An Evening with David Sedaris



Tuesday, 19 January 2010

A friend had a spare ticket to what turned out to be a packed house at His Majesty’s Theatre, as the literati of Perth - with gleaming smart spectacles and an air of blameless sophistication - welcomed best-selling author David Sedaris to the Wild West.

The three-time Grammy Award nominee, probably best known for his books, “Me Talk Pretty One Day”, which had won the author the 2001 Thurber Prize for American Humour; and “Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim” of which the audio book read by Sedaris had been nominated for Best Spoken Word album in 2004; was touring Australia’s far flung shores as part of a general itinerary that had included one of his favourite countries, Japan.

He had wryly observed that getting on a plane to fly over 22 hours to a destination should reveal the traveller to another, almost otherworldly locale, like possibly, Mercury, but that Australia in general seemed to be a mixture of the surreal and familiar, America lite as it were.

Well lived and well travelled, the evening opened up on stage with an introduction in German by his Australian manager (!) which was soon translated to be along the lines of “We have David Sedaris and will trade him for all your flamboyant homosexuals”; a rather humorous and unconventional way to start a show!

But I guess this was more of a book reading event which just happened to be showcased at the theatre. It was a testament to the author’s popularity, and while he decries being described as a performer, time spent on National Public Radio in the 1990s and numerous appearances on the talk show circuit have honed his voice to be to an expressive reflection of his interior monologue and autobiographical works.

While he seemed initially dwarfed on stage by a background of large red curtains and a lectern he admitted he happily hid behind, his voice soon overtook the physical and the nuance, sly humour, sarcasm and deft timing brought his essays, elaborations and allegories to life.

A story about a gated forest was politely received, but given more ironic resonance when he commented that our airport security measures appear to be from the 1970s - Homeland Security in the States is obviously becoming a bane to not only visitors but citizens alike; however his droll and entertaining observational humour (with just a touch of verklempt) skewed well with the audience, well primed in the foyer earlier as Sedaris patiently signed copies of his books and CDs.

Some of the funniest tales of course, involved his tourist eye view of Australia, it’s people, animals and language; and the ‘kook’ aburra featured as a star attraction, sporting the “buzz cut of a high school gym teacher”, a slightly feared creature lashed in browns from “beige to walnut”.

He recounted that along with his sister Amy (now well known from her cult comedy series, Strangers with Candy) they had sung the classic Australian nursery rhyme “Kookaburra (sits in the old gumtree)” practically non-stop one night, almost driving their not-quite-fearsome, underwear relaxing father to distraction. How startling to hear this sing-song come out with an American accent! I confess I sang it happily on the way home.

An amusing evening unexpected, enjoyed and well spent.

1 comment:

  1. You need to write professionally! You made something I have no interest in enjoyable to read - and I learnt something. Jaymez

    ReplyDelete