Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Brick And Mortar

I can't believe how far we have come in so little time. The Villain Theater stage, box office, green room, bar, classroom, and entrance are all currently being built out for our August 1st Grand Opening Show Saturday Gigantic!

It's really amazing how we've gotten to this point in such a short time. Our growing student body and performers will soon have a place to call home along with shows to watch and learn from. It's amazing all the little things that spring up as we prepare to open.  Expected questions and hurdles like how to position the lighting or the color of the paint for the walls and also unexpected ones like which plants to use for the garden entrance or where the sandwich boards should be placed to maximize visibility.  All have been stressful and fun at the same time.

It takes a lot to get this to be the best it can be including marketing, great performers, lighting design, sound design, staff, payment systems, and all other manner of things I won't bore you with. As a producer I had always done a little of this for my shows but having an actual venue is a much bigger monster to tackle. 

I've loved every minute of it. I get as excited about getting insurance as I do about getting on stage. (I definitely get more excited about the stage) You get excited about everything when you are putting your whole life out there to build a dream. Peter and I take everything in good humor and try to keep things light even with all the pressure to get this place open. Everything is looking good and I'll be happy to welcome all of you in on August 1st.

Get your tickets! You don't want to miss the sight of a large Cuban man (me) shedding tears of joy. 

Jeff Quintana
Artistic Director
Villain Theater

Thursday, June 4, 2015

First Week of Classes

Ah Finally! I've been so excited to get back into teaching and coaching. I enjoy it so much and it really brightens my day to see people just enjoying each other. That is an awesome thing about improvisation. It's one of the few times you'll see a group of strangers enjoying and cheering for each other within minutes of the class beginning. 

It's a beautiful positive thing to be a part of. I enjoy the immediate family and friends vibe you build in an improv class.  If you didn't grow up in Miami it can be hard to make new friends but in an improv class you do it almost immediately. You spend time smiling and laughing with some folks once a week. You end up making friends instead of choosing them. It's genuine. It's a real connection because in improv the people you enjoy most to perform with and watch are the the ones who can find a real connection with you on stage.

When we put on the posts that Improv is for Everyone, I truly think that. There is not one person in the world who would not benefit from being better at embracing their fears and trying new things. All day we are calculating things. Calculating what time to get to work. Calculating what to do next at work. Calculating what to make for dinner. Calculating how long it will take to do every thing. So much thinking and that is fine. We need to think and we need to plan to live. That's fact.

We also need to connect in a real way. Enjoy our Co workers and family members more. Smile at strangers more and say hello. Break our own physical barriers down. Break our emotional barriers down. Enjoy working as a team more. Enjoy life more by connecting with the world and people in it.

That kind of open connection to find the joy in other humans and ourselves is what we all live for. We spend years of our lives trying to amass money so we can eventually have free time to spend ENJOYING life. Why wait so long to start enjoying life and the people around us? Do it now. Dance now. Play now. Improvise now because connecting with others will bring joy to your life.

I love this. I love people that love this. I love people that can put their ego aside and really connect with another person.

I truly believe if everyone would improvise the world would change. So let's make Improv for Everyone. Take a class and join our family. The Villain family. We bring the joy and the laughter. One day I hope to perform with you and make a real connection with you on stage and in life.

Jeff Quintana
Artistic Director
Villain Theater

Thursday, May 28, 2015

The First Month Back In MIA

It's been about a month now since I arrived back in Miami and got started on the crazy ride of opening my own Theater company with trusted friend Peter Mir.  People kept telling me how stressful all this would be and how you have to do all "not fun" parts of running a business but I just haven't found it to be true.  With every new contact we make, new student that signs up for class, new venue we get for shows, every new problem we solve, and just every new accomplishment we have I get more and more excited.  I love the victories on and off the stage and that is what makes Villain Theater so exciting to be a part of.

On the personal side I arrived here in Miami and was living out of bags on my older brother Willy's couch.  I have no car so that has been a challenge, especially since he lived all the way on North Beach.  There are so many benefits though to being there that really welcomed me back home in a big way.  We watched so many movies together that I am completely caught up on everything ever from American Sniper to Night Crawler.   I started learning and practicing the martial art of Wing Chun (My brother is a huge tactical martial arts enthusiast).  Its cool seeing how different types of disciplines have very similar ideologies and practices to form a different result.  For my brother its to defend himself in combat and for me its to pretend to be a shitty lawyer named Barnes Foklore.

