
This hyperactive, interactive, competitive show may not wind up running for 34 years at Astor Place Theater like “Blue Man Group,” a previous tenant, but “Burnout Paradise” runs every night for 17 miles, more or less. That’s how much distance the Australians running on four treadmills collectively clock, and whether it’s more or less is crucial to the contest – if anything can be said to be “crucial” in this Fringe-flavored frenetic silliness.
“Burnout Paradise,” a production of the five-member Pony Cam Collective, is all about endurance – as an aim, as a theme, and as an engine of its entertainment.

Four performers — Claire Bird, William Strom, Dominic Weintraub and Hugo Williams — take turns on each of the treadmills, which each are labeled, and have a different mission. For “Survival,” the mission is to cook and serve (to two volunteers from the audience) a three-course meal. For “Leisure,” it’s to perform all of a To Do list that covers a white board, mostly mundane tasks such as brushing your teeth, washing your hair, painting your nails (although they’re not so mundane when done live on stage while walking on a treadmill) but also some unlikely tasks; my favorite was “duck hunting.” For “Performance,” they sing, dance or recite Shakespeare. The quietest but in some ways cleverest is Admin, the aim of which is to fill out a grant application. The night I attended (for the show is different at each performance) they were fill out a grant for themselves, which you see projected on a screen behind them: “Pony Cam are a collective of five artists who make formally experimental theater that is collectively devised…”
They are supposed to complete all four missions by the end of four 12-minute rounds, while – to be clear — walking or running on the treadmills the entire time.
After each round, they tell us how much distance they ran on the treadmill. If they don’t finish all four missions, and beat their previous total record for distance, audience members are offered a refund.
Ava Campbell, the host and fifth member of Pony Cam, explains all this at the outset; she also puts the running times on a board she pulls down from the ceiling, rushes around serving cups of Gatorade to audience members, and hawks Pony Cam merch.
What’s key to the joy many audience members get from “Burnout Paradise” is the opportunity to participate; they jump up unbidden in a constant stream to help (For the duck hunt I mentioned, the performer held up a wooden outline of a duck, while an audience member shot bee-bees at it.) They take photos of the stage from their smart phone, and email them for use in the grant application; they fetch the spices for the meal; they paint the face of the performer.
The effect of all this activity by audience and actors and host is deliberate chaos, made all the more so by some fancy, busy video, lighting and sound design.
Pony Cam began performing this stunt-filled show at the Melbourne Fringe Festival, went on to Edinburgh Fringe, and has been touring with it ever since. At each venue, critics seem to see it as a commentary on the rat race, and as a creator of community. It’s true that before the contest begins, the runner’s individual profiles are projected on the screen, offering jokey biographical information such as their strengths and weaknesses, and how burned out they are, from 4/10 to 9/10. But little is made of this, and it’s easier to see the hammering these athletic performers put themselves through as closer to one of the many reality TV athletic competitions.
“Burnout Paradise” is scheduled to run at Astor Place Theater until June. Will it be extended? Will it become a fixture like “Blue Man Group?” If it does, eventually the original cast, who devised this self-torture for themselves, will have to be replaced. When they are, will this just be torture?
Burnout Paradise
Astor Place Theater through June 28
Running time: 70 minutes no intermission
Tickets: $39 to $119
Created and performed by Pony Cam: Claire Bird, Ava Campbell, William Strom, Dominic Weintraub and Hugo Williams.
Video Design Pony Cam and Jim Findlay, Lighting Design, Dans Maree Sheehan, Sound Design, Cody Spencer
Photos by Austin Ruffer