Travis from iMusical introducing the show. (at Washington Improv Theater)
Can we talk about those sandals?
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@launchtherocket
Travis from iMusical introducing the show. (at Washington Improv Theater)
Can we talk about those sandals?

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
“We’re gonna build a fourth wall, and the audience is gonna pay for it.” - Trump teaching improv
The Mystery Machine
A lot of new improvisers, and some not so new improvisers, think their job in an improv scene is to “bring something” to the moment or to come up with something creative and good. This results in a lot of improvisers getting into their heads way too much and trying too hard.
Improvisation is a process, typically conducted between two or more people. It’s a process that involves listening, agreement, support, justification, and a lot more. If you trust the process, the scene goes well. If you don’t trust the process, and instead you try to make something happen, then typically the scene will not go well.
I’ve been working on this metaphor in my head for what improvisation really is, and I’m gonna throw it out there.
Improvisation is like a mystery machine. This machine is sitting in the center of the stage. It has multiple hand cranks on it (one for however many improvisers are in the scene) and when you turn those hand cranks in the correct way, a beautiful and surprising product pops out.
You can’t just walk up to the mystery machine and say, “I’m going to make a funny scene about Dinosaurs!” and start cranking away and expect to get what you want. The machine will almost never give you what you want.
But if you and your scene partner both turn your hand cranks at the same speed, together in unison, the machine will produce something wonderful. If one of you cranks faster than the other you’ll get garbage. If you aren’t going in the same direction...garbage.Â
But if you trust the process of improvisation, and simply turn the cranks on the machine together, you’ll always get something interesting. It might be funny. It might be sweet. It might be real and grounded. It might be crazy. But it will definitely be worthwhile.Â
Lately I feel like I haven't been doing a good enough job of being creative and adding info to a scene. My strong suit has always been finding and specifying game, but recently I've been having more moments where I think "I need to add something right now," and being at a loss for words. My usual approach is to use my personal experience, but that often runs dry. Do you have any other advice for getting better at creating information from nothing?
Commit harder. Think of what just happened before the scene started. Look at the other character and make an observation about them.
Commit harder is the answer to almost all improv problems.
In improv there's no wrong way. There's just the new right way.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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We work too hard at the top of the scene. We think we need to figure out everything in the first few lines. Are you my mother? Are you my boss? Are we on a bank heist? Are we on the playground? Is …
We work too hard at the top of the scene. We think we need to figure out everything in the first few lines. Are you my mother? Are you my boss? Are we on a bank heist? Are we on the playground? Is that a cane in your hand or a magical staff? Do we need to know everything? No. We don’t. And the audience doesn’t care if we come up with some amazing back story.
The audience wants to see our behavior. They want to know how we relate to each other. That’s what a relationship is.
I’m weak and you are strong.
I’m calm and confident, you are jumpy and nervous.
I’m an optimist, you are a pessimist.
You need to be mothered, but I can’t do it because I’m repulsed by you.
You are the bully and I’m scared, but I’m going to stand up to you as best I can.
We are both so excited to see each other that we are jumping up and down like teenage girls.
I am trying to seduce you, and you are shocked.
These are all things that can be established in a very short amount of time. Sometimes we can walk on stage and feel it immediately. We notice it in each other’s behavior and how we feel. The audience sees it too. It’s clear and simple and right in front of us to play with. But instead we walk on stage worried about the who, the what and the where. Get out there instead and worry about the how.
“But, what about the game?”
Behavior is a game. And context is important. Yes, that is true. But instead of spending all your time worrying about yes anding the context, start with behavior and let the context tumble out. It will. You might need to practice it, but it will.
I’m weak and you are strong, and then it tumbles out that you are a private in the army and I am your drill sergeant.
I’m calm and confident, you are jumpy and nervous, and then it just spills out that we are breaking into a safe and you are the safe cracker.
I’m an optimist and you are a pessimist, and you are also my physical therapist.
You need to be mothered, but I can’t do it because I’m repulsed by you,and I’m also your mother.
You are a bully and I’m scared, but I’m going to stand up to you as best I can, because you are the IT guy whose job it is to fix my laptop damnit!
