(Redirected from Improvisational comedy)'Improvisational theatre' (also known as 'improv' or 'impro') is a form of
theatre in which the
actors use improvisational acting techniques to perform spontaneously. Actors typically use
audience suggestions to guide the performance as they create
dialogue, setting, and plot extemporaneously. Improvisational theatre performances tend to be
comedic, although some forms, including
Playback Theatre and
Theatre of the Oppressed, are not necessarily intended to be comedic.
Many improvisational actors also work as scripted actors, and "improv" techniques are often taught in standard acting classes. The basic skills of listening, clarity, confidence, and performing instinctively and spontaneously are considered important skills for actors to develop.
Improvisational comedy
Modern improvisational comedy, as it is practiced in the West, falls generally into two categories: shortform and longform.
Shortform improv consists of short scenes usually constructed from a predetermined game, structure, or idea and driven by an audience suggestion. Many shortform games were first created by
Viola Spolin. The shortform improv comedy television series ''
Whose Line Is It Anyway?'' has familiarized American and British viewers with shortform.
Longform improv performers create shows in which scenes are often interrelated by story, characters, or themes. Longform shows may take the form of an existing type of theater, for example a full-length play or
Broadway-style
musical such as Spontaneous Broadway
[1]. Longform improvisation is especially performed in
Chicago and
New York City. Perhaps the best-known, and considered the first, longform structure is
the Harold, developed by
ImprovOlympic cofounder
Del Close.
Origins
Improvised performance is as old as performance itself. From the 16th to the 18th century,
Commedia dell'arte performers improvised in the streets of Italy
[1]and in the 1890s theatrical theorists and directors such as
Konstantin Stanislavski and
Jacques Copeau, founders of two major streams of acting theory, both heavily utilised improvisation in acting training and rehearsal.
[2]
While some people credit
Dudley Riggs as the first
vaudevillian to use audience suggestions to create improvised sketches, 'modern theatrical improvisation' is generally accepted to have taken form in the classroom with the theatre games of
Viola Spolin in the 1940s and
Keith Johnstone in the 1950s. These rehearsal-room activities evolved quickly to an independent artform worthy of presentation before a paying audience.
Viola Spolin can probably be considered the American Grandmother of Improv. She influenced the first generation of Improv at
The Compass Players in
Chicago, which led to
The Second City. Her son,
Paul Sills, along with
David Shepherd, started The Compass Players and
Second City. They were among the first organised troupes in Chicago, Illinois and from their success, the modern Chicago improvisational comedy movement was spawned.
Much of the current "rules" of comedic improv were first formalized among The Compass Players troupe. From most accounts
Elaine May was central to this intellectual effort.
Mike Nichols, Ted Flicker, and
Del Close were her most frequent collaborators in this regard.
Many of the original cast of
Saturday Night Live came from The Second City and the franchise has produced such comedy stars as
Mike Myers,
Chris Farley and
John Belushi.
Simultaneously, Keith Johnstone's group ''The Theatre Machine'', which originated in
London, was touring Europe. This work gave birth to
Theatresports, at first secretly in Keith's workshops, and eventually in public when Keith moved to Canada.
Toronto has been home to a rich improv tradition.
In San Francisco,
The Committee theater was active during the 1960s.
Modern political improvisation's roots include
Jerzy Grotowski's work in Poland during the late 1950s and early 1960s,
Peter Brook's "happenings" in England during the late 1960s,
Augusto Boal's "Forum Theatre" in South America in the early 1970s, and San Fransico's
The Diggers' work in the 1960s. Some of this work led to pure improvisational performance styles, while others simply added to the theatrical vocabulary and were, on the whole, avant garde experiments.
Joan Littlewood, the English actress and director who was active from the 1930s to 1970s, made extensive use of improv in developing plays for performance. However she was successfully prosecuted twice for allowing her actors to improvise in performance. Until 1968, British law required scripts to be approved by the
Lord Chamberlain's Office. The department also sent inspectors to some performances to check that the approved script was complied with exactly.
Improvisational comedy on film and television
Many
silent filmmakers such as
Charlie Chaplin and
Buster Keaton used improvisation in the making of their films, developing their gags while filming and altering the
plot to fit. The
Marx Brothers were notorious for deviating from the script they were given, their
ad libs often becoming part of the standard routine and making their way into their films.
Improv comedy techniques have also been used in film, television and
stand-up comedy, notably the
mockumentary films of director
Christopher Guest, the recent
HBO television show
Curb Your Enthusiasm created by
Larry David, Nick Cannon's improv comedy show
Wild 'N Out, and most recently,
Thank God You're Here.
Psychology of improvisational theatre
In the field of the Psychology of
Consciousness,
Eberhard Scheiffele explored the altered state of consciousness experienced by actors and improvisers in his scholarly paper:
Acting: an altered state of consciousness. According to G. WIlliam Farthing in "The Psychology of Consciousness"(see
comparative study), actors (in performance, drama classes, or in psychodrama) routinely enter into an altered state of consciousness (ASC). Acting is seen as altering most of the 14 dimensions of changed subjective experience which characterise ASCs according to Farthing, namely: attention, perception, imagery and fantasy, inner speech, memory, higher-level thought processes, meaning or significance of experiences, time experience, emotional feeling and expression, level of arousal, self-control, suggestibility, body image, and sense of personal identity.
Improv process
Improvisational theatre allows an interactive relationship with the audience. Improv groups frequently solicit suggestions from the audience as a source of inspiration, a way of getting the audience involved, and as a means of proving that the performance is not scripted. That charge is sometimes aimed at the masters of the art, whose performances can seem so detailed that viewers may suspect the scenes were planned.
