Bronwyn Kuss: Sounds Good

by | Apr 10, 2023

By Laura Hartnell

‘Start at infant mortality and bring them back from there.’ That’s the approach of Bronwyn Kuss’ latest show, Sounds Good. It’s a tightly structured and effortlessly paced hour of wry, dark comedy.

After winning the Directors’ Choice Award and being nominated for Best Newcomer in last year’s Melbourne International Comedy Festival, Kuss has doubled down on her dry-as-a-bone humour in her latest offering. Her opening gambit describes how she was born yellow as a baby and family lore says the doctor called the next day to ask, ‘Is that baby dead yet?’ Exceeding expectations from the get-go, Kuss is a bit pissed that she has newborn baby trauma that she can’t remember nor profit from.

Instead, she tells us about growing up a (closeted) lesbian around the corner from Pauline Hanson’s fish and chip shop, the return of Y2K fashion, and being jealous of her partner’s ex who is going to the moon. She recounts with a genuineness, hilarity, and ease the absurdities of growing up in regional Australia and her self-deprecating reflections on navigating the dating world post-lockdowns make her a magnetic performer.

Kuss’ timing is excellent. The show rolls along effortlessly, and she is just as comfortable letting a punchline hang in the air as she is delivering it with a cold stare and wry smile into the eyes of an audience member. Kuss’ crowd work is light but well-placed, building enough intimacy in the room that her dry style still feels warm and inviting. A confident and compelling storyteller, Kuss’ command of the stage and confidence in her material make Sounds Good a hilarious and intelligent show that solidifies Kuss as one to watch.

Related Posts

Silvers Circus

Silvers Circus

By Chenoah Eljan  Silvers Circus has set up its big top in the parking lot of Burvale Hotel, Nunawading. Billed as a modern circus with a ‘twist’, it’s a safe bet the modern part means that the animal cruelty has been replaced by acrobatics and the twist means… more...

Bad Boy

Bad Boy

By Karyn Hodgkinson There has been a long history of gender violence in Australia. For much of the 19th century, men far outnumbered women (in) the Australian colonies. This produced a culture that prized hyper masculinity as a national ideal. (The Conversation, July...

Bite Club: 2nd Serve ~ Briefs Factory International & Sahara Beck

Bite Club: 2nd Serve ~ Briefs Factory International & Sahara Beck

 By Mama Natalia For almost as long as burlesque and drag revival artists have graced stages in Australia and beyond, there has been Briefs. Whispered about in awe within backstage dressing rooms for almost two decades, casually mentioned as the ‘who’s who’ of fringe...