We are both so excited to see each other that we are jumping up and down like teenage girls, and it’s a reunion of cellmates… in a prison.
I’m trying to seduce you, you are shocked, and you are my wife.
I’ll let you in on a secret though. Sometimes the context can simply be the most obvious and straightforward. You are the bully and I’m scared, and we are both just kids. And if we play the behavior and develop this relationship–this way in which we relate–often it’s pretty damn funny too. Yes, the strange context can help make it weirder and funnier and perhaps works better if you are writing a sketch, but the behavior is what keeps the audience watching. Behavior without much context can be fascinating. Context without behavior is boring.
“Great! Now we have a scene. What do we do next?”
The same thing you have been doing. The opening moment is the scene, at least for now. Just play it. Just be the thing you were in the beginning. That’s all you need to do. Do that for a few minutes, it will come to a climax, the audience will laugh, and your teammates will edit.
There, that’s not so hard is it?
See also Let your scene partner provoke you and Emotional Yo-yo.
Photo by Trix0r on flickr.
Great thoughts from one of the great ones
Improv artists Karen Stobbe and Mondy Carter share how they use the rules of improvisation to break through conventional caregiving techniques and open up new worlds for persons with dementia.
In improv, we start with no information. We're completely in the dark. You can' think your way through the dark. You have to feel your way through the dark.
In this video Herbie Hancock tells a story about a "mistake" he made while playing Jazz with Miles Davis and how Miles Davis reacted.Â
Thinking is the death of an improv scene. Feeling brings the improv scene to life.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
My new improv team, Grizzly, debuts tonight at the Curious Comedy Theater.
(photo by Ken Salaman - Salamander & Co)
Yesterday I had the opportunity to take part in something phenomenal. The Hillsboro Police Department recruited improvisers from the Curious Comedy Theater to help train their officers to handle scenarios involving civilians with mental illness in a more sensitive manner.
The officers would enter the room not knowing what they were going to encounter. As improvisers, we had been trained in how victims of PTSD, schizophrenia, and schizoaffective disorder would behave. We used our improv skills to escalate or de-escalate our situation based on how the officers approached and dealt with us.
It was an intense four hours. I am so happy that there are officers like this who are devoted to learning how to handle tough situations in a way that doesn’t involve an escalation of force. And I am honored that I was included in this program. I hope it will be seen as a success and grows to be used at police departments all over the state and country.
This is the best thing I've ever used my improv skills for.
#22_Chris McGowan_Supporting the Ensemble_Improv Yak
In episode 22 of Improv Yak, Carla yaks with Los Angeles improviser Chris McGowan about his thoughts on supporting the ensemble in improvisation. They also talk about the different ways “success” can be interpreted in regards to making a house team and they improvise a scene in the style of Doctor Who!
Check out this episode!
I love me some good Improv Yakking
Everything you do on stage matters. A lot.
Everything you do on stage matters. AÂ lot.
All of your actions on stage read. I learned this as a theatre and clown performer, and it’s totally true for improv. We don’t realize how much we are communicating in every moment of a scene with every little detail of our actions, the tone of our voice, the timing of our actions and speech, etc. Most inexperienced (and even highly experienced) improvisers only notice a small portion of the…
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This is really great.
New vlog post new vlog name! This vlog is now called ImproVlogger.
In this episode I discuss why it is okay that you are constantly making mistakes and screwing up all the time.
What should I discuss next time? What questions do you have for me? What am I doing horribly wrong? Reblog this with your comments or leave a comment on YouTube and I will (maybe) address them in the next video.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Regard yourself as a cloud, in the flesh. Because you see, clouds never make mistakes. Did you ever see a cloud that was misshapen?
Alan Watts
In this episode I introduce the “Wall of Fans”. Want to be featured on the Wall of Fans? Send me a picture of yourself and I will add it to the collection.
I’ve decided that once a week I will record an episode where I discuss some “improv wisdom” and how it can be used to improve your life.
The rest of the episodes will continue to be inspired by your comments and suggestions. So keep them coming.