While living on the beach I also got to do something that I missed a lot and that was actually going to the beach.  Getting some sun and being in the water is just part of what makes Miami so great.  As I told everyone in Chicago before I left, just being here I have already lost 7 pounds and feel a lot better.  Lifestyle here is just different and people around you are constantly the most attractive people you've ever seen.  Even ugly things look pretty in Miami from buildings to alligators.  Being on the beach also reminded me of the sweltering heat there is here but I love it.  I always have preferred to be too hot then too cold.  There is something that is great about sweating that just makes you awesome. The most obvious part of it being that its your bodies way of letting out toxins and other shit.  My skin is repairing itself from being so dry up in the Mid West and that is a victory in itself.

My brother was wonderful and cooked breakfast and dinner every night while making sure I didn't go insane as I struggled to get everything going.  Not having a car here leaves you at everyone's whim and I am someone that truly enjoys my activities and freedom.  I have been surviving with very little as I am used to doing.  Money is coming in but it goes right back out for the business.  That is the way start ups are and I knew this going in.  I should be able to afford getting in on a very cheap car soon and that will be great.  At this point I don't care what I am driving as long as I can get around.

I have taken steps towards eating better as I want to get more healthy and lose a bunch of weight.  I am at 315 right now but Im going to work hard to get down to 230 which would be a whopping 85 pounds.  That is like losing a whole other person.  Its a lofty goal but I've got a lot of help from family and Peter to keep me on the path of eating well and exercising more.

I have reconnected with people all over the improv community including Cage Free Humans, Miamah Comedy, Improv South Miami, Just The Funny, Old Impromedy Friends, Sick Puppies, Business Casual, Hailo Kitty, Chasing Tales, 4 X 4 Improv, Mod 27, Uprov, Special In A Bad Way, Comedy School Dropouts, and plenty more.  Its cool to see how many new faces there are and great to see the old school folks still kickin it. The community is bigger now and I think the presence of Micro Theater as a venue for all the groups to get together is awesome.  In Miami there was way too much division before and having an outlet like Micro makes it so everyone meets each other and hangs out more while doing different kinds of work from their own bubbles of comedy.  If you haven't checked out Dynamic Night at Micro Theater Miami you really should. Every Wednesday at 8pm, $5 per show, you can't lose.

Finally I moved to my little brothers (Chris) place recently, he just got into a new house and was kind enough to let me crash in an extra room he has for the next couple of months. Its been nice to have my own space and unpack my bags finally.  Small victories like being able to hang up your clothes, leave your bed in one spot made, connect your computer, and have a door that you can close have been gifts from above.  I live a very minimalist life style so every bit of comfort is huge to me.  I really think its why I love improv so much, I have never needed a lot.  I only need the next moment and living moment to moment makes it so I never get stressed out or have anxiety issues.  I am just focused on now and building to whats next.  So far everything is working out great and I know money will come and a car will happen too.  Its all just about working hard and keeping everything positive which are both my specialty.

Can't wait to start teaching this weekend. Its going to be amazing.  I love doing it and bringing a curriculum that I feel will really make people grow and get better.  Its my favorite thing in the world. I'll bring the tough love and I can't wait to see this group become closer for the next 8 weeks and really rock it out in their class show.  Everything is full steam ahead.    Villain Theater is Making its Mark on Miami and so am I. ;-)

Jeff Quintana
Artistic Director
Villain Theater

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

Different Techniques for Different Show Moments

I have been improvising for about 12 years now and in that time I've done about 100 shows a year and I'm low balling. Shows can't be the only thing you do but they are really important for putting into practice what we learned in classes, rehearsals, books, and more.

I have really found that the best shows I've played are those that I adjust in the moment my style of play. Every situation throughout a show requires reaction, commitment, and specificity, those are to me required. What is not required is that I use silence every scene, do object work every scene, play a bug character, play close to myself, play fast, play slow, and a whole slew of styles of play that I think people believe to be something they need to do every time to make good scenes.

Good scenes are made up of how we react moment to moment. I may start a scene slow with a sluggish energy but literally seconds later may have to be frantic and screaming. Commiting to your choice doesn't mean " Im sad for this scene" it means I'm sad in this scene until  not because this happened. Or I was sad but then super angry. We have to be constantly in the moment paying attention to what the scene is actually doing and playing it honestly.

We will definitely find patterns and games but even those can't be preplanned or set to be a road map. We have to see when that game is over and a new one begins. It's a difficult thing but it's where the best comedy comes from.

Timing is everything and I believe this mentality of moment to moment is the key to timing. Sometimes that hilarious line you have needs a 5 second silence before to make it really pop but you won't give the scene that unless you are really commited to the moment.

