![]() To understand the references to ‘the hamburger’ and ‘the windsurfer’ it is recommended that you look at the related Puppetry of the Penis related links. ![]() However, it certainly is an unusual occurrence and interesting to note the letter-writer’s description of a woman’s bathroom habits. One doesn’t doubt his concerns, particularly when sworn at so blatantly. The gentleman concerned has no qualms with the show itself (tickets to see it were a birthday present from his wife and he found it ‘hilarious’), but with certain audience members.Īs you can see the complainant felt rightly intimidated, when the mainly female audience started using the male toilets at the interval. Here we have an interesting complaint related to the show. The show came to the Theatre Royal in September 2001, and as you can see from related links on this site it attracted a lot of media coverage in the weeks coming up to the performance. The act was first performed on the international stage at the 1998 Melbourne International Comedy Festival and quickly became a global hit.įollowing success at the Edinburgh Fringe in 2000, a large UK national tour took place the following year. Puppetry of the Penis was a comedy show conceived by two Australians Simon Morley and David Friend, in which they manipulated their genitalia, along with comic narration, into various well-known shapes, such as the Eiffel Tower and the Loch Ness Monster.
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