Transactors 
Improv Company

 

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Applied Improv

 

Some of our favorite sites:

Archipelago Theatre

Improvland.com

YESand

Past Mouthings-Off:

Why Improv Is Absolutely Essential

Soft Focus and the
Art of Telling a Story

No, it's all made up...

Beware the Wacky Card!

Go Ahead, Screw Up.
It's Good for You!

Could You Be More Specific?

Creativity: What Is It
and Who Has It?

Focusing on Process

Fun with Responsibility
and Discipline

Do It Now

Twenty Years of Now!

Improv and the Method

Simplicity in Improv

Exploration Versus Invention

Vulnerability in Improv

Spirituality in Improv

Welcome to our Website


 
Mouthing Off

Got to Be Real

What is "art"? ... It's an expression. You have something you have to say. You groan, you moan, and you say it. You paint it, you dance it, you sing it. You express it out of your own soul.

"Non-art" is where you please people. Non-art is where you have very little to say. Where you have a great aptitude for mimicry, stealing, adapting, repeating, and parodying. This is non-art, which covers most of our popular media...

- Ben Hecht

Hecht, a great American writer, a journalist, screenwriter, and playwright, said these words on his short-lived and very controversial TV talk show almost 50 years ago. His thoughts struck me when recently read transcripts from that program, in no small degree because they seem as apt now as they did then.

But what does this have to do with improvisational theater and its applications?

Performance whose seemingly sole goal is pleasing the audience drives me crazy. The performers manipulate and cajole, striving to elicit a predetermined response. This seems so hollow, boring, and dishonest to me. I want to shout, "Why don't you say what you want to say and let me respond the way I will?"

Now, I'm not saying performance must be arcane, obtuse, and inaccessible--I like art I can understand. Indeed, sometimes I suspect some artists are trying to be obscure just for the sake of being confusing or perhaps because they don't really have anything to say but want to speak anyway.

Basically, I want to know what's on the artist's mind. I want the artist to respect and perhaps have sensitivity to me as an audience member but I do not want to be catered to any more than I want a friend to tell me something just because it seems I want to hear it. Being challenged can be exhilarating although I've appreciated great art that wasn't necessarily challenging.

So this is why, when I'm teaching or directing, I ask students and performers to leave behind the need to be perceived as funny, clever, unique, and wonderful. If you are pursuing your hoped-for response from people, you are getting away from your true self. The act of expression becomes the act of trying to get attention.

The artist must trust that by focusing on his/her message or discipline, good things will happen. The creative experience will be satisfying and honest for the creator and the audience will be genuinely affected by the work rather than simply being manipulated.

This is why we don't bill Transactors Improv as "comedy." We love it when people laugh and usually they do heartily and frequently. Often they laugh at things that we or our characters don't think are funny at all. But our focus and our self-definition is improvisational theater and the audience is invited to respond in any way it wants as long as no one gets hurt.

Outside the world of art, there is a tremendous call for authentic communication. Most folks aren't so fond of blowhards and slick salesmen. So when I teach communication and presentation skills in the Applied Improv (FIZ) curriculum, I tell my students that my goal is to get them to be as vividly themselves as possible.

When someone is speaking or improvising in front of me, I want to see them, who they are. Who are you? Show me. What do you have to say? Tell me.

I don't want to see people being someone else, whether it's an actor trying to be Chris Farley or a presenter trying to be that really successful motivational speaker she once saw.

Recently I had an improv student who would 'mug' whenever she did a scene or exercise. Her normally engaging demeanor would disappear behind a veil of exaggerated facial expressions and clownish voices and gestures. I encouraged her to respond in these activities as she would in real life. To her credit, she tried it and to the class's delight, it worked! Her acting was much more interesting, real, and, yes, funny.

When I assign the term paper to my MBA students at UNC's Business School, I advise them, "Don't tell me what I know. I already know that. Tell me what you know or at least what you've experienced." Of course there are plenty of teachers and bosses out there who want only 'yes men' but it's ultimately your choice whether or not you want to be one.

Aside from its negative effects on self-realization and self-actualization, people pleasing is based upon the very faulty premise that you know what other people want. When it comes to the way you present yourself and your responses and ideas, there's just no real way of knowing what people want.

I believe most of us are sensitive to authenticity, whether it's an improviser portraying a character, a person giving a presentation, or someone in an interview. Most of us would rather disagree with someone we believe rather than agree with someone we don't.

As Hecht warned us, art--saying what you have to say--is difficult. But what truly worthwhile endeavor doesn't involve challenge and risk?

-Greg Hohn, Director

News & Notes
Spring 2006

Transactors Improv is returning to the Stone Leaf Theatre Festival in Asheville! The company performs at BeBe Theatre at 8 p.m., June 1; 8 & 11 p.m., June 2; and 4 & 8 p.m., June 3. Please visit Stone Leaf's site for more information.

We have new video footage on the site!

The normally very healthy Anoushka got so sick this past winter that at one point she fell asleep in the hall of her home.

Greg went downhill skiing for the first time in March during a visit to Colorado, where he also snowshoed. "I always thought I'd be good at it if I tried," he humbly reports.

Jeffrey is in the short indie thriller Attache. He dies in the first scene.

Jill and her family and their animals are thrilled with their new digs.

Not only has Mike not submitted anything for our spring News & Notes but he has yet to retrieve the serving plate on which he brought a delicious homemade cheesecake to the Transactors' Christmas party!

Nancy is continuing filming on Golf War Widows, a short film produced by wholmmovies and directed by Jay Enterkin.

Rachel is currently producing, co-directing, and acting in Sh*tkicker Monologues at Common Ground Theatre in Durham. Running May 4-14, this evening of music and monologues is a showcase of local talent including fellow Transactors Jeffrey and Nancy.

After almost nine years with the company, Steve recently left the group because he, his wife, and their daughter are moving to Greensboro. We are sad to see him go but also very grateful for all he brought to the company!

Steven's wedding is coming up in June! "I'm learning, apparently, I may have picked up some bad procrastination habits over the years," he notes. (At least he doesn't have a cheesecake serving plate at my house. -Ed.)

Transactors Improv has T-shirts! They're black with our lightbulb on the front and our logo and motto on the back in white. Available in S, L, and XL sizes, they are 100% cotton and cost $10. Contact us at transactors@transactors.org if you want one or even more.

To subscribe to our e-mailing list, write transactors@transactors.org.

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Transactors Improv Company
P.O.Box 2295
Chapel Hill, NC 27515
919.824.0937

transactors@transactors.org
 
For booking information, contact:
Loyd Artists
800.476.6240
info@loydartists.com
www.loydartists.com