Penticton Herald

James & Jamesy dive deep into the art of clowning around

- By J.P. Squire

James & Jamesy are back with another silly and outrageous comedy. But it’s not as easy as you would expect in Easy as Pie as witnessed during eight recent performanc­es in the Okanagan and Kootenays.

The Canadian Comedy Award-winning duo of Aaron Malkin and Alastair Knowles have performed their hit holiday comedy, O Christmas Tea, to more than 100,000 patrons, and the duo have won more than two dozen ‘Best of Fest’ awards at arts festivals throughout North America.

The 70-minute production of Easy as Pie is an explosion of pantomime, slapstick and sketch comedy based on the famous pie-in-the-face scenario. That simple concept is similar to O Christmas Tree with minimal staging and maximum imaginatio­n.

Dressed as clowns, one jokes: “I can’t believe it, our debut performanc­e.”

They appear briefly in their clown act but the rest of this carefully-scripted show is set backstage where they explore why their performanc­e didn’t “check all the boxes” because the pie-in-the-face gag didn’t happen: “It’s no laughing matter.”

The press release explanatio­n is that they “explore the depths of memory and hurtful past events, and discover the possibilit­y of healing through love and friendship.”

The reality is physical comedy taken to its James & Jamesy limits with the now-usual element of ongoing interactio­n with audience members. The reality: Easy as Pie is a resurrecti­on of vaudeville, so silly at times that the loudest laughter often came from the numerous children in attendance.

Without giving away too much of the plot, the pair explore why they can’t complete the simple pie-in-the-face gag by going into each other’s minds – special semi-black lighting. They explore traumatic history making it temporaril­y more of an adult theme. The familiar elements of O Christmas Tea are repeated - the contortion­s, pantomime and slo-motion antics but in a new setting.

After the runaway success of O Christmas Tea during their West Coast tour in late 2023, the enthusiast­ic audience response to Easy as Pie will hopefully produce a third round of James & Jamesy.

DEAR DR. ROACH: I have recently learned that my sibling, age 70, has rare cancer of the thymus. She will be getting chemothera­py and perhaps radiation treatment. I have heard of immunother­apy. Is this an option?

Would you know what could have caused this type of cancer? When she was younger, she had bouts of rosacea; could there be a connection?

– A.H.

ANSWER: Diabete The thymus is a gland in the upper chest that is critical for the developmen­t of the immune system during early childhood. Tumors of the thymus are rare, and thymic cancer is rarer still. There are no known risk factors for thymic cancer, and rosacea isn’t one to expect.

If the cancer has not spread outside of the thymus, surgery can be curative, but people with high-risk cancers (by pathologic­al evaluation) are usually recommende­d to follow surgery with radiation treatment. If the cancer has spread, then chemothera­py is the first-line treatment. Some people are cured by chemothera­py, even with advanced disease. Unfortunat­ely, people with thymic cancer are at a very high risk for serious immune-related side effects from immunother­apy, so this therapy is not helpful in people with thymic cancer.

Because this is such a rare cancer, the optimum treatment isn’t known. I wish her the best in her treatment.

DEAR DR. ROACH: My 31-year-old daughter is pregnant with her first baby. She is in her fifth month, and the doctor has told her that her baby is at the 75th percentile in growth. Can you please advise if this is a concern?

– O.G.S.

ANSWER: Some The 50th percentile is, by definition, an average-sized baby (for the appropriat­e population).

The 75th percentile makes her baby a bit bigger than average but, by no means, abnormally large. We start to worry when the baby is above the 90th percentile, although the 95th and 97.75th percentile are commonly used by researcher­s to define “macrosomia” – a baby who is larger than expected.

When a fetus is that large, there are risks to the mother, including protracted labor, the need for a caesarean birth, and damage to the genital tract and uterus. Risks of a very large baby also include damage to the shoulder during delivery. When a baby is that big, there is a concern that the mother may have high levels of insulin, which acts as a growth hormone for the baby.

Moms who gain excess weight during pregnancy are at a higher risk for larger babies.

There are other rare causes. All expectant mothers are screened for the form of diabetes that is associated with pregnancy. A baby born to a mom with diabetes is at risk for low blood sugar when they’re first born.

However, your grandchild is not in a range where any of these bad outcomes are likely. If your daughter or the baby’s father is a large person, there is simply a higher chance that they’ll have a large baby. On the other side, a developing fetus that is less than the 10th percentile (but especially less than the 3rd percentile) for weight is a bigger concern because there are many worrisome causes for the baby not to grow. Her baby seems to be in a very healthy range.

Finally, the ultrasound pictures aren’t perfect and can under- or overestima­te fetal size, so I really wouldn’t get too concerned.

Readers may email questions to: toyourgood­health@med.cornell.edu

 ?? PHOTO SUBMITTED ?? Comedians James & Jamesy performed shows around the Okanagan over the past week.
PHOTO SUBMITTED Comedians James & Jamesy performed shows around the Okanagan over the past week.
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