Jon, a serial killer by trade (apparently that’s a job now), Mark, who collected eyeballs as a hobby, and Ryan, who had a split personality being a sex addict and Gollum, the perfect combination!. After much deliberation and plenty of laughter, Toyota chose Gollum. After all, she became his precious.

VIEW THE GAME HERE: DATING GAME

As the show drew to a close, the energy in the theatre was still soaring. The players took their final bow to raucous applause and plenty of hoots from the crowd. Another night of quick wit, fearless creativity, and side-splitting improv came to an end, and the Honest Liars celebrated yet another triumph in Tauranga’s favourite comedy playground.

Honest Liars Improv Tauranga

If this show was anything to go by, the final one of 2025 is not to be missed. Bring your best suggestions, loosen your laughing muscles, and prepare for the unexpected — because with the Honest Liars, anything can happen.

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.

buy ticketshonest liars comedy improv

Fun Improv in a Full House

Fun Improv in a Full House

A load of fun in a full house for the Honest Liars improv show night in August.

A crisp, clear winter’s night and the expectation of a full house had the players motivated and ready to play. By the time they got to the 16th Ave Theatre and began their warm-ups, the laughter was already rebounding around the walls.

full house

 

The show kicked off with the classic high-energy game Objections, and the crowd came in hot with the suggestion “Marmite.” Things got gloriously absurd as the players argued passionately over the merits and crimes of the sticky black spread, even dragging poor Paddington Bear and his marmalade sandwich into the chaos. With debate points ranging from culinary betrayal to national identity, it was safe to say the night was off to a roaring start.

Then came The Good, The Bad & The Ugly — improv’s dodgy advice column brought to life. An audience member bravely asked, “How do I talk to my doctor?” The answers ranged from sensible to questionable to completely unhinged. One player gave a perfectly rational suggestion, another implied that intimidation would work, and the third… well, let’s just say it involved sleeping with all medical practitioners. As always, it was the honest absurdity that stole the show.

Next up was Director’s Cut, where three travelling singers went on a genre-hopping road trip like no other. What started as a squabbling drama swiftly galloped into a western, complete with yee-haws and dodgy mules, before swerving dramatically into an 1980s-style adult film — where the girls were trying to find the pizza boy, and giving exaggerated winks to the audience. The audience howled as the players took each new twist in stride, showing off not just their comic timing but their impressive genre agility.

In The Clap Game, three teams of two players were each given a setting: New York, Covid, and Horror. The twist? Every team had to steal the last line of the previous scene and use it to begin theirs: cue overlapping chaos, clever callbacks, and a whole lot of verbal ping-pong. Highlights included an orange-faced Trump wannabe in Times Square, a dead grandma who could have died from COVID even though she had cancer, diabetes and every other disease at the time. The ‘horror’ was a couple enjoying role-playing to spice up their marriage. The final repeated line — “That was freakin’ awful!” — was the perfect punchline to wrap it all up.

You can see the whole game on our YouTube Channel: The Clap Game

Finally, the night closed with a crowd favourite: The Twitch. The premise? Each improviser was interviewed for a job (in this case, as a ventriloquist), coming to the interview with a specific twitch, both physical and verbal, which the interviewer had to replicate. The result was a gloriously unhinged mashup of puppetry, spasms, and accidental slapstick. The interviewer barely held it together — and had the whole theatre in stitches.

Here’s a snippet of the last three interviewees—the twitches were in full swing by this time.

With every seat filled and every scene more unpredictable than the last, this was a night to remember. The cast brought their A-game, fuelled by the buzz of a full house and a cracking audience. From Marmite debates to cowboy singers to twitchy ventriloquists, the Honest Liars once again proved that nothing beats the magic of live improv.

Fun Improv in a Full House? Absolutely.
If you missed it, don’t worry. There’ll be more. And if you were there? Thanks for bringing the laughter. See you next time.

Thanks to players

Kathy & MC
Steve
Kelly
Sue
Gala
Mark
Ryan

Thanks to
Admin: Fee and Sharon
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

A Belly of Laughs at Honest Liars Improv Show

A Belly of Laughs at Honest Liars Improv Show

Full House, Full Laughs: Honest Liars Bring the Heat to a Chilly June Night

It may have been a cold winter’s evening on 7 June, but inside Tauranga’s 16th Ave Theatre, the temperature rose fast, not least because the Honest Liars kicked things off at a strip club.

The improv comedy troupe turned out in full force for another riotous show, and so did the audience. Near-capacity ticket sales were boosted by enthusiastic walk-ins, making for a packed house that buzzed with energy before the first scene even began.

