Irony Done Here.
Created and performed
by Shortis and Simpson. Sound engineer Bevan Noble. Smith’s Alternative. Smith’s
Alternative. March 21-22 2026
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
Canberra’s supreme satirists have been serving up full platters of irony and swipes at the establishment for years. Shortis and Simpson’s latest offering is no exception. But there is a difference. Irony Done Here is a retrospective look at the last 30 years of music and song that have delighted audiences. Musician and songwriter John Shortis has composed a litany of songs that have been sung by singer and choir leader Moya Simpson. They bristle with wit and mockery. Simpson sings with a cheeky sleight of the vocal chords, at times joined in by Shortis with his trademark grin that laughs at life’s foibles. There is no offense in the smile, only a delighted amusement at the silliness of human behaviour, political shenanigans and social issue absurdity.
What makes Irony Done Here a
must be revived show is not only its retrospective collection of Shortis and
Simpson’s shows over the past thirty years but its nostalgic glimpse of the
vast contribution that the duo has given to the Canberra community and the
nation over the past thirty years since their car broke down in Bungendore and
the rest is history. The title of the show reflects their quick wit when a next
door neighbour’s sign Ironing Done Here inspired the title Irony Done
Here. In the intimate setting of their spiritual home Smith’s Alternative
the closing night audience was treated to a sentimental journey down the years
from Simpson’s native England and Shortis’s work on TV jingles to a triumphant
song writing and singing partnership that has cast a discerning eye on the
funny side of history.
But wait! That’s not all! Simpson’s contribution to Dean Cameron’s lakeside event The Dreamkeeper gave rise to the creation of community choirs Can Belto and the Worldly Goods Choir. Shortis’s research into the collections of so many cultural institutions from yet another spiritual home the National Library to the CSIRO (Sounds of Science) have cast a satirical eye on our PMs from Edmund Barton to Tony Abbot on one hand and the behaviour of the pollinating honey bee on the other. Key moments in our nation’s history such as the Dismissal have been revealed through laughter and song and serious satire and Shortis and Simpson’s nostalgic retrospective is a vital account of the duo’s shows and accomplishments over the past decades.
Rumours of retirement appear
somewhat overstated. Simpson suggests that Shortis’s brain will never stop
whirling and there’s plenty a song still to be sung. I found Irony Done Here
intriguing, informative and hugely entertaining in a charming and feel good way
that had me laughing, thinking and humming along. I hope that the retrospective
can be revived as a tribute to history and the many artists who have
contributed to Shortis and Simpson’s journey over the past thirty years in
Bungendore and nationwide. There’s no keeping a good duo down apparently and
audiences can catch Shortis and Simpson's The World At Our Feet on this Friday at Ainslie Arts Centre with the Worldly Goods Choir and Liz Lea’s senior dance group GOLD. It
will be a good opportunity to see irony done there.







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