Wednesday, September 29, 2010

BOOK REVIEW: Impro for Storytellers


Impro for Storytellers is the somewhat less philosophical, more exercise oriented version of the first Impro. Many people prefer Storytellers, though I personally enjoy the theorizing of Impro better. Still, as it is a sprawling improv book (nearly 400 pages, ye gods!), there is a lot to benefit from this volume as well.

Reading Impro for Stortellers is a bit like being a fly on the wall of an improv workshop, but the teacher is secretly informing the fly of all his reasonings. This can be a great benfit to new improvisors hungry for lessons but nowhere to learn. Johnstone describes his students' pitfalls (pitfalls a newbie will certainly recognize in himself/herself) and gives straightforward lessons on how to break them free from their constraints. There are copious amounts of exercises described in this book, many familiar to all improvisors and several you may recognize as actual FNI games. Besides some extraneous information on how to handle Theatresports and run your own show, it's all useful information to new performers.

Chapters on "Storytelling" and "Making Things Happen" will be a great boon to those who can't wrap their minds around the ideas in Impro. There are many great lessons on opening up your mind and spicing up your stories. The chapter on "Character" is also very useful. Most improv books have tons to say about scenework but little on character, so Johnstone's discussions here will be great for anyone who wants to break free from themselves on stage. Some people may find these ideas a bit too "theater-y," which is silly considering improv is nothing but theater, but you should take a gander anyway.

Storytellers may be a better start and more digestible than Impro, but I highly recommend both if you wish to pursue improv further.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

BOOK REVIEW: Impro


Keith Johnstone's two improv books (Impro and Impro for Storytellers) are a bit headier than the straight-forward Truth in Comedy. It's what you might expect from a man who wrote a play called Moby Dick, in which a sperm cell grows millions of times its size and escapes a fish bowl to wreck havoc on the highs seas. In Impro, Johnstone is chiefly concerned with bringing imagination back to the adult actor's mind.

He does this focusing on only four main points: 1) Status 2) Spontaneity 3) Narrative Skills 4) Masks. While a long book for only four chapters, Johnstone's copious examples and exercises create a rich understanding of each topic and can really go a long way to opening up your mind onstage. Here's the rough break down of each:

  1. Status - Johnstone explains how knowing your character's place on the "pecking order" can generate ideas. Whether you are Master, Servant, or seesawing up and down the status ladder, being aware of how others affect you (and allowing yourself to be affected) can make creating characters and stories much easier.
  2. Spontaneity - Knowing that there are no correct choices in improv. We spend way too much time in real life struggling against our imaginations, so when it comes to the stage, break free. Be obscene, be psychotic, and strangely enough...be obvious!
  3. Narrative Skills - How a story isn't just a random collection of events, but a collection of ideas that reincorporate what has already been created. Johnstone also illustrates the principle that most stories are merely routines broken.
  4. Masks - Usually the most derided chapter, Johnstone gives examples of how he uses masks to open up actors and make them make larger choices.

Impro is a philosophical book, but there are plenty of handy exercises within and copious food for thought. The chapter on Masks will seem irrelevant and 99% of you will never really get a chance to explore the ideas within, but I can tell you it's all true. While not as direct as Johnstone's examples, playing the puppeteer in "Bored Morticians" is pretty darn close to mask work. Having even that slight barrier between the character and myself has caused some insane ideas, so don't assume this chapter is completely worthless. Impro is a good next step book after you think you've gotten the "rules" down.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Welcome

Hello all,

It is your humble doorman here, John Feightner the name. If you're new to our little dog and pony show, let me be the second person* to say, "Welcome."

I'm hoping many of you will find your way back to our show week after week. If you've made it past the basement monsters, sat through one show, and actually taken the time to click the link that lead to this bloggity-blog-blog, I assume you've taken an interest already. We're here all year, so don't be a stranger. Join us. We are not a cult.

This is your show, folks. FNI was started years ago by a dreaded flock of theater students who wanted to run an improv workshop. They were a talented bunch and gathered new performers week after week, as well as picking up a few people who just wanted to watch. On most college campuses (campii?), this would have eventually turned into an improv troupe: a gangly set of hopeful geeks presenting their own shows at coffee houses and campus events. Instead, these proto-FNIers decided to create a community. A place where anyone could perform. They rented a theater and made admission as cheap as they could make it. And we've kept the tradition running. FNI is not a money making machine. It's just a space. A space for you.

FNI is different every week. It's informed by the people in it. So bring your thoughts, bring your ideas, bring your weird. Bring whatever baggage you got; we'll add heat and stir.

If you've felt it already, it's all true: FNI is one of the most unique little gifts this 'Burgh has to offer. You won't find it anywhere else. No one else is stupid enough to show up every week with no show, no performers, and hope that everything works out.

And it has worked out. For 21 years we've kept the fires burning. It's your turn to stir the coals.

So remember the words of our elders: Fear not failure. Welcome your performers. Be courteous. Remember to listen. Respect the space.

And everbody have fun tonight.