The audience favourite game, Pocket Note, took place in the world’s most hilariously budget strip club, with Jon and Mark baring all (creatively, of course) as strippers, and Sally playing a very enthusiastic patron. Armed with hidden audience-supplied lines like “talk louder,” “please release me, let me go,” and the cryptic “never grow a moustache,” the trio oiled up and jandal-shimmied their way through a scene that had everyone gasping with laughter.

Check out a wee snippet:

Next up was the ever-popular Dating Game, featuring Kathy as the glamorous and wanting a new husband, Melanka. Her options were… colourful, to say the least. Mark played a suspiciously proud rectal surgeon, Ian had a tender obsession with keeping scrotums warm, and Ryan was mid-transformation into a dinosaur. Through carefully probing questions (and a few double entendres), Melanka made her pick. We won’t spoil who she chose — but let’s just say Jurassic love might be in the air.

Honest Liars Improv Show

After the interval, the players rolled into Sex With Me, the audience-suggestion game that guarantees both groans and giggles. The suggestion? Making coffee. What followed was a parade of caffeine-fuelled innuendo. From “sex with me is like a short white” to “sex with me — the ones you buy are so much better than the one at home,” the cast had the audience howling with laughter.

Then came The Cube, a storytelling game that crammed four wild narratives into one rotating scene. The audience’s suggestions? “Not your Dad,” “Cannibal Party,” “Spiders,” and — brace yourself — “Dildo.” The standout moment had to be young Ian announcing to his on-stage mum that he’d landed the role of Dildo Baggins. The moment of dawning horror on Mum’s face was pure improv gold. The newest player in the Honest Liars troupe, Shawn, was scared of spiders, but Sally demonstrated how to squash them. Shawn did an excellent job!

The Cube improv game

The night wrapped with a final round of Twitch, a fan-favourite game that brought everyone together for one last round of glorious chaos.

As always, the Honest Liars delivered comedy mayhem with quick wits, wild characters, and more one-liners than you could shake a jandal at. The theatre rang with laughter long after the final bow.

And then, as all good clowns must, the players packed up their props, wiped off the glitter (figuratively speaking), and went home, leaving behind a room full of the memories of grinning faces and sore cheeks (the smiling kind, of course).

Thanks to players

Jon & MC
Steve
Kathy & MC
Sally
Shawn
Mark
Ian
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.

buy ticketshonest liars comedy improv

Honest Liars Improv Show Tauranga

Honest Liars Improv Show Tauranga

Hilarious Chaos and Unpredictable Characters: Honest Liars Light Up Tauranga

If you’ve ever wondered what happens when you mix a fertility clinic heist with porcelain Trump dolls and a faulty bouncy castle — well, you clearly missed the last Honest Liars improv comedy show. But don’t worry, the blog will fill you in on the delightful absurdity.

The evening kicked off with a bang — or rather, a chaotic tumble — during the game of ‘Pocket Note’, where players Ryan, Steve and Kathy were tasked with sneaking bizarre audience-written lines into a scene. The premise? Robbing a fertility clinic. Because why not?

Each time someone picked up a pre-written line like “don’t go downstairs on rollerskates” or “you couldn’t hit an elephant from there”, the scene took an even more ridiculous turn. The joy of Pocket Note lies in the sheer unpredictability — and the players’ commitment to acting like these oddball lines were totally normal things to say while mid-heist. Ryan’s earnest delivery of “I get the best carpark spots” mid-escape may go down in Honest Liars’ history.

improv comedy

Next up was ‘The Returns Desk’, where the audience got to stitch up the performers in the nicest way possible. Each returning customer had no idea what item they were bringing back — only that Jon, behind the counter, would have to give them cryptic clues based on their made-up shop. Gala ended up at the zoo with a venomous spider who only spun half a web. Fee found herself at Peaches and Cream trying to return a far-too-loud… ahem, adult toy. And Sue wandered into an events hire store with a tragically childless bouncy castle.

Watching the players desperately try to interpret Jon’s increasingly pointed clues had the crowd in stitches, especially when Fee finally realised what she was holding and had described it as very large!

Another favourite, the ‘Dating Game,’ saw Sue play the ultimate bachelorette and choose between three wildly unsuitable suitors. There was Fee, a vacuum cleaner salesperson with a worrying passion for suction; Ryan, whose love for porcelain Trump dolls might’ve breached national security; and Steve, who was, rather unsettlingly, transforming into a lion.

After a few probing questions (“Where would you take me for dinner” being a personal highlight), Sue sniffed out the feline and chose Steve — clearly the purrfect match.

As always, the Honest Liars delivered an uproarious night of spontaneous silliness, quick thinking, and gloriously weird characters. Whether you were there in person or not, one thing’s certain: Tauranga hasn’t laughed this hard since the last show.

