Benny Feldman is a stand-up comedian known for his one-liners about butterflies, frogs, and such, and for performing with Tourette’s syndrome, and your weird younger sibling sending you his clips.
Sometimes you walk into a comedy show with a clear idea of what you are about to see. Sometimes the title gives you a hint. Sometimes the synopsis lays out the themes. With Benny Feldman’s Butterfly Pavilion, all I really knew going in was that Benny performs with Tourette’s. That was enough for me to take a chance. What I ended up watching was a rapid-fire, machine-gun style hour of jokes that felt a little like being caught in a wind tunnel of one liners. It reminded me of the experience of watching a comedian like Jimmy Carr, where the rhythm is quick, the jokes are short, and the pace never slows down long enough for you to fully settle. You either laugh or you miss it. There is no middle ground.
The show is built almost entirely on one liners. Some are observational. Some are absurd. Some are so niche that you can practically hear the Americans in the room laughing before the New Zealanders catch up (despite the time different). The topics jump around constantly. One moment he is talking about Alexa. The next moment he is talking about Jewish identity. Then he is talking about America. Then he is talking about something completely unrelated, like transforming into a donkey. It is a constant zigzag. You have to stay alert. Blink and you will miss the setup. Look away and you will miss the punchline. It is a style that can be exhilarating and exhausting at the same time.
Because the set is only forty five minutes, the density of jokes is intense. There is no time to breathe. There is no time to settle into a theme. The show moves from one idea to the next with the speed of someone flipping through channels on a television. It can be hit and miss. Some jokes land beautifully. Some jokes barely register. Some jokes feel like they are aimed at a very specific audience that may or may not be in the room. But that is part of the charm. Benny knows that not everything will land. He knows that some jokes will fall flat. He knows that he might forget where he is in the set. Instead of trying to hide those moments, he leans into them.
That is where the show becomes interesting. Benny has a very self aware style. He comments on the jokes that do not work. He comments on the audience reactions. He comments on the awkwardness of the room. He comments on his own Tourette’s. He comments on the fact that he is commenting. It becomes a loop of meta humour that somehow makes the awkwardness funnier. There are moments where the silence stretches a little too long. There are moments where the audience is not sure whether to laugh or wait. There are moments where Benny’s tics interrupt the flow. Instead of derailing the show, these moments become part of the show. The awkwardness becomes the punchline.
Living with Tourette’s is awkward. Benny does not try to smooth that out. He uses it. He folds it into the performance. The vocal and physical tics appear throughout the set. Some are involuntary. Some are exaggerated for comedic effect. Some are new additions he has created for the stage. They interrupt the rhythm in a way that feels unpredictable, but Benny has learned how to turn that unpredictability into a comedic tool. The audience never quite knows what is coming next. That uncertainty becomes part of the experience.
There is a section in the second half of the show where Benny shifts away from the rapid fire one liners and moves into something with a bit more structure. He talks about politics. He talks about frustration. He talks about the way people lie and deceive each other in small, everyday ways. It is still funny, but it has more shape than the earlier part of the show. You can feel him working on it. You can feel him trying to build something that connects the humour into a larger philosophical idea. It is not fully polished yet, but it adds a welcome change of pace. It gives the audience a chance to settle into a theme rather than being tossed around from topic to topic.
The absurdist humour is where Benny shines the most. He has a talent for starting with something relatable and then taking it in a completely unexpected direction. The joke begins in a place you recognise. Then it veers off into something strange and surreal. Those are the moments where the room lights up. The absurdity suits him. It matches the unpredictability of his delivery. It matches the rhythm of his tics. It matches the slightly chaotic energy of the entire show.
There are also moments where the awkwardness becomes the funniest part of the night. I found myself raising my eyebrows more than once. There were long pauses where the audience did not know what to do. There were jokes that seemed to evaporate before they reached the punchline. There were moments where the silence became so heavy that it looped back around into comedy. The awkwardness created its own laughter. It was not always intentional, but it was always interesting.
The show is not perfect. It is uneven. It is messy. It is unpredictable. But it is also honest. Benny is not trying to present a polished, flawless hour of comedy. He is presenting himself. His style. His brain. His tics. His humour. His awkwardness. His absurdity. His frustration. His joy. His weirdness. His honesty. It is all there, unfiltered.
You cannot sit through the full forty five minutes without laughing at least a few times. The sheer volume of jokes guarantees that something will land for you. The range of topics is so broad that everyone in the room will find something that resonates. Even when the jokes miss, the experience itself is entertaining. Benny has a presence that keeps you watching. You want to see what he will do next. You want to see how he will handle the next awkward moment. You want to see how he will turn the next tic into a punchline.
Benny Feldman’s Butterfly Pavilion is not a smooth or elegant show. It is a strange, jittery, unpredictable hour of comedy that embraces awkwardness rather than avoiding it. It is a show that feels like it is still evolving, but that evolution is part of the appeal. Benny is a comedian who knows exactly who he is and is not afraid to let the audience see all of it. The awkwardness becomes the humour. The unpredictability becomes the structure. The tics become the rhythm. The show becomes something that could only exist in the hands of someone who understands that comedy does not have to be perfect to be funny.
It just has to be honest.
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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