Olympic breaker Rachael Gunn, better known as Raygun, has defended a decision to issue legal threats that forced a comedian to cancel her show inspired by Gunn.
Australian comedian Steph Broadbridge was due to debut Raygun: The Musical at Kinselas in Sydney’s Darlinghurst last Saturday evening before performances scheduled for 2025 at comedy festivals in Sydney, Melbourne and Edinburgh.
She canned it after Gunn’s lawyers sent several letters to the show’s promoter, iD Comedy Club, asking it to cancel the show and not use the name “Raygun” or the Olympian’s now famous “kangaroo dance”, as both were Gunn’s intellectual property.
In a video posted to Instagram on Friday afternoon, Gunn told followers: “People assumed that we had developed [the show], that we had approved it. And it damaged many relationships, both personal and professional. That is why my management and legal team had to work so quickly to shut the musical down.
“It was really unfortunate that the show had to be cancelled so close to the launch. I know the artist would have put a lot of work into and that really sucks. But, had we known about it sooner, there could have been a different outcome.”
Gunn said the action was not a reflection of her being unable to handle a joke and that she had moved to trademark her name and pose because other parties were attempting to trademark them.
“I want to take a moment to correct the misinformation. Yes, I have trademarked my name and my now-famous kangaroo silhouette pose, which is being used in just about every Raygun merch out there. Which I’m not profiting off of, by the way,” she said.
Contacted for comment, performer Stephanie Broadbridge said she had nothing to add.