I'll get around to writing a proper bio for this show later but I'm in the middle of a sudoku. Can you just put something like "Melanie Bracewell is back with a brand-new hour about returning to unfinished things later in life. With rave reviews and multiple awards under her belt you don't want to miss it."
Melanie Bracewell has a rare ability to take the everyday frustrations of adult life and turn them into something bright, sharp, and genuinely joyful. In Dilly Dallying, she leans fully into that strength, delivering a show that is tightly structured, full of energy, and packed with the kind of callbacks that remind you just how carefully crafted her comedy really is.
From the moment she steps onstage, Melanie radiates confidence. Not the loud, chest‑puffed‑out kind, but the kind that comes from someone who knows exactly how to control a room. She moves with purpose, gestures with precision, and keeps the audience buzzing with a level of physicality that elevates even the simplest joke. Her energy is infectious, and it sets the tone for an hour that feels both polished and delightfully loose.
One of the first things you notice is how well-structured the show is. Melanie does not rely on rambling anecdotes or loose improvisation. Every story has a purpose, every detail is planted for a reason, and every joke feels like it belongs to a larger design. The callbacks are constant and clever. Just when you think she has moved on to a completely unrelated topic, she finds a way to loop it back to something from earlier in the show. That moment of recognition hits the audience like a wave, and the laughter that follows is explosive. It is the kind of comedic craftsmanship that only comes from someone who has spent years honing their timing.
Her crowd work is minimal, but when she does engage, she does it with creativity. The air-dropping bit in particular is a standout. It is playful, unexpected, and perfectly suited to her style. She never relies on the audience to carry the show, but she knows how to use them to heighten a moment without losing control of the narrative.
What makes Dilly Dallying so relatable is the subject matter. Melanie does not try to reinvent the wheel. Instead, she digs into the small annoyances and quiet joys that make up adult life. Business class flights. Neighbourhood disputes over recycling bins. The perfect comeback that arrives hours too late to be useful. These are not groundbreaking topics, but Melanie’s delivery makes them feel fresh. She has a way of capturing the exact emotional truth of a situation, then twisting it just enough to make it hilarious.
There is also a refreshing lack of self-deprecation in her material. She does not tear herself down for laughs, nor does she lean into political commentary. Instead, she focuses on observational humour delivered with confidence and humility. She enjoys what she does, and that enjoyment radiates through the room. It is rare to see a comedian who can be this funny without resorting to cynicism or bitterness.
The overarching theme of the show is, unsurprisingly, dilly dallying. Melanie talks about being in her thirties and feeling the pressure from society to hurry up and tick off the milestones. Marriage. Children. Settling down. Doing the things. But instead of treating dilly dallying as a flaw, she reframes it as something that has shaped her life in positive ways. She talks about the joy of taking your time, the value of small detours, and the unexpected benefits of not rushing into things just because everyone else thinks you should.
This theme becomes especially poignant when she discusses love. Melanie reflects on how finding love too early can sometimes mean losing it before you are ready to hold onto it. She talks about timing, growth, and the strange way life unfolds when you give yourself permission to slow down. It is sweet without being saccharine, thoughtful without being heavy, and it ties the entire show together beautifully.
One of the most impressive things about Dilly Dallying is Melanie’s ability to keep a joke going long after you think it has reached its natural end. She jumps in unexpected directions, adds new layers, and finds fresh angles that keep the audience laughing even as they think they know where the punchline is heading. It is a testament to her skill as a writer and performer. She understands rhythm, she understands surprise, and she understands how to build a joke into something bigger than it first appears.
Her physicality is another highlight. Melanie gestures with purpose, using her whole body to sell a moment. Whether she is reenacting a petty argument with a neighbour or demonstrating the ridiculousness of a flight upgrade, her movements amplify the humour. It is expressive in a way that makes the jokes land harder without ever feeling over the top.
There is also a sense of humility that runs through the show. Melanie never positions herself as the hero or the victim of her stories. She is simply a person navigating the strange, often inconvenient world of adulthood. That relatability is what makes the show feel so grounded. She is not trying to impress the audience. She is trying to connect with them.
The pacing is tight, the transitions are smooth, and the overall structure is one of the strongest elements of the show. You can feel the planning behind it, but it never feels rigid. It feels like a comedian at the top of her game, confident enough to trust her material and skilled enough to execute it flawlessly.
By the end of the hour, Dilly Dallying feels like a celebration of taking your time. It is a reminder that life does not need to be rushed, that joy can be found in the small inconveniences and unexpected detours, and that sometimes the best things happen when you let yourself wander a little.
It is cute. It is clever. It is incredibly solid work from a comedian who knows exactly how to craft a show that feels both effortless and meticulously designed.
The show is part of the NZ International Comedy Festival. Find tickets to a show near you here
Review written by Alex Moulton

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