Thu. Nov 14th, 2024
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Two Adelaide Fringe festival comedians say a member of their team was attacked while he was promoting the show last Friday night in the heart of the city.

Comedians Aditya Gautam and Chetan Singh were scheduled to perform that night as part of their show The Racist Immigrants that features a multicultural group of comedians.

But they had to find others to stand in so they could take the victim to the emergency department at the Royal Adelaide Hospital.

Gautam said he was worried when he arrived outside the Rundle Mall venue and saw the show’s sign flung on the ground with blood on and around it.

He said concerned bystanders told him that they had contacted police after witnessing someone being punched in the face.

“Instantly, obviously, I started looking for our friend to see how he is and where he is,” he said.

“I went inside, and the boy was in the bathroom, he was sort of cleaning himself.

“He was cleaning the blood basically, because there was a lot of blood, it was all over his clothes.”

Gautam, who arrived shortly after the attack that occurred about 7:45pm, said they left for the hospital soon after around 8:20pm.

A composite image of two men holding microphones speaking at a stand-up comedy show
Comedians Aditya Gautam and Chetan Singh.(Supplied)

According to Singh, the victim, who is of an Indian background but does not wish to be identified, was approached by two men prior to the attack.

The men, described as being Caucasian and in their early 30s, said they wanted to know about the show, before pushing the victim around when he told them about it.

“They didn’t actually attack him at that point. They just went away and sat there for a little while,” Singh said.

“He moved on from that spot to a different spot, trying to get away from them.

“About five or 10 minutes later, one of those guys came running to him and punched him in the face.”

Singh said the victim had to receive several stitches for the cut on his lip and that his front tooth was chipped in half.

“Obviously, he’s been deeply shaken by what’s happened,” he said.

Attack makes performers feel unsafe

Singh said they would no longer have people spruiking their show in Adelaide – a city he has lived in for nearly two decades.

“A couple of days ago we were doing this ourselves, so we were like, ‘this could’ve happened to us’,” he said.

“It definitely makes us feel really, really unsafe to ever do this kind of marketing again for our show.”

A placard for the Fringe show The Racist Immigrants.
The poster for The Racist Immigrants show that was being promoted.(Supplied)

Gautam said the stand-up show – which premiered at the Adelaide Fringe in 2021, and has since toured Melbourne, Sydney and Perth – was a satirical take on the performers’ experiences of racist attitudes.

“The whole point of the show is to talk about how people from different races and cultures are coming and making Australia home, which is how we want to counter racism,” he said.

“We’re trying to make everybody see how we’re all the same.”

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