5 Good Reasons to see a show at The Imperial during MICF

We love supporting smallerĀ independentĀ venues away from The Town Hall during the Melbourne International Comedy Festival, ’cause lets face it, everyone knows about that venue – they really don’t need any of our help. We were sad to say goodbye to the little bar Rue Rabelons as a venue in Melbourne, but we’re happy to announce a new venue for the festival up the posh end of town, opposite the Government House – The Imperial Hotel. The comedy there is being curated by Angela Thompson and Micah D Higbed. It will have 2 rooms running through the festival with a variety of young and up and coming performers giving it a great vibe. They had their own mini Gala on Thursday night where host Jimmy James Eaton and performers Tom Ward, Victoria Healy and Neil Sinclair (above) gave us a great taste of what’s to come. So with fourteen shows to choose from, a bar and some yummy pub food deals on offer, don’t forget to hop on a tram and pop up to The Imperial during the festival this year.

5 Good Reasons to see a show at The Imperial during MICF

1) There are 14 great shows on in the one venue!

1. Andy Matthews & Tony Besselink – Atchieve Nothing
2. Balderdash (Tim Clark & Liam Ryan)
3. Dave Fairclough – In Love
4. Elliot Cyngler is Too Small to Function
5. Jason Geary & Jimmy James Eaton – Sketch-ual Healing
6. Jonathan Schuster’s Chrysalis
7. Micah D Higbed – Noteworthy
8. Neil Sinclair – Phoney
9. Sam Peterson, Natalie Harris & Nick Quon – 3 Little Gigs
10. Sullivan & Bok
11. The Time Machine
12. These Kids Are Good
13. Victoria Healy’s Anatomy
14. Xavier Toby – White Trash

2) The shows are all cheap. Most are $15 full price. Some are even cheaper. Also, cheap student tickets on the door.

3) Independently produced! Weā€™ve even kitted the place out ourselves. BYO stage? Yes siree.

4) The Imperial has great food, and they are doing even more special specials during MICF. They also have a top notch drinks selection.

5) All the shows are great. We donā€™t have any duds, hidden away in a smaller font. They are ALL THE SAME FONT SIZE!

Check out facebook.com/ImpyComedy for updates on the shows, pics, giveaways and competitions. Weā€™re also on @ImpyComedy if youā€™re in to that kind of thing.

The Imperial Hotel is at 2 – 8 Bourke St Melbourne on the corner of Spring St.

See the Melbourne International Comedy Festival Guide and website for show details

http://www.comedyfestival.com.au

Shows at 2013 Melbourne International Comedy Festival that have previously been reviewed by Squirrel Comedy.

By Lisa Clark

Waiting for reviews to come in to make a decision about what shows you are seeing this year? Well we’ve already reviewed quite a lot of shows that are on at this year’sĀ Melbourne International Comedy Festival. Of course some of the shows reviewed here may have been reworked, improved or changed in some way. Hang the DJ has a new DJ, Eddie Pepitonne’s show isn’t called Bloodbath and some of these shows will be different at every performance. Hopefully the past reviews that you will find linked here in alphabetical order will give you an idea of what to expect and help you work out what you are going to see this year. Look out for our new reviews from this years comedy festival, coming soon to Squirrel Comedy!

 

AUNTY DONNA AND THE FAX MACHINE SHOP

Aunty Donna’s first showĀ Aunty Donna in Pants SuitsĀ got them nominated for a Golden Gibbo Award, this new show, originally performed at Melbourne Fringe 2012 made them winners of theĀ Peopleā€™s Choice Award. Aunty Donna are a sketch troupe of four guys performing very adult humour. Cathy enjoyed it and thought it was ‘a very slick production. Itā€™s tightly scripted and well-performed.’

https://www.squirrelcomedy.com/?p=2043

Aunty Donna will be late at The Portland Hotel

http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/aunty-donna-and-the-fax-machine-shop

 

