“What’s the word I’m supposed to say? Wait, why are you looking at me?
What motion and the---AAAH!”
Then my face would turn a vibrant shade of beet red for the rest of class...
Needless to say, I avoided them at all costs--the same went with improv, I didn’t know what to say or do, and I was so worried about looking like a doofus that I’d hang back and hide till the game was over.
Now that I’m a little older(ish) and wiser, I’ve realized that these games don’t actually have anything to do with me. Or with any one person for that matter. The whole point is to be a doofus, to surrender yourself utterly to the fact that you are a part of a group of people whose job it is to tell a story, no matter how silly or x-rated it may become (and believe me, improvs and theater games can get
pretty raunchy). The purpose of these games is to train an ensemble to work together, give and
take focus and to trust that wherever the story they make may take them, they are in it together.
Erin developed a comforting catch phrase "We have months".
There’s something to be said for being willing to act like a dork in front of the rest of your ensemble members, it brings everyone closer together and I think also lets people see the realest you there is, when you’re the most vulnerable, trying desperately to make sense of rules that don’t actually make that much sense. Also, the ability to move past the dork-acting phase and communicate with each other is empowering to say the least--the group develops a vocabulary together and becomes a tighter unit.
When that same level of attentiveness and willingness to give over to spontanaety is translated to the stage, it can make for some exciting theater indeed. For me, it’s totally worth looking like a dork if it means learning something in the process--and after all, what we put up on stage are called “Plays” for a reason, right?
What do you, the viewers at home think?
More on this Next Entry...In the meantime, here’s some “Who’s Line is it Anyway”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kfsaSouIus8

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