*Ben has beaten me to the punch, but, then again, that's his job.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

BOOK REVIEW: Truth in Comedy



(every week I'll be posting improv book reviews. as FNI is usually a starting out place for many performers, we want to showcase some helpful guides for those who want to learn how improvising really works)

Truth in Comedy is THE improv starter book, my young Padawan. If you have even an inkling for knowing more about improvisation, all the basic information you need is found in this slim, handy volume. As stated in the introduction:

"The simple, basic rules laid down in this book will result in much funnier, intelligent, and more interesting scenes. Deliberately trying to be funny or witty is a considerable drawback, and often leads to disaster. Honest responses are simpler and more effective. By the same token, making patterns and connections is much more important than making jokes."

In twelve simple chapters, Truth in Comedy lays the foundation of honesty, trust, agreement, staying in the moment, scene building, and pattern recognition that is the key to all improv comedy. Comedy in improv doesn't come from jokes (one-liners and word play) but from staying true to human relationships and the humor that comes from personal interactions. While Truth in Comedy teaches you to fly unfettered toward the unexpected, it shows that even the most bizarre scenes possible must be anchored in real emotions, wants, and needs.

Each chapter is highly organized with clear examples given to illustrate each point. Using actual improv scenes from workshops and shows, Charna Halpern fully describes the do's and don'ts allowing you to see how following the "rules" make a scene grow and how the pitfalls truly short-circuit creativity. Comedians like Mike Myers, Bill Murray, and Chris Farley are named dropped throughout, but it is the teachings and philosophy of Del Close that truly paint this book. He is man, the myth, the legend of improvisation and you will know by the end why he was dubbed co-author of this book.

You will also be introduced to the long-form improv game, "The Harold," in this volume. While you won't find the particulars of this game too useful at FNI, the lessons of support and team building used to create the Harold can certainly be transcribed to the simpler scenework seen on our stage. You might not need those last two chapters now, but don't avoid them either.

Let me put it this way: if you've bothered to take time out of your day to read an improv comedy blog, you need Truth in Comedy. Here's the Amazon link. Scared of internet demons? Just go to the college bookstore and ask them to order it. This is the first book I ever read about improv and rereading it for this review still gave me a powerful charge. Do it!

Monday, August 16, 2010

Quick Update

Friends of FNI, this blog will be considerably more active once the new season of Friday Nite Improvs begins.

In the interim, what topics would you find most helpful?

Monday, May 10, 2010

Basic Rules of Improv

Below you'll find a quick and dirty list of some of the "rules" of improv. We'll address each one individually later, but consider this your improv cheat sheet.

All of the "rules" boil down to one basic concept: Make your partner(s) look good.

If you're more concerned about making your scene partner look good than you are about making yourself look good, you'll both look better in the end. Improv is a team sport. Respect the give and take of the scene. You are creating something out of nothing, so give your partner something to work with. Take what your partner gives you and build on it. Make your partner look good (and you'll look better in the process).

Here are a few tips to help you do that:

Do:

1. Do make choices.
You've got a one word suggestion, or maybe a location and a task. After that, it's all you and your partner. You both need to be making choices, and every choice you make is a gift to your partner that they can work with. Every small choice you make (a strong character, a hidden conflict, an interesting action) adds up to make a great scene.

2. Do accept your partner's choices.
When your partner makes a choice, it is a gift. Accept it and build on it. You'll hear this referred to as "Yes, and"-ing. Yes, I accept your choice, and I'm building on it.

3. Do have an open mind.
So much of improv is free association. When an improv scene stalls, it's often because of internal second guessing on the part of one or both partners. Trust your gut instinct (as long as your gut instinct isn't to be a jerk to your partner.)

Don't:

1. Don't deny.
Person A: "Welcome to the shoe factory, Mr. Smith, I think you'll like working here! I'll be your supervisor."
Person B: "You're crazy! This isn't a shoe factory, this is the Moon! And I'm YOUR supervisor!"


Congratulations, Person B, you've just derailed the scene. We've all seen denial. We've all done it, too. Let's hang our heads for a second and then move on. It might feel like a cheap laugh, or the way to get to do the scene that you really wanted to do. Well, cut it out. If your partner gives you a premise, you accept it, shape it, and build on it. (See: Yes, and)

2. Don't ask open questions.
"Where are we?"
"Who are you?"
"What's the plan?"
"Why are you doing that?"


In an improv scene, open questions are a way to speak without saying anything at all. By asking questions like those, you are essentially handing responsibility for the scene over to your partner, while still maintaining the appearance of participating in the scene.
"You choose where we are."
"You choose who you are."
"You come up with an idea for a plan."
"You explain what you are doing and why, thus creating the entire basis for a scene singlehandedly."

3. Don't pimp your partner.
"Hey, read this hilarious joke in this book."
"Sing that really high and fast song your were singing earlier."
"Show me that breakdance move you're always talking about."


Pimping is asking your partner to do something ridiculous onstage that you have good reason to believe he or she cannot or will not do. This is another one of those things that feels like an easy laugh. You get to say something funny, and if your partner can't do it, they look like a fool, and you assume you look like less of a fool in comparison (you are wrong). If they can do it, you've just caused something ridiculous to happen on stage. It seems like a win/win for you. It's not. First, you look like an asshole, and not in a hilarious way. Second, it's just not as funny as you think it is. Ridiculous things happening onstage is a good thing. But if you want a joke told, or a dance done, do it yourself.

These tips will help you on stage, but ultimately, what makes a great improviser is getting onstage and taking risks. Failure really is ok, especially when you learn from it!