
Buster Daniels to tour Melb
20th Dec 2005
Buster Daniels, the coruscating star from Murrambateman, has announced an ambitious Melbourne / Sydney tour of his very own cabaret, Nancy Boy, accompanied by Mark Fitzgibbon on piano.
Buster is rumoured to be in private talks with the Attorney-General’s Department to allow him immunity from the sedition laws. “It’s true. In the show I do incite a call to arms against the imperialist aggression of the West, but I do it in a loving, caring, mercenary way,” he said.
Featuring songs by Joe Jackson, Guns N' Roses, Johnny Cash and Daniel Maloney, this is bareback cabaret at its most infectious.
“I embarked on my career in cabaret out of protest,” says Buster. “I was protesting against the phalanx of anonymous pretty gay men who had sought out the medium to tell a very grateful audience (mostly composed of Mum, Dad, Bestest Friend and Aunty Janice) their very limited life story in dated song. I began to ask myself; what business does a 21 year-old from Paddington have singing about a Trolley Car? Not to mention the execrable versions of those songs written by Mr Sondheim often for aging menopausal divas at the cross-roads of THE CHANGE”.
Buster Daniels was born and raised on a farm in the semi-rural town of Murrambateman, a hamlet on the outskirts of Canberra. “My up-bringing was idyllic. Summers were spent shearing, delousing, neutering … Ah, Papa took such pride in his appearance.”
“But I must admit, I became miserable on the farm. It was very isolated and with the droughts, the floods, and all that economic uncertainty depression was rife. It seemed every other week a farm owner was found hanging in his shed, which always confused me because to commit suicide in Murrambateman is a rather redundant act,” he said.
But now Buster has moved far away from his in-bred roots to light the stage of Melbourne’s most intimate performance venue, The Butterfly Club. “Oh, I adore that place, I really do. It\'s so intimate and the audience is so close to the stage that on a clear night I can often make out some of the gentlemens’ religions!”
So what is Buster’s show about? “Well, I’m looking at the big issues with this show, like how do you have your way with five bi-curious plumbers while simultaneously making them all feel special and needed? I’m also asking the questions that really need to be asked like, when will the pink polo with the up-turned collar die its final grisly death? Who keeps employing Jeannie Little as an “entertainer”? And exactly how close are scientists to finding the genetic link between homosexuality and anything connected with a Minogue?”
Buster’s look and manner are quite distinct, although it has been said that with his soft-spoken voice and deconstructed formal glam he has a little in common with drag artistes. “Oh no! I don’t understand the grotesquerie of drag, actually. I mean why would an audience spend an evening watching a sexless alien jump around in garish costumes to old Cher songs, when they can stay at home and watch the DVD of Cher doing that herself?”
And what of his performance style? “Well I have been compared to many but I think I’m happiest with being described as a cross between Julie Andrews circa Victor/Victoria and a rabid, pansexual Alsatian.”
The Butterfly Club
204 Bank Street, South Melbourne
Dates: Thursday 26 Jan to Sunday 12 Feb (performances Thur to Sun)
Time: All shows at 8.30 pm
Tickets: $20; $15 concession-holders
Bookings: Telephone 03 9690 2000 or online at www.thebutterflyclub.com
Buster Daniels is proudly brought to you by On the Wing Touring, the touring arm of Melbourne’s home of cabaret, The Butterfly Club (www.thebutterflyclub.com).