Join the star of RuPaul's Drag Race, award-winning comedian Anita Wigl'it for Drag Bingo the stage show! Over an hour, play three outrageous games of bingo and be dazzled by drag shows featuring Anita's own special brand of outrageous, silly and ridiculous comedy!
There are drag shows, there are comedy shows, and then there is Drag Bingo A Go-Go. It is a one-hour detonation of camp, chaos, and cackling that only Anita Wigl’It could deliver. As part of the Best Foods NZ International Comedy Festival, Anita took the humble, church-hall pastime of bingo and inflated it into a full-scale spectacle. The show sold out with ease and proved once again why she remains one of Aotearoa’s most magnetic comedic performers. The festival listing promised three rounds of bingo mixed with Anita’s signature brand of silly, ridiculous comedy, complete with drag performances and fabulous prizes. What actually unfolded on stage was far more explosive than any tidy description could capture.
From the moment the lights snapped up, Anita arrived with the kind of energy that feels like being hit by a confetti cannon at point-blank range. She strutted out in a shimmering ensemble that could probably be seen from space, heels clicking like a countdown to mischief. The crowd was already buzzing before she even spoke, and the room erupted as she launched into her first volley of wickedly reimagined bingo calls. Forget the dusty two little ducks and legs eleven you might remember from community halls. Anita’s versions were filthier, funnier, and delivered with the precision of someone who knows exactly how far she can push an audience before they topple over into uncontrollable laughter.
What makes Anita such a formidable performer is her ability to read a room with surgical accuracy. She does not simply call numbers. She orchestrates the emotional temperature of the entire space. One moment, she is teasing a front-row audience member for their suspiciously competitive energy. Next, she is riffing off a shouted comment from the back, spinning it into a punchline so sharp it could slice through her own wig glue. Her quick wit, well-known from her television appearances, becomes even more potent in person. Every quip feels spontaneous and dangerously alive, as if the whole show is teetering on the edge of delightful disaster.
The structure of the night is deceptively simple. Three rounds of bingo, each escalating in absurdity, punctuated by drag performances that swing between glamorous, chaotic, and outright unhinged. Within that framework, Anita builds a playground where anything can happen. Audience participation is not just encouraged. It is inevitable. She pulls people into the spotlight with a mix of charm and cheek, always ensuring consent, always keeping the tone playful rather than predatory. Even the most reluctant participants find themselves laughing along, swept up in the collective silliness.
One of the greatest strengths is how the show transforms the audience from passive observers into co-conspirators. People were not just marking off numbers. They were hollering, dancing in their seats, waving their bingo cards like flags of chaotic allegiance. The room felt electric, as though everyone had silently agreed to abandon dignity at the door. Anita, ever the benevolent puppet master, guided that energy with the confidence of someone who has spent years perfecting the art of joyful disorder.
Her drag performances between rounds were miniature showcases of her versatility. One number leaned into campy melodrama, complete with exaggerated facial expressions and comedic timing so crisp it could have been storyboarded. Another was pure glamour, reminding the audience that beneath the jokes and chaos lies a seasoned entertainer with real stagecraft. These interludes gave the show a rhythm; moments to catch your breath before the next wave of bingo-fuelled madness crashed over you.
The humour throughout the night was unapologetically naughty, but never mean-spirited. Anita walks that razor-thin line between risqué and reckless with enviable balance. She knows exactly when to push, when to pull back, and when to let the audience’s imagination do the heavy lifting. It is the kind of comedy that leaves your face aching, your mascara smudged, and your drink dangerously close to spilling because you are laughing too hard to hold it steady.
What also stands out is how Drag Bingo A Go-Go manages to feel both polished and delightfully unhinged. The show is tightly structured because bingo requires some level of order, but Anita injects enough spontaneity to make each performance feel unique. No two nights will ever be the same because the audience becomes part of the machinery. Their reactions, their competitiveness, their willingness to play along, all of it feeds into the show’s momentum.
The prizes were as fabulous as promised, but the real reward was the atmosphere Anita created. It was a space where adults could be silly, loud, and joyfully inappropriate without judgement. In a festival packed with stand-up sets and scripted performances, Drag Bingo A Go-Go stood out as something more communal, more interactive, and more gloriously chaotic.
By the time the final number was called, the room was vibrating with laughter and adrenaline. People stumbled out into the night grinning, buzzing, and already quoting their favourite moments back to each other. It is rare to find a show that leaves an entire audience looking like they have just survived a glitter tornado, but Anita manages it with ease.
In the end, Drag Bingo A Go-Go is exactly what it promises to be. Balls to the wall, high-heeled, sparkly, naughty, and utterly unforgettable. Anita Wigl’It does not just host a bingo night. She detonates one. She turns a familiar pastime into a riotous celebration of drag, comedy, and collective joy. It is the kind of show that leaves you wanting more than just those six inches on offer, giggling for all the right reasons, and already planning your next round.
If the Comedy Festival is a buffet, Drag Bingo A Go-Go is the dish everyone goes back for seconds of. And honestly, you would be foolish not to.
The show is part of the NZ International Comedy Festival. Find tickets to a show near you here
Review written by Josh McNally
Edited by Alex Moulton


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