BEN POBJIE ā€“ LETā€™S PUT ON A SHOW

Ben’s show is a collaboration with the audience to explore the nature of putting on a comedy show. Elyce thought the show was fun and that’ the more the audience puts into this show, the more you will get back’.

https://www.squirrelcomedy.com/?p=2020

Ben Pobjie will be on at Gertrude’s Brown Couch

http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/let-s-put-on-a-show-ben-pobjie

 

EDDIE PEPITONE

I adored Eddie when IĀ firstĀ saw him in Edinburgh at the recording of Stuart Goldsmiths’ Ā Comedian’s Comedian podcast. I knew I had to see his solo show Blood Bath and was notĀ disappointed. I described him as ‘arse-achingly funny’.

https://www.squirrelcomedy.com/?p=1804

Eddie’s solo show is on at 11pm on April 5th at Victoria Hotel – Banquet Room

http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/one-off-solo-show-eddie-pepitone

He’ll be doing seven shows as part of Headliners

http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/in-headliners-eddie-pepitone

and there will be a showing of his documentary Bitter Buddha is on at the Hifi Bar 4pm on April 6th

http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/eddie-pepitone-documentary-the-bitter-buddha

 

FELICITY WARD ā€“ THE HEDGEHOG DILEMMA

Felicity’s only appearance at this year’s comedy festival will be a reprise of her stunning, hilarious and moving show The Hedgehog Dilema. She’s filming it for prosperity and I can’t recommend it highly enough. It was one of the first shows I saw last year and her story stayed with me for a long time. ‘Her ability to keep the audience in stitches throughout all of this is a testament to her stunning talent.’

https://www.squirrelcomedy.com/?p=1237

The Hedgehog Dilemma will be on at the Atheneum Theatre on April 15

http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/the-hedgehog-dilemma-felicity-ward

 

GIRLS UNINTERUPTED ARE GOOD VALUE

Cathy thought that it was criminal thatĀ Louise Joy McCrae and Nicolette Minster don’t have higher comedy profiles on the Australian Comedy Scene in her review from Melbourne Fringe 2012

https://www.squirrelcomedy.com/?p=2082

They’re performing atĀ Portland Hotel in the Portland Room

http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/are-good-value-girls-uninterrupted

 

HANG THE DJ – ANDY McCLELLAND & KIEREN O’SULLIVAN –Ā 

This now has a different DJ to the one reviewed at Melbourne Fringe 2012. But Andy is still there in a show where he gets to share his passion for music and hilarious tales of being a DJ. Colin said ‘This fusion of comedy, music and dancing was a brilliant way to end an evening.’

https://www.squirrelcomedy.com/?p=2085

Hang the DJĀ is on late at Trades Hall in the Quilt Room<
http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/hang-the-dj-feat-dj-kieran-o-sullivan-andrew-mcclelland-s

 

HOW TO GET RICH ALEISHA McCORMAC

Originally directed by Julia Zemiro for the 2012 Melbourne Fringe, I thought this one woman play was ‘aĀ Ā pretty light and fluffy soufflĆ© of a show that would suit a girlsā€™ night out or henā€™s night’

https://www.squirrelcomedy.com/?p=2052

Aleisha will be performing atĀ Trades Hall – The Meeting Room til April 7th

http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/how-to-get-rich-aleisha-mccormack

 

LIVE ON AIR WITH POET LAUREATE TELIA NEVILEĀ 

When I first saw Live on Air it was really a work in progress but I still found it very entertaining and Telia was ‘able to consistently create new ways to make her audience laugh with her clever poetry and personas.’ She’s apparently put a lot of work in it since so it should be a pretty fabulous show.

https://www.squirrelcomedy.com/?p=2016

Live on Air will be on at The Northcote Town Hall

http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/live-on-air-poet-laureate-telia-nevile

 

NICHOLAS J JOHNSON ā€“ TODAY TONIGHT, TOMORROW THE WORLD

Based on his own true experience appearing onĀ Today TonightĀ and Cathy thought it was ‘a cracker’

https://www.squirrelcomedy.com/?p=1956

Today Tonight,Ā Tomorrrow the WorldĀ will be at Comedy on Collins at The Scots Church Assembly Hall

http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/today-tonight-tomorrow-the-world-nicholas-j-johnson