Be in the moment and strong scenes will become more regular.

Jeff Quintana
Artistic Director
Villain Theater

In Your Head? Feel Trapped? GOOD!

I was speaking with Peter last night after a rehearsal and we were saying how sometimes we've been in our heads when in a rehearsal or class. Contrary to popular belief , I really think this is a good thing, no, it's a GREAT thing. 

See the reason we get in our heads most of the time is because we are being challenged to stretch ourselves. We are doing something with our improv that we haven't done before. Because of this our body naturally rejects it, because it means we are going into unknown territory. Our sense of self preservation goes off and holds us back from risk. In this case it's the risk of doing badly in front of our classmates or the teacher or the director.

These moments are exactly what rehearsal is for.  These moments are also what improv fundamentally is: Following The Fear.  We fear the unknown, we fear change, so our body rejects it. It makes excuses as to why this is not needed.  Having a new tool and skill in our improv is never bad. Having a different Point of view or way of approaching the work is always needed.  You never know what situation you may be in on stage and you may need to use a different approach.

Try it all. Really try it.  I pride myself on being able to embrace different techniques and perform with anyone.  I got there by failing hard and often in rehearsals.  I also failed Hard and often in shows trying new things. We all have to be okay with doing so.  Learn all you can. Incorporate all you can. Become a complete improviser by Following the fear and always growing forever in this work.

- Jeff Quintana
Artistic Director
Villain Theater

Friday, March 27, 2015

Make Your Mark! Villain Theater in Miami!

Finally Peter and I can begin our dream of opening a theater dedicated to improvisation in our own back yard of Miami,FL.  This has been something we both have been preparing for since we left this beautiful city in 2010.  We've been through a lot and learned even more. We'll both be alternating writing about our experiences on this blog along with our thoughts on improvisation, theater, comedy, Miami, and art at large.

Check back soon! Exciting things on the way and we can't wait to bring something to Miami that will truly empower anyone who wants to do more with everything in their life.  Make your mark.  Villain Theater is here to do just that. 

- Jeff Quintana
Artistic Director
Villain Theater

Thursday, March 26, 2015

Weekender

Originally when asked to join a new Harold Team after Villain I declined. I was not ready to jump on another team right away. I had just been on an amazing team that was as close a team as I've ever been on besides a team with my best friend and my brother that I had been on for years.  I also wanted some time away from Harolds. 

I really felt I wouldn't do any more Harolds beyond Heraldo before I left town. That changed one night after about 3 weeks of being away and declining the team they put me on. I was asked to sit in with a team that was low on numbers.  Their name was Weekender, The given name they had from the Harold Commission and they had not changed it.  At iO you are first given a place holder name when your team is first made and usually what happens is the team changes it before their first show.  Its not the case for all but most teams have their new name by that first show or shortly after.  Most of the time teams change their names but in Weekenders case they were having way too much fun and it just became easier to keep it as they were getting known for it.  

After being away from Harolds a short time and being away from Villain I didn't have high hopes for the show.  That all changed in an instant right from the warm up.  Just some of the kindest and funniest people you will ever meet.  They were so welcoming of me right away and we played a really great show.  Then they had another show a week later and I played that show and it was a blast.  Then it just kept happening. Its been a total blast to play with them and they make such cool moves throughout the show that everyone jumps on real hard.  

They have a great coach in Jon Butts and he really pushes for Weekender to have a good time while also doing good work that is interesting.  When I was asked to become a regular on the team I explained that I was leaving to Miami to open a theater as it was not common knowledge yet.  Jon and the team were so kind to let me keep playing each week until I leave.  In the short time I have been with them Weekender has done some really cool shows and they have a super bright future ahead of them.  

It was nice to have another experience with the Harold beyond Villain and Heraldo.  It truly is always different and changes so much based on who you play with.  Thanks for the great times and friendship Weekender!  Hope to see you all down in Miami soon!

-Jeff Quintana
Artistic Director
Villain Theater

Ego Needs To Go

I have been improvising since 2003. In that time I have been a part of the improv cultures in Miami, Gainesville, Miami again, New York, Chicago, and finally Miami again.  Every time I moved I started from nothing and had to build up again. I also went through my fair share of trials outside of improv including being jobless and homeless for about 2 weeks. For those weeks I lived on a park bench outside in the winter of NYC. Once you have lived like that you tend to not care about material possessions and your ego is non existent.

