Friday, April 4, 2008

Improv principles galore!

Hello again-

I thought I'd put this up, since we're playing theater games today. Sorry, to those of you who can't come! We'll probably let you know on what you missed out on.

Also, these are things that seemed like good tips to me. On a few of them, I reiterated the point a little.

Please read these, and try to keep these in mind at our future warm-ups and performances.

Get into trouble. Go out on a limb without being sure you have a way to recover. The audience will love seeing you deal with the situation you've gotten yourself into. Do not play it "safe".
Scott has said to let them sweat multiple times, I believe. This sounds like it goes along those lines.

Dare to suck big! HA! That's my only comment!

Don't plan ahead. Give up your ideas when the scene doesn't progress as you'd hoped. Just respond moment by moment to what happens, without thinking of a goal that you want the scene to reach. Too often, I think, we see people plan to do something, and get totally hung up on that. The best scenes aren't planned, they're spur of the moment.

Experiment (in performance, not just in classes or practices). Do things on stage that you've never done before, without coordinating them in advance with others. Let yourself discover entirely new skills right during a scene. Discovering new skills is always a good thing!

Love everything unconditionally. Usually loving something rather than hating something leads the scene into genuinely unpredictable territory. Hating something usually just bogs things down. (An instance of making the Active Choice.) For example, if someone gives you cotton candy, you could hate it because you hate circuses, and spend the next five minutes bickering. Or you could love cotton candy, get a sugar high, and wander into a tent where you get sawn in half. I can think of a couple people who definitely need to take this one to heart. Besides....sugar highs rock! ^_^

If there is violence in the scene, act it out in slow motion. This is actually a safety tip, but it's often funny anyway. I say, let's try to avoid violence. However, if we do end up play-fighting....that would be so hilarious!!!!!!

Go with the obvious. This is always the first resort in improv. Often, what is obvious to you is not obvious to other people, but because it connects so naturally with the scene, the audience often perceives it as "brilliant". Intentionally being non-obvious usually just comes across as "forcing it" or "trying too hard". We want to look like it comes naturally, right? So let's be brilliant!

If someone asks you a yes-or-no question and you have no particular inspiration, just say yes and see where it leads. Saying no usually blocks action. Self-explanatory.

Do something original in every game that you have never done or seen before. BUT DON'T PLAN TO. If you feel like doing something, just do it. Don't be afraid of doing something that has never been done before. In fact, do what you think is least likely to happen. The audience will love it. Since when are we realistic, anyways? :P

Commit. Sell It. Put your line out there, make your choice, and let whatever happens happen. Never say a line tentatively, like you need audience approval. Let the audience decide what's funny, let the scene go where it goes. Let me reiterate those first two words again: COMMIT. SELL IT. (Oh, wait. That's 3 words.) That is SO important. Think of your favorite lines from improv warm-ups and performances...they were always said boldly, loudly, and confidently, which is part of what made it funny. Right?

Create Potential, don't just use it up. If all you do is use it up, you eventually run out of potential. So create more, so we don't have to be at a loss!

If you liked those, and want to see the rest of them (I just picked my favorites out), you can go to this website, which is where I found them:

http://greenlightwiki.com/improv/tips_and_techniques

Can't wait until the theater games start!

2 comments:

sktea1 said...

Wow! Great post Court! And a great link... I'll be visiting that improv wiki regularly.

crazyrockerchick said...

Thanks, Scott! Same here...what are some other things that should probably be added to this list? Let me know!