 

Ā ROB HUNTER –Ā LATE O’ CLOCK WITH ROB HUNTER

In the tradition of Alan Partridge and Dame Edna amongst other purveyors of Theatre of Cruelty, Rob Hunter’s interview showĀ satirisesĀ chat shows while being pretty mean to the guests, who are mostly in on the joke. Our reviewer wasn’t when he saw it at last year’s Melbourne International Comedy Festival and did not have a very good time as he explained ‘Ā The MICF blurb about this show being ā€œuncomfortably tenseā€ and ā€œnotĀ for the squeamishā€ was a freaking understatement for me personally’ Well if Rob Hunter is hoping to provoke strong reactions, it certainly worked with Andrew who gifted Rob with the poster quote ‘I fucking hated this show’Ā . We’ll be giving another reviewer a go at it this year.

https://www.squirrelcomedy.com/?p=1380

Late O’Clock with Rob Hunter is on atĀ Melb Town Hall Ā in the Cloak Room

http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/late-o-clock-with-rob-hunter-rob-hunter

 

SIMON MUNNERY ā€“ FYLM MAKKER

Simon Munnery has been around a long time is always up to something creative, original and silly. We think Simon is a comedy genius and this was the highlight of Colin’s 2012 Edinburgh Fringe. He describes it thusly; ‘Broadcast via video link from the middle of the room, he performs sketches, monologues, puppetry and songs to camera using all sorts of video trickery to create a unique and hilarious show.’

https://www.squirrelcomedy.com/?p=1861

Simon is performing at The Victoria Hotel in the Vic’s Bar

http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/fylm-makker-simon-munnery

 

SLUTMONSTER AND FRIENDS

This was a show that blew the minds of everyone who saw it at last year’s Melbourne Fringe Festival. You came out wondering ‘What the hell was that?’ and ‘Why am I still still laughing hours later?’ Beautifully designed, sharply written with clever catchy songs, surprises and lots of rude bits. Colin said ‘Itā€™s a sick, twisted and perverted play thatā€™s gutbustingly hilarious.’

https://www.squirrelcomedy.com/?p=1985

Slutmonster will be Strutting her stuff at the Northcote Town Hall
http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/slutmonster-and-friends

 

TRYING HARD ā€“ ALASDAIR TREMBLAY-BIRCHALL

Alasdair gives us two shows for the price of one in what Cathy describes as ‘some entertaining and delightfully original comedy’

https://www.squirrelcomedy.com/?p=2026

Trying HardĀ is on at the Forum Theatre – Carpet Room
http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/trying-hard-alasdair-tremblay-birchall

 

VICTORIA HEALY ā€˜S ANATOMY

Victoria Healy is not very comfortable with her body but manages to spend an hour exploring it for laughs. Elyce describedĀ Healy as ‘a quick-witted and talented comedic performer, who is only getting better and better at her craft.’

https://www.squirrelcomedy.com/?p=1965

Victoria is on at the Imperial Hotel

http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/victoria-healy-s-anatomy

5 Good Reasons to see TOM BALLARD, Tommy Little and Tommy Dassalo

Here is Tom Ballardā€™s Top 5 Good Reasons to see TOM BALLARD – My Ego Is Better Than Your Ego

1. It’s a profoundly self-indulgent exploration of my ego and self-esteem issues. It’s literally me talking for an hour about me needing you to like me, so it’s got this kind of “charmingly narcissistic” vibe going on.

2. My mum likes to see me being successful.

3. I’m not going to talk to you and humiliate you as an audience member. (Well..except for one person. Just at the start. But it’s not really about them. Or you, if it’s you. Honestly – it’s a good bit.)