In order for an improvised
scene to be successful, the actors involved must work together responsively to define the parameters and action of the scene, in a process of
co-creation. With each spoken word or action in the scene, an actor makes an ''offer'', meaning that he or she defines some element of the reality of the scene. This might include giving another character a name, identifying a relationship, location, or using
mime to define the physical environment. These activities are also known as ''endowment''. It is the responsibility of the other actors to accept the offers that their fellow performers make; to not do so is known as
blocking, which usually prevents the scene from developing. Some performers may deliberately block (or otherwise break out of character) for comedic effect -- this is known as ''gagging'' -- but this generally prevents the scene from advancing and is frowned upon by many improvisers. Accepting an offer is usually accompanied by adding a new offer, often building on the earlier one; this is a process improvisers refer to as ''"Yes, And..."'' and is considered the cornerstone of improvisational technique.
The unscripted nature of improv also implies no predetermined knowledge about the
props that might be useful in a scene. Improv companies may have at their disposal some number of readily accessible props that can be called upon at a moment's notice, but many improvisers eschew props in favor of the infinite possibilities available through
mime. In improv, this is more commonly known as 'space object work', not 'mime'. And the props and locations created by this technique, as 'space objects'. As with all improv ''offers'', actors are encouraged to respect the validity and continuity of the imaginary environment defined by themselves and their fellow performers; this means, for example, taking care not to walk through the table or "miraculously" survive multiple bullet wounds from another improviser's gun.
Because improv actors may be required to play a variety of roles without preparation, they need to be able to construct characters quickly with physicality,
gestures,
accents,
voice changes, or other techniques as demanded by the situation. The actor may be called upon to play a character of a different age or sex. Character motivations are an important part of successful improv scenes, and improv actors must therefore attempt to act according to the objectives that they believe their character seeks.
Community
Many theatre troupes are devoted to staging improvisational performances and growing the improv community through their training centres. One of the most widespread is the international organization Theatresports, which was founded by
Keith Johnstone, an English director who wrote what many consider to be the seminal work on the relationship between status, story telling and improvisational acting, ''Impro''. There are also many independent companies around the world; a non-exhaustive but lengthy list is available
here. A major group in the south west is the classes of
SAK Comedy Lab. In Brighton on the south coast of England, improvisational company
the Maydays run regular courses and workshops in all forms of improvisation for all levels, and are dedicated to creating a community of improvisers in their area.
In addition to for-profit theatre troupes, there are several college-based improv groups in the United States that are becoming popularized as a result of programs such as
Whose Line is it Anyway?.
Improv luminaries
Some key figures in the development of improvisational theatre are
Avery Schreiber,
Viola Spolin and her son
Paul Sills, founder of Chicago's famed
Second City troupe and originator of
Theater Games, and
Del Close, founder of
ImprovOlympic (along with
Charna Halpern) and creator of the
longform improv known as
The Harold. Others include Dudley Riggs, founder of
Minneapolis'
Brave New Workshop;
Keith Johnstone, the British teacher and writer–author of Impro, who founded the Theatre Machine and whose teachings form the foundation of the popular shortform Theatresports format and
Dick Chudnow, founder of
ComedySportz which evolved its family-friendly show format from Johnstone's Theatersports.
In 1975
Jonathan Fox founded
Playback Theatre, a form of improvised community theatre which is often not comedic and replays stories as shared by members of the audience.
The Groundlings is a popular and influential improv theatre and training center in
Los Angeles, California.
One former Groundlings director, Stan Wells, has generated two new longform styles: the clap-in and transformation styles. Transformation is currently only performed by The Transformers Improv Troupe, but the clap-in form has been performed at the Groundlings,
Upright Citizens Brigade, and at the
ACME Comedy Theatre.
David Shepherd, with Paul Sills, founded the
The Compass Players in Chicago. Shepherd was intent on developing a true "people's Theatre", and hoped to bring political drama to the stockyards. The Compass went on to play in numerous forms and companies, in a number of cities including NY and Hyannis, after the founding of The Second City. A number of Compass members were also founding members of The Second City. In the 1970s, Shepherd began experimenting with group-created videos. He is the author of "That Movie In Your Head", about these efforts. See Coleman, Janet, The Compass: The Improvisational Theatre that Revolutionized American Comedy Chicago, University Of Chicago Press; Reprint edition (November 1, 1991)
References
1. Claudon, David. ''A Thumbnail History of Commedia Dell' arte.'' 2003
2. ''Twentieth Century Acting Training''. ed. Alison Hodge. New York: Routledge, 2000.
On the possibilities of detecting intentions prior to understanding them Povinelli, Daniel J.
See also
★
Ad lib
★
Atellanæ Fabulæ
★
Busking
★
Commedia dell'arte
★
Improvisation
★
List of improvisational theatre companies
★
Guerrilla improv
Further reading
★ Coleman, Janet, The Compass: The Improvisational Theatre that Revolutionized American Comedy Chicago, University Of Chicago Press; Reprint edition (November 1, 1991)
★ Johnstone, Keith. 1987. Impro: Improvisation and the Theatre. Theatre Arts Books
External links
★
The Living Playbook: online collection of improvisational games, by
Seattle troupe
Unexpected Productions.
★
How to Be a Better Improviser: an excellent primer on some of the basic precepts ("ground rules") of improv, by improviser and teacher
Daniel Goldstein.
★
How To Improvise Shakespeare A quick crash course on how to better improvise in the style of Shakespeare.
★
Improvoker features stories, thoughts, and ideas about longform improvisational comedy by improvisers.
★
YesAnd.com features improv news, resources and message boards.
★ The
Improv Resource Center is a community site for dedicated improvisers in Chicago, New York and other parts of the United States.
★
Learn Improv List of improv warm-ups, exercises, and handles.
★
The Far Games Improv games and workshops formats to get wise or laugh trying