This show belongs to the Adelaide Fringe 2025 season. This season is now over.

A cropped promotional banner for a comedy show titled "Which Way?" at Adelaide Fringe 2025. A person wears glasses, a light gray blazer, and brown polo shirt, smiling at the camera against a yellow-orange background. Text shows "LEON FILEWOOD" performing March 4th-9th at Rhino Room's Alley Cat at 5:45PM. Banner includes Melbourne Comedy Festival 2018 "Deadly Funny" winner laurels, Adelaide Fringe and Adelaide Comedy logos, and FringeTIX booking information.

Whichway?

In an era where politicians profit from fearmongering and dividing communities, this timely and hilarious performance cuts through the noise with warmth and sharp-witted storytelling that weaves personal experiences with national headlines. Discover how shared laughter can bridge our deepest divides.

From the grassroots of a little remote community to the heart of urban Australia, this disarmingly funny and warm journey, gives an insight that challenges what media headlines tell us about identity and belonging. About what it means to be Australian. As the Federal election rhetoric heats up and political leaders leverage anxiety for votes, this comedy show reminds us that sometimes the best response to fear, is a good laugh.

Please note: Limited seats available. Get tickets early to avoid disappointment.

Presented by: Leon Filewood

From self-proclaimed village idiot to legal eagle (ok, fine, "legal turtle dove"), Leon Filewood's stand-up comic journey has been as unlikely as breakdancing being an Olympic sport. Yet he won the Melbourne International Comedy Festival's (MICF) National Deadly Funny competition in 2018! Since then, he's been making audiences laugh across Australia's premium stand up comedy venues like the Sydney Comedy Store, and at festivals like the Perth Fringe World and MICF. He found he had to stop telling lawyer jokes. Because lawyers didn't find them funny, and no one else thought they were jokes! While "relatively unknown" in the Australian comedy scene, he's practically a celebrity at his local Bunnings sausage sizzle, where he's considered "one to watch"... mainly because he uses too much sauce
Comedy • Stand-Up
Queensland • World Premiere
 
First Nations Australian
 
Fringe Fund Recipient
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