4. It’s 100% fair trade and means tested.

5. I am not Ricky Nixon.

Tom Ballard – My Ego Is Better Than Your Ego is on at The Swiss Club throughout the Festival

http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/my-ego-is-better-than-your-ego-tom-ballard

 

5 Good Reasons to see Tommy Little ā€“ Sex, Drugs & Herbal Tea

5. No animals were harmed in the making of it.

4. Youā€™ll learn about new words like foodie, shelving and lolocaust.

3. Iā€™m not Ricky Nixon.

2. Youā€™ll have a much needed laugh with me, at me or a combination of both.

1. Itā€™s better than sitting alone and surfing the web, yes Iā€™m talking to you, itā€™s time put down the keyboard and come to the party

TOMMY LITTLE ā€“ Sex, Drugs & Herbal Tea is on in the Cloak Room, Melbourne Town Hall throughout the Festival
http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/sex-drugs-herbal-tea-tommy-little

 

Tommy Dassalo’s 5 Good Reasons to see Spread.Ā 

1. Itā€™s the true story about how my great-grandpa invented Vegemite.

I can guarantee that mine is the only show in the Festival that can claim thatā€¦ Unless one of my cousins has decided to do a showā€¦ Shitā€¦ I really should have asked around at the family Christmas party.

2. My drawings are in the show.

Iā€™ve been up until three in the morning every night finishing off drawings for a segment of the show. If you donā€™t laugh at the drawings, I would ask that you at least chuckle politely at the effort thatā€™s gone into the drawings.

3. I play characters in the show.

Well, just one of them, but still! Iā€™ve never done characters before! Maybe after this I never will again! Come and see me do some ā€˜actingā€™ and then be not at all surprised when I tell you that I never got a good role in any of my high school plays.

4. I will be wearing a very nice suit.

Not to brag, but itā€™s from Arthur Galan. I bought it for a fancy ball last year. Then I realised how dumb it was to spend so much money on something that I only wore for one night. Then I realised if I wear it onstage I can claim it on tax. So you should see my show if you a) like looking at well dressed men or b) are my accountant.

5. My show is at the beautiful Forum theatre.

Obviously in a small room within the Forum theatre, but my dad thinks that Iā€™m in the MAIN, ACTUAL FORUM THEATRE. Hopefully heaps of people come to my show and I get moved into the main theatre and I wonā€™t have to tell my dad that Iā€™ve been lying to him for the last four months. Everybody wins!

[And I am definitely not Ricky Nixon]

Tommy Dassalo’s Spread is on at TheĀ Forum Theatre – Ladies’ Lounge
http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/spread-tommy-dassalo

The Rubberbandits

By Cathy Culliver

The Rubberbandits are a couple of plastic bag-wearing lads from Limerick in Ireland who have become a YouTube sensation with their hilarious but supremely silly songs like ā€œHorse Outsideā€ and ā€œSpastic Hawkā€.

Cathy talked to Blindboy Boatclub (real name Dave Chambers) about their upcoming visit to Melbourne and what exactly makes these guys tick.

So what the Rubberbandits are all about?

We wear plastic bags on our heads, and weā€™re hardcore gangster rappers.

I have to ask, whatā€™s with the plastic bags? My mother always told me it was dangerous to put them on your head.

The way we look at it, the only certainty in life is death. So you may as well put a plastic bag on your head.

Isnā€™t it also because you want to conceal your identity?

Well thereā€™s a little bit of that as well. I like to go to the shop and buy toilet roll and peas without anyone looking at me. I like to buy peas in peace. And deodorant ā€“ I donā€™t want someone looking at my particular brand of deodorant.

What can Australian audiences expect from your live shows?

Itā€™s like a rave, but if you let a lot of dogs into the rave.

Youā€™re planning on having dogs in your show?

No, just metaphorically speaking. OK, imagine instead of a rave, itā€™s car. And then you let a dog into the back of the car. And youā€™ve got your shopping there, and the dog just does its thing in the back of the car.

Well I donā€™t think Iā€™ve ever heard a comedy show explained in that way, so now Iā€™m definitely intrigued.

