Townsville Bulletin

Giggles go viral

Jimmy Rees helped raise a nation of kids and now look who’s laughing

- JAMES WIGNEY

Despite playing to packed houses, and having to extend his last national tour from five shows to a whopping 39 shows, Jimmy Rees says that he still feels like an impostor in the stand-up comedy world. His recent stint on Channel 10’s Taskmaster alongside stand-up veterans including Julia Morris, Luke Mcgregor, Nina Oyama and Danielle Walker, made Rees realise how unusual his journey to standing behind a microphone in front of a room full of strangers was, and also how much he had to learn.

“I sometimes feel a bit of an impostor when I’m around some of those comedians and they’ve gone through all the circuits and everything to get where they are,” Rees says from his base on Victoria’s Mornington Peninsula. “It’s not like any way is wrong, but I do feel like I can learn a lot from them.”

Whereas many of his contempora­ries spent years in dingy clubs honing their craft in front of tiny and sometimes hostile audiences, Rees arrived on the big stage in an entirely different manner.

First there was his 11 years as children’s entertaine­r Jimmy Giggle, opposite a puppet owl on the longrunnin­g and much loved ABC Kids show Giggle and Hoot. When that wound up in 2020, just as the Covid pandemic began to take hold, he transition­ed into more adult-focused online sketch comedy.

His panoply of characters including The Guy Who Decides, Jason and the Brighton Ladies – and their comedic takes on everything from border restrictio­ns to parenting – brought joy to locked-down Australian­s, helping him amass hundreds of millions of views and more than 1 million Facebook followers, 1.3 million on Tiktok and 470,000 on Instagram.

It was that built-in audience that helped Rees make the transition to the stage for his Meanwhile In Australia tour last year, which was also released as a Binge comedy special. He reasoned that if he could reproduce live some of what had made him a roaring success online, then the audiences would follow.

Planning it and doing it, however, were two entirely different things. His online comedy relied on multiple versions of himself talking to each other as different characters, necessitat­ing some tricky editing, technical innovation and lightning fast costume changes in the live arena. While plenty of practice and trial and error produced a slick, successful show, things didn’t always go to plan – and that was just fine.

“Every edit is so fast and I can’t change costume that fast but it turns that out half the fun of changing all the costumes and doing that live is it going wrong,” Rees says with a laugh. “People seem to enjoy that even more, as opposed to it being online.”

Rees is promising to up the ante for his just-announced second tour, Not That Kinda Viral, which will make its way around the country between August and November. He promises the show will be “bigger and better”, with plenty of what audiences already know and love but this time with added Jimmys as he ponders the events of his life and the state of the world over the past year.

“I’m thinking of some other interestin­g ways to have multiples of me on stage at once using technology and some sort of stage trickery as well,” he says. “Hopefully that will be a bit of fun.”

Given his background as a kids’ entertaine­r, Rees is at pains to point out that while he prides himself in not being overtly crass, his live shows are aimed squarely at older audiences.

But the message doesn’t always get through and he says there were a few times on his last tour that he questioned some parents’ choices after spotting young faces in audiences.

“It’s advertised that it’s not for kids, but they have got their Hoot doll ready for me to sign and I’m like, ‘I don’t know – I think your parents are going to be putting your hand over your ears a couple of times’,” he says.

Even though it’s been more than three years since he last put on the costume, and he lightly roasted the character in his last tour, Rees looks back on his Jimmy Giggle years fondly, as do the parents whose children he helped raise.

“People still say ‘you put my kids to bed every single night’,” he says. “Those kids are now 18, which makes me feel very old, but nonetheles­s, it was such a sweet and nice show. It’s not like I was on MAFS and people come up and say ‘I hate you – why did you leave her? You idiot!’. I don’t cop flak because it was such a nice show.”

And would he be game to reunite with his former owl buddy for some kind of special event?

“Oh, absolutely I would go back for an anniversar­y,” he says. “That would be wild fun. There could definitely be a little reunion of some sort – but I don’t know if I’d fit in that costume. I was in my 20s for the main duration of it and sometimes they had to adjust the pants as I put on a little bit more weight. Then I’d lose weight and have to put them back together again, so I don’t know how I would go.”

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 ?? ?? Comedian Jimmy Rees is taking his comedy tour Not That Kinda Viral on the road from August and, below, on stage during his Meanwhile In Australia tour, now a comedy special on Binge.
Comedian Jimmy Rees is taking his comedy tour Not That Kinda Viral on the road from August and, below, on stage during his Meanwhile In Australia tour, now a comedy special on Binge.

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