The affectionate parody features a cast of eight, puppets and original songs, including You May Be a B-girl, But You’ll Always Be an A-girl To Me; I’m Breaking Down; and the closer I’m a Celebrity.
While Broadbridge conceived the title as a gag to sell tickets, she quickly realised the idea had legs.
“When she continued to be in the media and piped up with different opinions that would blow the story up again, I thought, ‘this could be a brilliant musical’,” she says. “The story felt very operatic in how extreme everything was.”
Broadbridge says the sheer cultural ubiquity of the Raygun story made for fertile comic ground.
“When you do comedy, there are so few things you can talk about that everyone – young, old, whichever demographic – is across,” she says. “The only three I’ve found since I’ve been doing comedy are COVID, Trump and Raygun.”
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Having trained as a jazz singer at the Australian National University, Broadbridge once aspired to a career in musical theatre and often incorporates ukulele and song into her comedy.
She has performed at the Melbourne International Comedy Festival and become a cult favourite on the Sydney circuit. She is known for her tireless work ethic; in one year, she played almost 400 gigs in front of every imaginable crowd.
‘It is a piss-take, but it’s done with love.’
Steph Broadbridge
There is one punter she’s particularly keen to reach.
“I really want [Raygun] to see it,” she says. “I’m terrified, though. What if she doesn’t like it?
“It is a piss-take, but it’s done with love. You like her at the end, and she wins.”
Raygun: The Musical is at Kinsela’s December 7