All of this is great but especially…
- Notice something in the present.
- Ascribe meaning to it.
- Heighten it.
Don’t worry about finding something important. Don’t worry about finding a game. Just be present and notice.
All of this is great but especially…
- Notice something in the present.
- Ascribe meaning to it.
- Heighten it.
Don’t worry about finding something important. Don’t worry about finding a game. Just be present and notice.
I know this is gonna sound crazy, but I’m asking you to like–no, love the people who you’re doing improv with. What happens to them, especially on stage, should be more important to you than what happens to you. You are a tough, smart, grown-up person who has seen a lot of tough situations. You can take care of yourself if it comes down to it. Your Improv Friends? Give them everything they need! Be their sugar daddies and tell them how they’re never gonna have to scratch and struggle for anything while you’re around. And you know what? They’re gonna love you back for that. They’re gonna trust you and try to give just as much back. If they don’t then you’ll survive, but if they do you both will thrive.
Not true improv advice, but if you’re anything like me you’ve suffered from self-doubt when doin’ the improv.
Your reaction is all you get. No one is more than they are right now. In trying to be so is where we fuck up. We hear a line of dialogue, we have a reaction, we ignore or try to be better than our reaction, we think, we come up with a second or third option, but now we are no longer in the moment, we aren’t focused on listening or playing our character, we are in our head. We think we can’t come up with anything when actually we have come up with too much. What we should have done was the first thing that occurred to us.
This is neat. I’m at the teenage stage, hopefully not being too much of a know-it-all tho!
A lot of good stuff in the reblogs from this.