Yeah, thereā€™s no way to describe it really. Itā€™s just us with plastic bags on, roaring and shouting, and anything can happen. We nailed Santa Claus to a crucifix once.

So you guys started out doing prank calls in school, and then got your big break when your video for the song ā€˜Horse Outsideā€ went viral on YouTube, is that right?

Yeah, that was an accident. We just made a video with all our friends, and a TV company paid for it. Then it just got massive. We didnā€™t try to make it big or anything. It just kind of happened without us wanting it to happen.

What do you think youā€™d be doing now if that hadnā€™t happened and youā€™d never made it big?

Um, Iā€™d own a hot air balloon company.

Has that always been your dream?

Yeah, Iā€™ve always been very passionate about it. But I want to take the art of hot air ballooning and mix it with other disciplines, like being a milkman. I want to be the worldā€™s first hot air balloon milkman. Iā€™d drop the milk with little parachutes on them so they donā€™t smash outside someoneā€™s doorstep.

How angry would you be if someone beat you to that?

Oh Iā€™d be very, very angry. I think itā€™s Richard Bransonā€™s next venture. He wants to be the worldā€™s only hot air balloon milkman.

You sing songs about things like owning a disabled hawk, fighting your girlfriendā€™s dad and the merits of owning a horse instead of a car. Is there anything you wouldnā€™t sing a song about?

Actually, no. Thatā€™s often something I ask myself, ā€œwhat would I not sing about?ā€ I think Iā€™d sing a song about anything. Itā€™s all about the way that you interpret it.

Will this be your first time in Australia?

No we came over last year and we played in Irish pubs. But this is our first time going over to do the comedy festival.

Those gigs last year were crazy, and we stayed in a brothel in Sydney for a week.

Oh really? What was that like?

It was insane. It was in the middle of Kings Cross in Sydney, and there were prostitutes walking all over the hotel rooms and everything. It was absolute madness.

Oh and in Kings Cross I also saw a dog, and the dog was wearing shoes. And the policeman who was there told me it was so the dog didnā€™t step on any needles. Iā€™d never seen a dog wearing shoes ever, but in Kings Cross, the dogs wear shoes.

What are you most looking forward to doing while youā€™re back here?

I like walking around and seeing wildlife. Last time I was in Melbourne, I went to a park and saw a giant lizard. And then I looked around and there was another lizard. Before I knew it, I found myself surrounded by all these lizards. That was incredible, so I want to try to do that again. I want to get acquainted with more lizards.

Most people say they want to meet a koala.

No, I donā€™t like koalas. I heard theyā€™re in a perpetual state of flatulence. They just fart all the time and it never stops. Itā€™s a slow cycle of fart. And I heard the fart smells like chemicals because of their exclusive eucalyptus diet. So I donā€™t want to f**k with koalas. Iā€™d rather have lizards.

Thatā€™s fair enough.

Yeah, and I kind of also want to get bitten by a spider just so I can tell people.

Well we could probably sort that out for you. Weā€™ve got a few here.

So if I wanted to get bit, what should I do? I heard the best thing to do was to go outside and put your hand into an old brick or a piece of patio furniture.

Yep, thatā€™ll do it.

What about snakes? Do you have them in the city?

No, youā€™d probably have to go out into the bush to find those.

Oh. But it would be good if Australian TV decided to syndicate Sex and the City, but then replace all the actresses with snakes and call it Snakes and the City. You could have an anaconda with a blonde wig and a mole on its face like Sarah Jessica Parker. Iā€™d watch it.

Thatā€™s brilliant, but unfortunately we donā€™t have any anacondas. We do have some of the worldā€™s most poisonous snakes here, though.

Oh god. Whatā€™s wrong with your animals? Why are they so aggressive and poisonous? Jesus Christ. I mean, you never have that in Ireland. The other day I was walking to the shop and a dog scowled at me. He gave me a dirty look. But thatā€™s the closest I ever came to danger in Ireland with an animal.

A lot of your humour is very Irish-centric. Do you think Australians will get it?

