Showing posts with label improv. Show all posts
Showing posts with label improv. Show all posts

10.19.2009

Letting go of control.

If there is one thing that will kill an artistic process it can be the need to control what is happening on stage & lock it down. For me this kills inspiration.

Graves in the Water is no different.

Since this Halloween is the first time the piece is being performed, as the director I’ve been struggling with coming up with an order for the piece. We’ve found individual thru lines for each actor, but are missing one for the whole show.

So I said “fuck it” and suggested to my cast that we work off of our own inspiration. Maybe it’s because I spent my birthday weekend at the Baltimore Improv Festival or maybe I just couldn’t make up my mind, but I think having a “no structure” format will make this piece exciting, new & fresh each time it’s performed (for the actors & the audience).

Here’s what I mean by “no structure”:

The evening will start with Mrs. Kessler and end with Edith Conant, but everything in between is not set. The actors work off their own inspiration, they must listen & react to what is being said around them to find who goes next.

There are some challenges with doing the piece this way, mainly sometimes the actors get “stuck” and aren’t sure who should go next, but in rehearsal we are working on that. The first time I actually had them work in this “no structure” format I let them improv the actual pieces, speaking subtext that kind of thing. They worked off of the inspiration provided by the previous character. Now our focus is shifting on to “opposites” or impulses that pull you away from the character previous. This allows the actors to come from a place where they feel comfortable and gives them the freedom not to get stuck.

For some this lack of control may be difficult, but as a director I love the opportunities to let go of that and to just really trust my actors. I mean I hired them for a reason, didn’t I?

We’ll see where it goes from here!

7.14.2009

Good Improv is Better Than Sex.



Good improv is a spiritual experience. It touches down to the core, where you and the character become one. There is no more separation between actor & character, your choices become theirs, their choices become yours.

Good improv fulfills the actor, you walk away fully satisfied, knowing more about yourself, your character and the relationship to the other character.

Good improv is truth on stage.

Good improv will have you asking "What just happened?" because you are so in tune that you just live purely in the moment. Only after trying to remember are you actually able to reflect on what just happened.

Good improv should be uncomfortable at some point. If you're not uncomfortable, you aren't letting enough walls down. But after that comes the pleasure, the pure ecstasy that comes from letting yourself just be there, not knowing what's coming next.

Good improv keeps you wanting more.

God how I love a night of good improv!

P.S. The picture is a Tamara de Lempicka painting. Love her!