Australian actor Drew Fairley has taken to Instagram to keep himself, and his followers, entertained while we waits for repatriation
"I thought it was a great premise for comedy," he says. "The words cabin fever were being bandied around with everyone staying at home and I was in an actual cabin. So I did a little chat to camera with terrible lighting, just me but in different shirts."
Beginning as a study in nothingness it has morphed into a series attracting hundreds of views, as Fairley ponders walking up and down all the ship's staircases, the wealth of parsnip soup at dinner, sporadic noises that "sound like an on-board pewter factory" and if his cabin has a ghost after his soap disappeared from the bathroom.By day 17 Fairley had started filming make-up tutorials wearing a wig, tennis sweatbands and a bathrobe.
"I thought that even if one person understood that nothingness was something that we all share that would be good," he says. "I've started a Dogme 95 style, based on the Danish film group from the 1990s, where every prop or costume has to already be in the room. I've really loved doing it cause it's so stupid."
As the days passed Fairley also expanded his connections on-board, making friends with crew, joining the on-board radio station as a co-host and, during the ship's Anzac Day commemorative service, reading a passage for the wreath-laying."That changed what Anzac Day meant to me," he says. "It was something I'd never thought I'd do and it felt entirely different. It was weirdly moving.
Fairley is still on-board, one of two Australian entertainers on the ship, and still unaware of any plans to be repatriated. He has 15 shows in the second series of"In one of them I cry," he says. "It was on the day we were exiled. I started feeling enormously sad, real raw. I'm not sure if I'll publish that yet."
Australia Latest News, Australia Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Coronavirus pandemic sees WA circus performer stuck at sea on cruise ship forced to leave Australia - ABC NewsElke Uhd is furious she has been left stranded on the Pacific Explorer cruise ship more than 5,000 kilometres from home after it was ordered to depart Australia earlier this month.
Read more »
What products Aussies are buying during lockdownAustralians have turned into a nation of beauty-obsessed wannabe chefs with little care for how our breath smells if spending habits during the coronavirus lockdown are anything to go by.
Read more »
Pandemic sparks compassion and empathy across Australia, research showsPreliminary results of a survey by researchers from Edith Cowan University reveal people are showing high levels of concern for others – and not just their friends and family | Emma_J_Young
Read more »
‘Captive’ cruise staff beg to be arrestedCruise ship staff being “held captive” on a quarantined vessel off the US coast are starting to beg to be arrested after almost 50 days locked down at sea.
Read more »
The Office’s Greg Daniels on his new TV comedy, UploadGreg Daniels is best known for the US version of The Office, but his new TV series is playing in a very different sandbox.
Read more »