I donā€™t know. That was one fear we had when we went to Britain, that the British people wouldnā€™t get it. But they did.

I donā€™t know a hell of a lot about Australian culture, so I guess weā€™re going to have to find out when we get to Melbourne.

I think youā€™ll be fine. Australians and the Irish are pretty similar in their sense of humour.

Well thatā€™s good. If thatā€™s the case then weā€™ll get on quite good. But you know, in Australia Iā€™m sure people fight peopleā€™s fathers, Iā€™m sure you have horses and Iā€™m sure youā€™ve got retarded birds of prey. Weā€™ll get on fine.

The Rubberbandits are performing at the Hi-Fi from 28th March to 7th April. For tickets and more information, visit:
http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/rubberbandits

5 Good Reasons to see Lisa-Skye and two shows by John Robertson

5 Good Reasons to see LISA-SKYE: Songs My Parents Taught Me

1. Her last show, LADYBONER, got 6 reviews and they were all completely effing glowing/4-star. So she is OBJECTIVELY FINE.

2. Youā€™re most likely not out of her league, and thatā€™s nice to know.
2.1 (Nice to know in the loos of Tuxedo Cat post-show).

3. Honestly ā€“ sheā€™s just so fucking sparkly and magnetic.

4. She still has the motherflipping metronome, people. And itā€™s still for motherflipping real.

5. Her YouTube clips areā€¦ Ridiculous and very, very funny.

 

Lisa-SkyeĀ Songs My Parents Taught Me is on at The Tuxedo Cat for 11 shows from April 11.
http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/songs-my-parents-taught-me-lisa-skye

 

5 Good Reasons to see John Robertson in THE DARK ROOM

1. Itā€™s an accessible, interactive adventure brought to life with cash prizes and personal abuse from a disembodied head. Adults find it confusing – teenagers understand it instinctively. You awake to find yourself in a dark room.

2. Because you canā€™t ā€œseeā€ this show, youā€™re in a dark room!

3. Itā€™s immersive like a pool and addictive like chocolate. Itā€™s a chocolate pool, is what Iā€™m saying. (BUT THERE IS NO CHOCOLATE, ONLY DARKNESS. DARKNESS. IN THE DARK ROOM.)

4. Itā€™s surprisingly popular in France, Germany and China. Of course, youā€™re not in any of those places; YOUā€™RE IN A DARK ROOM!

5. It was originally a YouTube hit ā€“ and itā€™s played as a live show all over the world, get some practice here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hvkjP6dqpfY

8.15pm 1st, 8th, 15th April
Melbourne Town Hall – Cloak Room
http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/the-dark-room-john-robertson

 

5 Good Reasons to see John Robertson’s KINKLINGĀ 

1. Itā€™s funny and contains no elements of heartbreak.

2. It wonā€™t ā€œmake you thinkā€; itā€™ll assume you already do.

3. I wear a nice jacket and I smile lots.

4. The titleā€™s a made-up word for a made-up person.

5. Itā€™s a late-night party in a hotel. If the show runs over time weā€™ll go into the foyer. If we get kicked out weā€™ll go have dinner. If youā€™re still with me, weā€™ll to to my apartment on La Trobe St. After awhile youā€™ll have to leave the apartment, watching me sleep is not part of the show.

28th March – 20th April (Thurs – Sat)
11pm Portland Hotel, Locker Room
http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/kinkling-john-robertson

Interview with Mike Birbiglia about his show My Girlfriendā€™s Boyfriend.

By Cathy Culliver

Tell me about My Girlfriendā€™s Boyfriend.

Itā€™s sort of a hybrid between a one-man play and a comedy routine that I have been working on for about three or four years. I performed it Off-Broadway in 2011 as a warm up, and Iā€™ve now performed it in about 70 different cities.

Itā€™s basically a show thatā€™s a one-man romantic comedy, which is difficult to do because comedy is a cynical art form in a lot of ways and I wanted to do something that was true to the cynical roots of comedy but also had beams of optimism in it. So Iā€™d like to think that Iā€™ve done it.

