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ABP - Always Be Postin

Updates on Sundays!

Friday, October 31, 2014

Blog-O-Ween: The Final Blog O th' Ween

We finally made it and now we're famous! Well, one outta two ain't bad I guess. Posting every day has been surprisingly difficult and somehow incredibly easy at the same time. Over the past 17 days (minus weekends, what am I a savage?), I have struggled to force myself to open a new post window each night and each night I started writing with relative ease.

I've learned a lot about my love for improv and teaching through the past three weeks and I feel like it is stronger than ever. Blogging is always something that I aspired to, but was afraid to do. I didn't want to get started and then quit. I didn't want to let other people see my personal, private thoughts about things I loved. I was afraid my love would get picked apart.

I realize now, for the moment at least, that I'm blessed by a pretty small and silently supportive audience. I get page views, a handful of likes on facebook, maybe even a share from my mom, but that's totally fine with me. I'm not writing this blog to be correct or offer perfect solutions to issues I've encountered in teaching or improv. I'm writing this to figure out how to solve those problems or explain how I've solved them in the past. I hope people disagree with me sometimes, because I'm pretty sure I'm wrong a whole lot more than I'm right.

I will be going back to updating on Tuesdays and Thursdays for the most part, but I will still start a post-blitz every now and again.

I will be focusing on providing some more robust posts with the lighter update schedule and I will really be working on remembering to take pictures of things so all of my updates aren't just WALLOFTEXT. That's all I've got, friends. What would you like to see outta this thing?

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Blog-O-Ween! A Reflection On My Teaching Style

Wednesday night was my final class before Halloween and I tried something new. Usually my pre-Halloween class is a hectic jaunt around whatever building we happen to be in. I recruit two or three friends to play characters and I have them lead us on a chase around the building dropping candy wherever they go. It is stressful and exhausting and almost always not planned thoroughly enough. I also worry how parents will feel when my costumed friends inevitably give their children floor-candy. This year I did away with all the hubub, and I think it was a real sign of growth for me as a teacher.

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Blog-O-Ween! Spittin' Improv Game

"Find the game" your instructors tell you. "The game will make your scene a piece of cake," they state nebulously. What the hell is the game (aside from Triple H's nickname)? The game of the scene is... wait for it... literally whatever you make it. It's almost like you and your partner have total control of your scene and the game isn't something mystical. Oh my goodness!

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Blog-O-Ween: Guessing Games Are Improv Magic

Tonight I had a friend tell me that I get far too emotionally invested when we play "Five Things" during rehearsals or shows. For people who don't visit ComedySportz on the reg, Five Things is basically the ultimate guessing game. Your guesser has 5 minutes to  get about 15 gives and your givers can only mime and use gibberish. It looks impossible and that's what makes it improv magic.

Monday, October 27, 2014

Blog-O-Ween! Pictures from GMXv6

GMX was hella fun. Nearly too fun. Here are some pictures:
Pictured Here: Friend Durst (aka Mike Whidden) standing watch over our Star Wars themed Comedy Carnival Cornhole Center

Pictured here is Boba Fett, Lego Torture Walk, and Molly Bahre who's clearly having none of it.
We had a booth! Look at our beautiful shirts, our beautiful Jesse, and our okay Brittney.
I have mentioned that I am not a Dr. Who fan, but this Dalek was absolutely wonderful.
And here's my second sauciest Tardis pose. I can't share the #1 ranker, it's too scintillating. 

Friday, October 24, 2014

Blog-O-Ween! GMX This Weekend!

The Nashville Improv Company has bravely volunteered to do about 16 hours worth of panels at the Geek Media Expo (GMX) this year and I am (perhaps foolishly) blindly following them into battle. We had a smattering of panels last year and it seems that the Geeky, Media-y, Expo-y powers that be liked us a whole bunch. The feeling's mutual, GMX, we love you too!

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Blog-O-Ween! Just do it!

Getting your students interested and involved in class can be difficult. If you're anything like me, you are always incredibly into the theory of what you're teaching and you want your class to be able to appreciate the beautiful mechanics of what they're about to do. While it's great to be so excited about how stuff works, sometimes it's better just to let it work before explaining it. In theatre and in improv it is important to let your students get to creating in a safe environment quickly before even thinking about sharing theory with them. So quit mucking around with vocabulary words in your theatre class and just do it!

