The Guardian (USA)

Hannah Gadsby: Body of Work review – romcom hater happily in love

- Brian Logan

Body of Work is “a feelgood show”, Hannah Gadsby tells us. Its predecesso­rs, the smash hits Nanette and Douglas, shot the Tasmanian to stardom – but weren’t all smiles. Her latest, recounting romance and recent marriage to her producer Jenney Shamash, arrives with a lighter, looser vibe. Even looser than intended, perhaps. Gadsby enters in a wheelchair, having broken her leg on a trip to Iceland. That poleaxed her European tour, and restricted recent gigs to venues with adequate disability access. So “I haven’t done this very much”, she tells us: the show might be a little rough and unready.

By the end, as Body of Work ambled towards the two-hour mark, I could see Gadsby’s point. In a show that makes much of the distinctio­n between storytelli­ng and merely listing things that happened (Gadsby’s dad is apparently a poor raconteur), I missed the structural rigour of her earlier offerings. And yet, this is still a delightful set, the more so for finding the 44year-old in such happy, playful form. Gadsby hates romcoms, she tells us – but delivers one here, after a fashion, covering her courtship with “Jenno”, flashing back to her relationsh­ip history (drolly characteri­sed less as “baggage”, more as a tangle of tote bags), then depicting the pair’s life as a couple, with Jenno smoothing the autistic, perimenopa­usal, post-famous Gadsby’s path into domesticat­ed middle age.

Post-famous? One section reflects on how poorly prepared Gadsby was when celebrity came calling, and how she “fucked it up” via socially maladroit encounters with Jodie Foster and Richard Curtis. After criticisin­g him for broadcasti­ng Dave Chappelle’s transphobi­c special, there’s a tirade too against Netflix’s Ted Sarandos, which she suspects might burn any remaining bridges to global stardom.

As that routine suggests, Gadsby’s spikiness hasn’t deserted her. But Body of Work foreground­s her homely side, as she tells her tale of new love (with droll reference to the bizarre romantic standards of heterosexu­als) and conjures her parents to vividly eccentric life. If momentum dwindles towards the end, this remains a winning return for Gadsby, to whose heavyhitti­ng accomplish­ments can now be added a flair for comedy with a light heart.

Hannah Gadsby: Body of Work on tour in the UK until 19 March, then on world tour.

 ?? ?? A flair for light-hearted comedy, too … Hannah Gadsby in Body of Work. Photograph: Supplied
A flair for light-hearted comedy, too … Hannah Gadsby in Body of Work. Photograph: Supplied

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