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Wednesday, 1 April 2026 - 17:40

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Tired of touring, Randy Feltface says he's still funnier than terminally-ill Teletubbies

Fresh off a string of sold-out shows across the Netherlands and a high-profile appearance on the RTL comedy program Lubach, Randy Feltface should be on top of the world. He’s gearing up for the April 1 release of his highly anticipated new YouTube special, "First Banana". Yet, underneath the bright stage lights and global adoration, the existential purple Australian puppet is desperately yearning for domestic normalcy. Feltface stripped away the fabric to reveal the raw exhaustion of a performer who is fundamentally burned out by the spotlight, when he sat down for the 50th episode of the Dam Yankee podcast, now on YouTube, Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and more services.

After more than 20 years on the comedy circuit, his life has become a scattered puzzle of storage units across continents, he tells Dam Yankee host Zack Newmark. Feltface maintains a storage locker in Los Angeles and a shipping container full of old props in Victoria, Australia, while living entirely out of a suitcase.

"I sleep in a different bed every night of the week, and I'm not for one second... complaining about my lifestyle," Feltface clarified, acknowledging his immense success. "I love touring, I'm... perpetually grateful for the world that I have created and that I get to exist in ." However, the fatigue is undeniable.

"I'm sick of it," he confessed. "I want to do some laundry. I want a washing machine. That's too much to ask. I want a goddamn washing machine and a bookshelf. Oh, and a cup. I want a mug."

[See him discuss the brutal reality of his early industry rejections at 08:39]

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Image removed.
Australian stand-up comedian Randy Feltface - Credit: Dylan Woodley / Supplied to NL Times - License: All Rights Reserved

That simple desire for a morning matcha in his own mug starkly contrasts with the grueling, chaotic path he took to achieve worldwide fame. In his early days, being a purple, fabric-based standup comic meant fighting through a wall of prejudice in traditional comedy clubs. Feltface didn't sugarcoat the early humiliation he faced from industry gatekeepers.

"I got a lot of, you know, rejection in the early days," he recalled, dropping his manic energy for a moment of grim reflection. Promoters would dismiss him outright with incredibly specific insults. "A lot of 'We'll call you when we need someone who looks like Tinky Winky from the Teletubbies with a life threatening autoimmune disease. We'll get on the phone when we need that, Randy.'"

Instead of walking away, Feltface used that grotesque imagery as fuel, embracing an intensely physical, emotionally dense style of storytelling. But constantly throwing his body around the stage takes a massive toll. "I'm very Buster Keaton in the way I carry my injuries," Feltface revealed. "I'm always limping around with something, you know? It's all part of the job. Anything for a laugh, really."

With his body battered and his patience for living out of a suitcase wearing incredibly thin, the beloved comedian is standing at a critical crossroads. As Newmark pressed him on exactly where he would plant his roots and what it would take to finally get him off the road for good, Feltface’s answer changed the entire trajectory of the interview. Will the global icon finally hang up his microphone for a quiet life, or is he trapped in the tour cycle forever?

[Find out if Randy Feltface is retiring from the road at 18:45]

Despite the physical toll of 20 years on the road, Feltface admits there is a unique energy he finds when performing for audiences in the Netherlands. The connection with Dutch crowds is part of what keeps him going even when he feels he’s "evolving the wrong way". The thrill of the live environment as something that can’t be replicated, noting, "I love touring, I'm... perpetually grateful for the world that I have created and that I get to exist in".

He finds Dutch audiences to be "fantastic", and the support he has received from talk show host and comedian Arjen Lubach has been instrumental. "The Netherlands is the one area of Europe where I've really managed to cultivate an audience by coming back," he says.

"I love touring here because the ticket sales are great, the audiences are enthusiastic," adding, "I feel like we have a relationship outside of me just being on stage. It's a bit more familiarity."

[Hear what Randy says about selling out theaters in Amsterdam, Eindhoven, and Rotterdam at 37:48]

This full episode of Dam Yankee can be seen on YouTube, or listen to the Dam Yankee on all major podcast platforms.

Randy Feltface is currently on tour with comedian Brodi Snook in the United States, which continues through the end of May. The duo then head back out on the road for more North American tour dates in September. Follow Feltface on YouTube, Instagram, TikTok, and Facebook for updates.

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Episode highlights

  • The "Autoimmune Tinky Winky" Rejection: When discussing the difficulties of getting gigs as a "purple person" made of fabric, Randy reveals the brutal rejections of his early career. He quotes promoters who told him, "We'll call you when we need someone who looks like Tinky Winky from the Teletubbies with a life-threatening autoimmune disease". [View Clip]
  • His No-Pockets U.S. Presidential Bid: Randy loves the U.S. so much, that he ran for president there in 2024, and could see making it a home. "I've built a career in America. I've put all my eggs in the United States of America basket," he says. At the same time, "the country's in a very, very strange place at the moment," certainly not because a purple puppet can run for office. [View Clip]
  • A Nomad Who "Just Wants a Washing Machine": Despite his fame, Randy admits he is "sick" of the perpetual touring life. He confesses that he is in his mid-40s, with belongings scattered in storage lockers across the globe, and he sleeps in a different bed every night. With a genuine tone of desperation he says, "I want a goddamn washing machine and a bookshelf. Oh, and a cup... I want a mug". [View Clip]
Subscribe to the podcast on Youtube

Guest background

  • Born in Australia in 1980
  • Manufactured from material in the United States
  • Started as a stand-up comedian in 2005
  • Quit drinking and smoking and became a vegan
  • Currently touring his Gimmick show
  • Releasing his new special, First Banana, on April 1
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