Why It’s Important to Play the Reality of a Scene in Improv
Jimmy Carrane Blog
by Jimmy Carrane
1M ago
Some improv teachers (including myself) will say over and over again “Don’t try to be funny.” That can be confusing. A better approach is, “Play the reality of the scene.” When improvisers do that, especially when they are given a certain task, the funny will show up without them trying. In improv, the more believable you are in an imaginary situation, the funnier it will be. That’s why before you can be funny you need to be real. Which means play the reality of the situation. If the scene has you and your friend driving in a car to go the movies, be in the car, play it like you would in ..read more
Visit website
5 Things Improvisers Must Stream Right Now
Jimmy Carrane Blog
by Jimmy Carrane
2M ago
Like many of you, I love to catch up on entertainment late at night before bed, and lately, I've seen some really great TV shows, movies, stand-up specials and documentaries that have reminded me of my own journey as an improviser. So if you're looking for a little creative inspiration, here are a few things I recommend you check out. The Bear Season 2 (Hulu) For those of you who haven’t seen The Bear, the show is about a brilliant young chef named Carmy who returns home to Chicago to run his family’s beef sandwich shop. Season two opens with trying to open a fine dining restaurant where the ..read more
Visit website
When You Are Lost In a Scene, Be Honest
Jimmy Carrane Blog
by Jimmy Carrane
2M ago
A lot of times when people are improvising, people think they have to keep going no matter what. Oftentimes improvisers feel so much pressure to keep a scene going that they will muscle ahead in a scene even when they don’t know what’s going on. If you get lost in a scene, the best thing to do is to be honest so you can get more clarity. For example, if you are improvising and your scene partner says something that you can’t hear, don’t pretend that you did. Instead, tell them you didn’t hear what they just said. Ask them to repeat it, just like you would in life. Also, if your partn ..read more
Visit website
To Be a Master, You Must Remain the Student
Jimmy Carrane Blog
by Jimmy Carrane
3M ago
To be a master, you must remain the student. We all want to master improv. But a true master accepts that he's never going to master what he's trying to master. Shunryu Suzuki explains it better in his book Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind: “If your mind is empty… it is open to everything. In the beginner’s mind there are many possibilities, but in the expert’s mind there are few.” When we have been improvising for a while, we think we know everything, especially if we have success. We can let the rules of improv, or a certain style of play, or our status interfere with our progre ..read more
Visit website
To All You Performers, Keep Going
Jimmy Carrane Blog
by Jimmy Carrane
3M ago
Kim Greene is the owner of The Laughing Academy in Glenview, and she’s someone I have known in the improv scene in Chicago since the ’90s. We first met doing a business theater gig for Second City, and today, I teach classes for her at her theater. What I love about Kim is that not only is she a wonderful teacher, but also she is one of the biggest supporters of the arts that I know. She is always going to shows at venues all over Chicago, in addition to seeing the many shows she produces at her own theater.  She gets the artist’s journey because she is one h ..read more
Visit website
Find the Love in Your Improv Scenes
Jimmy Carrane Blog
by Jimmy Carrane
4M ago
When we watch an improv team or a person on stage who loves improvising, it can be contagious. If we are having fun, the audience is having fun. But often, I forget to bring the joy and bring the love to what I am doing, both on stage and in life. In my improv classes and workshops, we will be doing a round of scenes to warm up, and I’ll find that my students will play characters who are argumentative, dark and snarky. I will side coach and say, "Find the love," and something will change. I cannot explain how it does, but the scenes become lighter, more compe ..read more
Visit website
My 3 Wishes for Improvisers in 2024
Jimmy Carrane Blog
by Jimmy Carrane
4M ago
As we come to the end of this year, I have 3 wishes I'd like to make for all improvisers in 2024. 1. Slow Down Slow down on stage and in life. When we slow down, we feel our feelings. Feeling leads to more creativity and a deeper connection with the improvisers on stage and the audience. We are told in improv to be in the moment, and I can tell you from experience that it is easier to be in the moment when you are going slow. I re-learn this every time I go on a walk with my 7-year-old daughter. Usually, it takes us 10 minutes to walk one block. She will stop on the way to study a st ..read more
Visit website
Lean Into the Pauses
Jimmy Carrane Blog
by Jimmy Carrane
5M ago
Music is the space between the notes. Claude Debussy When people first start working with me and they begin to slow down in their improv, they notice the pauses or the space between dialogue. This can seem strange at first to people who are used to improvising very quickly, but I try to teach my students that the space between the words is as important as the words themselves. Leaving a little space between the dialogue creates tension, and comedy needs tension. When we release that tension, we usually get laughter. We like laughter – that’s why most of do improv in the first place ..read more
Visit website
Why You Need Humility to Be a Good Improviser
Jimmy Carrane Blog
by Jimmy Carrane
6M ago
An improviser is a true artist. And to be a true artist, it takes true humility. It takes more humility to be on stage than ego. When I improvise from my ego, and I still do sometimes, it's “Get out of the way, I am the best." And "I am the best" never leads to getting better. It's lonely on the pedestal. When I improvise from a place of humility, I have more fun, because learning is fun, and I tend not to be as hard on myself.  And it takes just as much humility to do a bad show where you think you bombed as it does a good show where you think you killed.  In a b ..read more
Visit website
Keep Showing UP
Jimmy Carrane Blog
by Jimmy Carrane
7M ago
“90% of life is showing up.” -- Woody Allen I want to write something, but I can't. It’s one of those days when the best thing I can do is to just show up to the page. And the hardest part is being alright with that.  I have a wise friend who says just because I am having a C-minus day doesn't mean I can't do B-minus work. So here I am, giving you my best B-minus blog. I have missed out on a lot of opportunities in my career because I didn’t know how to show up when I wasn’t doing something perfectly. But today is a different day, and I am different person. S ..read more
Visit website

Follow Jimmy Carrane Blog on FeedSpot

Continue with Google
Continue with Apple
OR