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Blog-O-Ween! Women in Improv

In the Nashville Improv Company we are lucky enough to have a large amount of talented women. 6 out of our 16 members are ladies, but that runs counter to the trend in most improv circles. Most groups, in Nashville and elsewhere, feature maybe two women in a cast of eight or so. Women are pretty strongly represented in the Music, Theatre and Dance worlds, so it's not that they're not interested in performing. In a world where women are just as capable improvisers as men are, why are there so few female improvisers?

I find that, moreso than men, women are forced into subordinate roles in scenes incredibly often. Not only that, but if they try to resist they find themselves berated by their male counterparts. Heck, sometimes they accept the offer and still get berated for their troubles. Quite a few professional improvisers (including Susan Messing and Nikki Pierce) believe that it's not that huge of a hurdle. They basically claim that all the ladies dealing with these issues should suck it up and improv harder.

It's kind of easy for people with as much experience and training as Susan Messing to suggest that most female improvisers are only limiting themselves. Strong and specific initiations don't come easily and quickly for every performer. Being labeled as a weak, worthless character over and over again when you are just learning how to improvise is a huge hurdle to have to leap over. When improv loses its spontaneity and fun, why would you even want to continue? If you get crushed on every rep before you have a chance to learn, I don't blame you for wanting to quit. I'd want to quit.

Improv-ladies, do you feel like comedy and improvisation are biased against you? How have you dealt with misogyny in scenes? Was overcoming the issues just a function of stronger, more specific initiations or was it finding a group of non-jerks? Was it a combination of both? Let me know your experiences, cause I super feel like I don't know what I'm talking about.

Monday, October 20, 2014

Blog-O-Ween! Dealing with Negativity

It's telling that I nearly titled this post "combating negativity." The thing about negativity in your improv or workplace or classroom is that if you decide that you've got to engage it in some kind of combat, you've already lost. I have struggled quite a bit with negativity in my time, both from others and from within myself. Let me tell ya, it sure kills a lot of the fun in stuff.

Friday, October 17, 2014

Blog-O-Ween! A Teaching Horror Story

This comes from my Summer teaching at Lexington Children's Theater back in 2010. I had never taught before that Summer and it was also my first professional internship. We had cleared our way through six out of ten weeks of classes when disaster finally struck. The only way we could survive was quick thinking and powerfully efficient teamwork.

Thursday, October 16, 2014

Blog-O-Ween! You Got Your Pop Culture In My Improv!

The dreaded Pop Culture suggestion or reference appearing in an improv show is enough to make some improvisers quake in terror. But fear not! Pop Culture can be a powerful ally in impressing your audience. I can't tell you how many times I've talked to audience members who were so pumped that we got their specific suggestion. It's not about having a magical, in-depth knowledge of everything, but it is about loving and respecting every single suggestion enough to give it a shot.

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Blog-O-Ween! An Actor's Horror Story

With Halloween just around the corner, another mysterious event is knocking at our doors, scratching at our windows, and leaving all the cabinets open in our kitchens. That's right, Blog-O-Ween is here! I'm going to be updating every weekday until Halloween, so keep an eye out for a lot of posts coming down the pipe.

I'm going to kick off Blog-O-Ween with one of my very first horror stories from performing. I wanted to write an improv horror story, but I've been incredibly lucky so for in my improv career. Theater? Not so much. Brace yourselves for true terror.


It is December of 2007 and I have been cast in my first speaking role in a play. I am Jingles the Elf in a play called Santa's Spectacles. My high school theatre class was putting on for some of the local elementary schools. The play is filled with the singing of Christmas Carols and a whole bunch of clever dialogue. We have rehearsed twice.

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Important Lessons From Teaching Young People

Teaching is hard. Teaching young people is harder. Of course teaching your lesson is important, but it's also what you're specifically trained to do. If you want your class to actually be successful, you're gonna have to do more than just communicate the material. Here's what's important in a class for young people (though I'm sure many lessons can be translated into teaching older students).

Thursday, October 9, 2014

How I Stumbled Into Improv

It's been nearly a year and a half since I began improvising professionally. I was a freshly graduated theatre major who was struggling to be an actor. In my desperate quest to find more stage time, I googled "nashville improv" and was directed to the fledgling Nashville Improv Company website. They had a place to enter your e-mail address to be notified of auditions, and even though it seemed pretty sketchy I chose to sign up. It had been years since I'd improvised outside of a college class, but I wasn't really expecting to be cast in an improv troupe. I'd go and get some audition practice in, network a little, and move on with my life. The best laid plans, am I right?