Patch Lambert
Rough Patch
As a single father, award-winning comedian Patch Lambert is on the brink of being dragged kicking and screaming into the Divorced Dads Club – a world where Nickelback blares from the car stereo, a supermarket pizza passes as fine dining and asking about mum's new boyfriend is part of the daily routine.
F#%k that.
But just when you think you’re getting through it, you get blindsided with the rough patches you thought you’d buried, popping into your mind at the worst moments, like mid-timber sale at Bunnings, where you swear so loudly the cashier thinks you’ve declared war on plywood (when in reality you’ve just remembered the time you got caught making fun of your teacher 15 years ago).
This show is not a therapy session, instead this is the night out we all deserve –an hilarious, chaotic and triumphant journey through the shared struggle of holding it all together.
'Such a genuine charisma that you leave not only with sore cheeks from all the laughter, but with a sense that he is now a good friend.' Art Murmurs
Suitable for audiences 18+
As a single father, award-winning comedian Patch Lambert is on the brink of being dragged kicking and screaming into the Divorced Dads Club – a world where Nickelback blares from the car stereo, a supermarket pizza passes as fine dining and asking about mum's new boyfriend is part of the daily routine.
F#%k that.
But just when you think you’re getting through it, you get blindsided with the rough patches you thought you’d buried, popping into your mind at the worst moments, like mid-timber sale at Bunnings, where you swear so loudly the cashier thinks you’ve declared war on plywood (when in reality you’ve just remembered the time you got caught making fun of your teacher 15 years ago).
This show is not a therapy session, instead this is the night out we all deserve –an hilarious, chaotic and triumphant journey through the shared struggle of holding it all together.
'Such a genuine charisma that you leave not only with sore cheeks from all the laughter, but with a sense that he is now a good friend.' Art Murmurs