REVIEW · ORLANDO
Orlando: The Outta Control Magic Comedy Dinner Show
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by WonderWorks Orlando · Bookable on GetYourGuide
A one-man show turns your dinner into chaos. The Outta Control Magic Comedy Dinner Show in Orlando mixes Tony Brent’s magic with nonstop audience participation, all in a 125-seat room built for close laughs. Two things I really like: the food is truly unlimited, and the jokes lean hard toward both adults and kids.
You’re also not stuck as a polite spectator. You may get pulled into mind-reading, predictions, and vanish-and-reappear style bits, so the room stays lively. One thing to consider: if you or your kids want a quiet, sit-and-watch evening, this one may feel too hands-on.
In This Review
- 6 key reasons this Orlando dinner show is worth your time
- Inside WonderWorks Orlando, where you start with the upside-down building
- The Tony Brent format: magic, impersonations, and improv in one fast lane
- How long is the show, really?
- The dinner part: unlimited pizza, salad, dessert, and drinks at your table
- What I’d watch for
- Where you fit in: how audience participation works here
- What the room feels like: close-up laughs, fast pacing, and constant momentum
- Price and value: is $39 fair for pizza, drinks, and magic?
- Who should book this show (and who might skip it)
- Kids policy to know
- Practical tips: IDs, parking, and getting seated without stress
- Should you book the Orlando Outta Control Magic Comedy Dinner Show?
- FAQ
- Where do I meet for the Outta Control Magic Comedy Dinner Show?
- How long is the experience?
- What food and drinks are included?
- Is it good for children?
- What ID do I need to bring?
- Is there parking nearby, and is the venue wheelchair accessible?
6 key reasons this Orlando dinner show is worth your time

- Small room, big energy with only 125 seats per show, so you feel part of it
- Unlimited pizza (cheese and pepperoni) plus salad and dessert at tableside
- Unlimited drinks: beer, wine, and soda keep the evening moving
- Tony Brent is the whole show: magic, impersonations, and improv in one nonstop run
- You may be involved in predictions, mind reading, and disappearing acts
- WonderWorks setting: the upside-down building makes the whole thing feel like an event before the show starts
Inside WonderWorks Orlando, where you start with the upside-down building

This show is at WonderWorks Orlando, and the meeting point clue is easy: look for the upside-down house. That matters because it sets expectations. You’re not wandering into a generic theater. You’re walking into a place designed to feel a little off-center and fun.
WonderWorks also helps with the logistics. Parking is available at the Pointe Orlando parking garage, and the fees are listed as $5 for the first hour, $2 for each additional hour, with a cap of $10 per day. If you’re arriving from a day of parks or beaches, that cap is a nice safety net.
I’d plan to arrive with enough buffer to park, find the venue, and get seated without rushing. Even when the dinner show runs on a tight schedule, early arrival usually means fewer moments of scrambling for your seat or drink.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Orlando
The Tony Brent format: magic, impersonations, and improv in one fast lane

The star here is Tony Brent, a one-man performer doing a mix of magic, impersonations, and high-energy improvisational comedy. The show is built around quick turns. You get laughs, then a trick, then audience interaction, then more laughs again.
The “Tony Brent is a cast of dozens” concept isn’t just marketing. The performance style is meant to keep you guessing who he’ll be next and what he’ll do with the attention in the room. That’s a big reason the energy stays high.
The magic angle is interactive in multiple ways:
- mind-reading style moments
- predictions that come true
- personal items that vanish and reappear
If you’re the type who likes witnessing the impossible but also enjoys the human chaos part, this fits well. It’s not only about the trick. It’s about the comedy pacing and the way the performer keeps the room engaged.
How long is the show, really?
The duration is listed as 1.5 hours. Inside that dinner-show structure, the performance itself runs about 60 minutes, with the overall evening feeling like a longer stretch once you factor in getting food and drinks moving.
One useful takeaway: don’t judge the evening by the magic time alone. The “eating while it happens” format adds weight to the experience, especially since the food and drinks are continuous rather than a single quick course.
The dinner part: unlimited pizza, salad, dessert, and drinks at your table

This is a big part of the value story. Your tableside service includes unlimited cheese and pepperoni pizza, plus salad and dessert. On top of that, drinks are unlimited too: beer, wine, and soda.
That means you’re not stuck waiting for one round and then going dry while you watch. The show moves fast, and the food rhythm is designed to keep you fed while you react to whatever is happening onstage.
From the feedback I’m using as a guide, a few patterns show up:
- The pizza quality gets praised as more than just filler.
- Drinks are topped up regularly.
- The food keeps coming, so you don’t feel like you paid for a snack-sized meal.
What I’d watch for
Pizza isn’t exactly flexible by nature. One experience note I think is important: if your group includes picky eaters who really dislike pizza, this may not land. The good news is that salad and dessert are included too, but the main “unlimited” item is still pizza.
If you know your kid eats little more than plain food, you can treat this show as a chance to test a small menu choice before you commit to an appetite-heavy dinner.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Orlando
Where you fit in: how audience participation works here
This isn’t a stuffy show where you stay in your seat and clap at the end. Participation is a core element. With only 125 seats per show, it’s easier for the performer to connect with the front rows and scattered audience members throughout the room.
What you might experience ranges from comedic prompts to moments where you help with tricks. The key is that the show is structured so participation feels like part of the entertainment, not a surprise ambush.
Practical tip: if you’re uncomfortable being picked, you can still have a good time. But you’ll get more out of it if you’re willing to laugh when the performer points you out, answers a question, or asks for a volunteer.
Also, this helps explain why the show tends to work across ages. One review highlighted a huge age range being engaged, from kids to adults. Another pointed out that families became part of the act, not just observers.
What the room feels like: close-up laughs, fast pacing, and constant momentum