Itā€™s basically about how I decided to get married, while not believing in the idea of marriage. But I love doing the show; one of the cool things is that over the years there have been a bunch of couples who have proposed marriage in the lobby after the show.

Thereā€™s a clip on YouTube where a couple propose at the end of my show. I jumped off stage, took the microphone, the guy got down on one knee, she said yes ā€¦ it was very exciting.

Part of this show aired on a recent episode of the This American Life podcast, where you talk about a girlfriend from high school who treated you horribly and didnā€™t want anyone to know you two were dating. I have to say this struck a chord with me, as Iā€™ve had a really similar experience. Do you think itā€™s part of the appeal that people can really relate to the stories you tell in the show?

Well yeah, when I wrote that story I thought I was the only person on earth that has ever happened to. But I canā€™t tell you how many people have come up to me and said, ā€œthat EXACT same thing happened to me!ā€

And to me thatā€™s when comedy is most exciting, when you uncover something and a lot of people are like ā€œme tooā€.

Would you describe yourself more of a storyteller than a stand up comedian?

I think of myself as a comedian, because I ultimately always try to have what Iā€™m doing be funny. To make an audience laugh, thatā€™s the number one goal.

But then over the years Iā€™ve kind of branched into storytelling and film making as an extension of the comedy. Now that I know I can make people laugh, I feel like I can do a longer form version of that and go outside of my comfort zone.

Last time I was in Australia, I was compared most by the locals to Daniel Kitson, whoā€™s a comedian I admire a great deal. And heā€™s also a sort of genre-bending comedian, but I still think of him as a comedian.

Many Australians would be well aware of your work with This American Life. Do you feel like you have a good fan base here?

I was very surprised when I was last in Australia that anyone even knew who I was, so that was very exciting for me. And I feel like this time there could be more, because I think This American Life has started airing on the radio over there. So Iā€™m hoping now it has an even wider reach.

But yeah, I wouldnā€™t be coming back and getting on a 23-hour flight if I didnā€™t love it there. My wife and I just absolutely love Australia; we love the people, we love the spirit of it, we love the sights, the beaches, the cliffs ā€¦ everything about it just overtook us.

Youā€™ve had one of your live shows go on to be made into a movie (Sleepwalk with Me, which is having its Australian premiere in Melbourne during MICF). Do you have any plans to do the same with this one?

I do, yeah. Iā€™m tasking myself with finishing a draft of the movie script on the plane ride to Australia. Because itā€™s so long, Iā€™m like, if I canā€™t finish a script in 23 hours then Iā€™m worthless. Itā€™s also a good way to distract myself from the fact that Iā€™m up 30,000 feet in the air.

You made Sleepwalk with Me with Ira Glass and the team from This American Life. And are you planning on working with Ira on this new movie as well?

I hope so. Ira and I work on a ton of stuff together, so it will definitely be something that I will beg him to do.

Before we finish up, how are you doing with the whole sleepwalking thing? Do you still have to sleep in a sleeping bag with mittens on? (As explored in Sleepwalk with Me, Birbiglia has a sleep condition that causes him to act out his dreams, so he has confine himself at night for his own safety).

I donā€™t wear the mittens anymore because theyā€™re just too hot. But I do wear the sleeping bag; I wear a kind of summer sleeping liner thing. And when I go to bed at night, my wife will literally say ā€œitā€™s time to go in your podā€.

Thatā€™s so romantic.

Well yeah, itā€™s really romantic and demeaning at the same time, which is really what romance is about I think.

My Girlfriendā€™s Boyfriend is on at Arts Centre Melbourne from 28 March – 4 April. For tickets and info visit:
http://www.comedyfestival.com.au/2013/season/shows/my-girlfriend-s-boyfriend-mike-birbiglia

Mike will also hold a live Q&A at the Australian premiere of his film Sleepwalk with Me at Cinema Nova on Sunday 31st March. For more information, visit:
http://www.cinemanova.com.au/catalogue/meet-the-filmmaker/27543