Articles and episodes about learning, coaching, and performing improv and comedy. Some of these articles will specifically consider the cognitive aspects of performing improv & comedy (stage or digital).
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Hi Improvisers, Back for some more improv-talk, and another episode for the podcast and YouTube channel. Here it is! Own Your Weirdness: A Guide to Really Good Improv (Performances)We spend a lot of time in improv trying to be good. Trying to do really good improv. We take classes, we get notes, and we watch performers we admire, we take more classes, we get more notes, all in the name of trying to figure out how they do what they do. This process can sometimes lead us down a path of trying to be less like ourselves and more like someone else. THAT PERSON OVER THERE! We try to hide the parts of us that feel messy, weird, or unskilled. (Like we do outside of the scene, maybe?) We think that if we can just get rid of our flaws, we will finally be a “good improviser” (whatever that is. Really.) I mostly believe the opposite is true. Mostly. I mean there are gotchas, sure. But I mostly think one becomes a great improviser by putting more of yourself into the scene, especially the parts you think are weaknesses. I learned this from a completely different area of my performance life: teaching dance fitness. I am a clumsy person, yet I taught urban hip hop for years. I once took over a class for a mentor who was a technically brilliant dancer. I was not. I was so busy comparing myself to him, focusing on all the things I could not do, that I was completely stuck in my head. My biggest fear was falling off the two-foot-high stage. One day, I did just that. I ran to the front of the room, misjudged a jump, and did not land gracefully. So I guess I didn’t fall OFF the stage… I somehow managed to fall ONTO it. Neat. The room went silent. In that moment of complete "failure", I had a choice. I jumped up, threw my hands in the air, and yelled that I was fine. The room erupted into a cheer. That was when I understood my role: connect with the people in that room using what I had. My clumsiness, my biggest perceived weakness, became my greatest asset for building a connection through humour. It became my style. This is the work of improv. Your scene partners and your audience do not need you to be a flawless version of another performer. They need YOU. Your unique brain wiring, your odd specific knowledge, your deadpan delivery, your literal interpretation of things, these are the gifts you bring to the stage. When you commit to who you are, you give your scene partners a clear, honest offer to play with. You stop trying to guess what a “good improviser” would do and you simply react. So be clumsy. Fall on the stage. See what it brings to you and the people around you, whoever is in the scene with you. Anyways, I talk about this stuff in the episode linked below. You can share the web page (or forward this newsletter) to a friend here. Listen or Watch Full EpisodeThe podcast and the youtube episode contains advice on the improv mindset, and might be especially relevant if you feel like you might be “weird” (I call myself this by choice, wanted to take ownership of the term). Learn more about that in the episode below, and get all the exercise directions. And come ask questions or share your own tips in the Improv Update discord general improv chat channel.
Anyways, that's it! Bye! In the kindest of regards, Jen Downloads
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Articles and episodes about learning, coaching, and performing improv and comedy. Some of these articles will specifically consider the cognitive aspects of performing improv & comedy (stage or digital).