Get ready for a chaotic and hilarious night as six of NZ’s funniest comedians take on Bonetown, a wild game hosted by Brynley Stent. In this outrageous panel-meets-game show, they’ll battle wits to decide what everyone in the room most wants to bone, with big laughs, heated debates, and unexpected surprises along the way.
At first glance, Bonetown feels like you’ve stumbled into a party where everyone else already knows the rules—awkward, slightly confusing, and a little too honest for comfort. But within minutes, host Brynley Stent’s devil-may-care charm, a cloud of theatrical smoke, and five other game-for-anything comedians transform that unease into belly laughs, whooping applause, and full-hearted engagement. What begins as a chaotic mess of desires, quirks, and innuendos quickly shapes into a hilarious and surprisingly nuanced night of entertainment.
The show, loosely based on the risqué parlour game Sexcapades, challenges a nightly rotation of comedians to present and defend their most “bone-worthy” ideas—be they tangible, emotional, or completely unhinged. Through four rounds of dramatic eliminations, each idea battles for the ultimate honour: being crowned the thing everyone most wants to “bone.” Think Would I Lie to You? meets The Bachelorette, filtered through the brain of someone who watched Taskmaster and said, “Needs more Neat 3B Action Cream.”
Friday’s lineup was stacked: Joseph Moore, Laura Daniel, Emma Holland, Jack Ansett, Rhiannon McCall, Hamish Parkinson, and Adam King brought a mix of seasoned experience and wild improvisation. Their ideas ranged from oddly profound to deliciously crass. Some entries were surprisingly relatable (“walking calmly onto a train while others panic”), others leaned gleefully into absurdity (“a sex doll replica of Laura Daniel”), and a few went straight for shock value (“barbecue sauce on t*tties” is just the beginning).
What keeps Bonetown from feeling like a one-note joke is its smart structure. Each round has its own flavour: self-selected eliminations, impassioned audience appeals, dramatic reveals of hidden motivations, and a final showdown. Between rounds, the audience is treated to mini-games and wildcard mechanics—creative curveballs that stop the show from becoming repetitive and give comedians new material to play with. It’s not just who can be the funniest, but who can be the cleverest under pressure.
Stent anchors it all with gleeful confidence. Dressed like the devil in a black morph suit and leather corset, she’s part ringmaster, part chaos agent, and full-time hype woman. Her performance is half-dominatrix, half-den mother, and it works. She leads the night with a mix of mock malevolence and genuine affection for the comedians—some of whom are clearly flying blind in a format that asks for both sincerity and absurdity in equal measure.
One of the show’s cleverest tricks is creating a space where anything can be discussed without shame. The “bones” may be framed as erotic, but they’re rarely sexual in a conventional sense. Rather, they reflect emotional cravings, private satisfactions, and personal quirks. There’s a running joke about the audience being “cucks,” forced to merely observe, but in truth, we’re invited to invest, debate, and even cheer for our favourites. The safe, silly atmosphere means even the strangest suggestions land well.
That said, the elimination format does have a downside: repetition. As ideas are rehashed across multiple rounds, even the funniest entries risk overstaying their welcome. Not every moment lands, and the comedy is as much about rhythm and chemistry as the written material. But the performers—regardless of familiarity with each other—rise to the challenge with energy and commitment.
What makes Bonetown work is its willingness to be messy. It doesn’t strive for perfection—it aims for chaos, honesty, and laughter. It succeeds. Every night is different, every lineup reshapes the tone, and every “bone” tells a story. Whether you’re laughing at a niche reference, a cringeworthy confession, or a surprising moment of sweetness, there’s always something to keep you leaning in.
By the end of the night, what started as a slightly awkward, oddball comedy concept had the crowd fully invested. Bonetown may be dressed in devil horns and wrapped in innuendo, but underneath is a cleverly crafted, crowd-driven experience that celebrates weirdness, vulnerability, and the strange things that bring us joy.
Highly recommended—especially if you’re ready to laugh at your desires and cheer for someone else’s.
Bonetown runs from 7 May - 10 May 2025 at Auckland's Basement Theatre, Theatre, and 17 May at Wellington's Te Auaha - Tapere Nui.
Tickets can be purchased here
Presented as part of the NZ International Comedy Festival with Best Foods Mayo, from 2 – 24 May 2025