The experience is built to keep you on your toes. The show keeps ticking through jokes and tricks at a pace that doesn’t drag.
The “every 8 seconds” phrasing may sound dramatic, but it matches what this format is trying to do: keep the crowd reacting. With audience participation as a centerpiece, you don’t wait long for a new target of laughter.
The close seat count helps too. In a packed theater with thousands of people, you get distance. Here, the room stays tight enough that you feel included even when you’re not volunteering.
There’s also a staff role in making the evening feel smooth. Several reviews praised service and drink refills, which matters because the comedy and magic are loud and fast. If the tables aren’t taken care of, the whole thing can feel stressful.
One name that came up specifically was Angelica, praised as a fabulous server. That’s the kind of detail you want to see for a meal-and-show format: people being attentive so you’re free to focus on the show.
Price and value: is $39 fair for pizza, drinks, and magic?
At $39 per person, the pricing is worth thinking about in a realistic way. This isn’t a bare ticket to a magic show. You’re getting a full dinner-show package with:
- unlimited pizza (cheese and pepperoni)
- salad and dessert
- unlimited beer, wine, and soda
- a one-man performance blending magic, impersonations, and improv
For Orlando, where many evening activities are expensive and often feel like a separate ticket plus a separate meal, bundling is the point. You’re paying for entertainment and eating at the same time. If you tend to snack while you travel, this could still work. But it gets especially valuable if you’re hungry and you want the evening to feel like one plan, not two.
It’s also praised as well worth the cost in multiple experiences. That lines up with the included food and the fact that the room is small enough to feel interactive rather than mass-audience casual.
The only “value risk” is if your group doesn’t like pizza or strongly prefers a traditional, quiet theater show. If that’s you, you might feel like you paid for food you didn’t want. But if you’re okay with pizza as the main event, this is a good deal.
Who should book this show (and who might skip it)
This show is a strong fit if you want an evening that’s:
- family friendly without being boring for adults
- comedy-forward, magic included
- interactive enough to keep everyone awake
- low-stress compared to planning a full second attraction day
It also works well for mixed-age groups. One note I liked: the performance engaged a wide span of ages, from 7 to 72, which tells you the pacing doesn’t cater only to one group.
It’s less ideal if you want:
- a quiet, sit-back experience
- a show with minimal audience interaction
- a menu that isn’t pizza-centered
And if you’re planning around very specific food restrictions, the data you have here centers on pizza, salad, dessert. That means you should check with the venue directly if your needs go beyond standard preferences.
Kids policy to know
Children 3 and under still need a ticket to enter even though they are free. That’s a small detail that can cause friction if you assume no ticket is needed. Build that into your planning.
Practical tips: IDs, parking, and getting seated without stress

You’ll want a passport or ID card. That’s not a universal rule for every attraction, so take it seriously for a smoother check-in.
For parking, the Pointe Orlando garage setup is handy. The fees are straightforward:
- $5 for the first hour
- $2 for each additional hour
- no more than $10 per day
If you’re staying near International Drive or you’re doing a WonderWorks stop anyway, this keeps your evening practical.
As for timing: the show is usually in the evening. I’d treat it as a dinner plan, not a late-night add-on. You’ll want to be seated and ready before the first wave of food and drink starts rolling.
Wheelchair access is listed, so the venue supports mobility needs. If you have specific seating requirements, it’s smart to contact the operator ahead of time so you’re not guessing at what will work best once you arrive.
Should you book the Orlando Outta Control Magic Comedy Dinner Show?
If you like comedy, you enjoy a little audience chaos, and you want dinner handled while you’re entertained, I think this is an easy yes. The combination of unlimited pizza, unlimited drinks, and an interactive one-man magic-comedy show priced at $39 makes it feel like a smart Orlando evening plan.
I’d hesitate only if your group hates pizza or strongly prefers a traditional theater vibe with zero involvement. If that sounds like your crew, look for a more standard show format and keep your dinner separate.
If you want one ticket that turns into both a meal and a laugh-filled evening at WonderWorks, this is the kind of plan that pays off fast.
FAQ
Where do I meet for the Outta Control Magic Comedy Dinner Show?
Meet by looking for the upside-down house at WonderWorks Orlando.
How long is the experience?
The experience is listed at 1.5 hours, and the performance itself runs about 60 minutes within that longer dinner-show format.
What food and drinks are included?
Unlimited cheese and pepperoni pizza, salad, and dessert are included. Unlimited beer, wine, and soda are also included.
Is it good for children?
The show is family friendly. Children 3 and under still need a ticket to enter, even though they are free.
What ID do I need to bring?
Bring a passport or an ID card.
Is there parking nearby, and is the venue wheelchair accessible?
Parking is available at the Pointe Orlando parking garage, with fees listed as $5 for the first hour, $2 for each additional hour, and no more than $10 per day. The show is wheelchair accessible.






