Missed out? Don’t worry — the Honest Liars will be back on the 1st Saturday of each month with more madcap mayhem. Just be careful where you park your bouncy castle.

Thanks to players

Jon MC
Kathy MC
Steve
Gala
Fee
Sue
Ryan

Thanks to
Admin: Kelly
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

Honest Liars Kick Off 2025 with Laughter & Surprises

Honest Liars Kick Off 2025 with Laughter & Surprises

The 1st show of 2025 and the Honest Liars were back in fine form.

The players were just a fraction concerned as very few tickets had been sold. But, all was not lost as the waifs and strays wandered in and, in fact, made up for 60% of the audience. The lack of ticket sales had been blamed on the Buskers’ festival and music evening which was also happening on the same day.

However, as extra chairs were needed as the crowd continued to walk in, the players relaxed and were eager to perform.

The MC, Jon introduced the players and quickly got into the first game of ‘Categories’. The suggestions ranged from Stallone movies, dinosaurs to things you’d find in a dairy the latter producing such quips as “irate cashiers” and “ram raiders”.

‘The Good, the Bad and the Ugly’ came next, producing excellent, so-so and downright rotten advice to a problem. For example. What to do about blisters on my feet.

  • The good advice offered by Steve was to get some good cream from the pharmacy.
  • The so-so advice from Mark was to use some good, strong sandpaper
  • Then the worst advice from Gala was to get someone to carry you everywhere!

From there it was on to ‘Pocket Note’ a crowd favourite. There were some wonderful notes suggested from the audience:

  • Drink less whiskey
  • Sip the cool-aid
  • The rollercoaster starts here
  • I’m trying to get to my mother’s funeral
  • Try to rub it less
  • How very dare you
  • I am a vegan
  • It’s clean sheet day.

Of course each of these suggestions has to be worked seamlessly (cough, cough) into the story as the players pick them up and say them as part of ‘the script’.

This time, Sally and Ian were working at a sewage treatment plant, complaining about the smell and all the dirty nappies and wet wipes that had clogged up the system. Jon wandered in thinking the place was an art installation and got all enthused over what he was seeing.

Sally was digging away and found something unusual, Ian saw it was a jumper and read the label which said ‘I am a vegan’. This, of course, changed the direction slightly even when it was discovered there was a body that went with the jersey.

pocket note comedy improv

Jon thought the whole thing was marvellous and said he knew of many artists who would jump at the chance to exhibit in this installation, and they could call it ‘The rollercoaster starts here’ (very apt title!). He would bring artists from all over the world, and they could all ‘sip the cool-aid’

Once they all realised there was money to be made, the vile sewage treatment plant took on a whole new look.

The chairs were then set out for ‘The Dating Game’. Mark was the bachelor who left the theatre while the audience suggested the individual quirks. Gala was a wig maker, Sally collected wet leaves, and Sue was to morph into an octopus.
Mark returned as the game began with the 70’s dating theme music and was introduced as Pete, who packed peanuts in Pak n’ Sav. After questioning the contestants, Mark guessed all their quirks and decided to go out with the octopus (mainly because she alluded to what she could do with her eight tentacles!).

The games continued, and after the intermission, Fee got up on behalf of the Honest Liars to recognise Natalie, the daughter of one of the players. She had come and taken some fantastic photos of the players which you can see the new pics all over this website and on our social media. Thanks, Natalie for an excellent job…. you should go professional!

Honest Liars Improv Show 2025

The games continued with ‘Sex with Me’ followed by a fun ‘Returns Desk’, which saw Sue returning a packet of crisps possessed by Ghandi’s spirit. Mark brought back a vase of rotting flowers that smelled like rotting flesh, and Gala pulled in a cement truck that produced unicorns rather than cement. Sue’s classic first line of “this ruined my pelvic floor” erupted the audience into peels of laughter – let’s face it, the imagery alone is mind-boggling.

‘The Cube’ also produced four great stories as Jon, Steve, Sue, and Ian rotated, developing the stories with each turn. These stories included a large penguin couple whose egg hatched into a polar bear, a morgue attendant bringing in weirdly killed bodies, an ice cream attendant in a rat suit and bizarre date locations where one on the date kept losing limbs.

the cube comedy improv

Ian volunteered to be the ‘Twitch’ interviewer, and as he saw the different applicants for the bus driver position, the twitches had him blowing kisses, tooting a train horn, and yelling watch out.

comedy improv short form
Needless to say, he was exhausted when he finally offered the job to the last candidate, Jon.

The first show of 2025 was a success and the players and audience alike had a lot of laughs and a few surprises!

Thanks to players

Jon & MC
Steve
Sue
Sally
Gala
Mark
Ian

Thanks to
Admin: Kelly and 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