Once I went through all that it made it so improvising and working hard forever comes much easier. It becomes a fact of life to work hard and stay humble.  I have seen so many fall in all these cities because of hubris.  Becoming too good to learn more, too good to treat new performers well, too good to try on stage, and eventually too good to realize that they were not good any more.
There is a thin line we all must walk between confidence and arrogance.  The way to stay on the right side of that line is to always be looking to learn and grow. I have learned something from the worst teachers I've had and the best teachers, learned something from the newest performers and the most veteran, learned something from every day on this Earth, and I have learned something from every person I have met.

The fact that anyone can come in and let their ego get in the way of their improvement is insane. Improv is made for people who constantly adapt, change, and grow. Too many times have I seen people fall into a "Bag Of Tricks" or let their status in an improv company cloud their view until they are no longer serving the art form. These people are slaves to Ego and Status. Neither of which makes you a better improviser or a better person.

When I arrived in NYC I had to take classes and build up my abilities. No one let's you just walk on stage. You have to earn it. Same goes in Chicago. They didn't care what I had learned before, I had to go through classes and learn more. In both cases I learned so much even in a level 1 class that stays with me forever.

Anytime I can bring some Chicago and New York performers down to teach in Miami you can expect to see me in all those workshops right along side my students if I have never taken a class with that teacher before.

There is never a time where we can stop learning and growing as people or as improvisers.  I had a big ego at one point and it's a petty and stupid thing to let get in the way of doing good work.  Smash it down and start collaborating. There is enough improv and jobs for everyone. Ego and status means nothing.

- Jeff Quintana
Artistic Director
Villain Theater

Sunday, March 8, 2015

Stag: My first and My last

I have coached a lot of teams in Chicago. Sometimes I was just stepping in for  a Harold Team that wanted a different Point of view, other times I was coaching many independent teams.  I love doing it and it's something I've been doing since 2007.  Teaching and coaching really ups your game in improv, especially when working with people that have been doing this longer then you.  Once you are there coaching people that once coached you its a weird transition.

In doing so I learned to be as humble and open as possible to whomever is in the coach / directors chair. There is always something to learn about your play and about how you learn. Even with bad coaching there was something to learn from because I would learn what I didn't like and apply it to my own coaching.  I was lucky to sub coach at iO and was eventually assigned as the steady coach of the Harold Team Stag.

This is a wonderful group of folks made up of Gina DeLuca, Marissa Rhines, Mike Anichini, Jess DeMarke, Amy Haeussler, Liz Siedt,  Spencer Walker, Michelle Fox, Jimmy Barrett, and Marie Maloney. Today I let them know I would be leaving town to open the theater in Miami. They were all so genuinely happy for me and genuinely sad I was leaving. I have learned so much from coaching them and I think when you are coaching a great team that happens.

A great team will always push you as hard as you are pushing them. Stag has been such a blast to coach and all of them I would play on stage with any time. I am sad to leave them as they are the main reason I would have stuck around longer. They deserved someone who could be there for them always and I am definitely looking to leave them in good hands.

I always hope with every team I coach that I have left them with one thing and that is the ability to be open with each other. Too many times I see teams be stifled to ignore their feelings or not have the openness to get mad and address each other in a respectful manner.  I really try to push that we are people in a family and family and humanity at large doesn't always get along. Just like family though when it's time we band together and attack the stage as a unit and we get through it. In the best cases we do more then get through it, we shine. 
I hope I have left them with at least that. Once you have that then nothing can block your progress as a team. The team will always grow and be going to the next level because they are open and willing to listen to each other. They allow themselves To Be human, Get mad, Be hurt, And Forgive Each Other. You'll never have bull shit then because everything is on the table.

I have been so lucky to have Stag, they taught me how to be a better and more well rounded improviser. They all have such strong voices and jump into everything I ask hard even if they didn't understand it right away.  Each of their playing styles I would watch and find something I love that I would add to my own arsenal of improvisation.

The coolest thing I've witnessed with Stag  is how they are adapting and assimilating each others style of play. That is just amazing to see as they start knowing what tickles each other and pushing all of each others buttons. They find joy in mistakes and escalate them so they are no longer considered mistakes.

They have everything it takes to be a great team and I can't wait to have them come down to the theater one day.  I am really looking forward to seeing their team flourish from afar and glad to have been a part of it.  STAG fo life!

Saturday, March 7, 2015

The Annoyance And Villain Theater

My time is running short in Chicago but I saved the best for last. I am finally able to train with Mick Napier in his advanced improv class. I started at The Annoyance almost 5 years ago and actually was doing their classes before iO. I read Micks book Improvise back in 2006 and it made a huge impression on me. 

I got more from his book then any other I had read on improv before or since.  I still use The Annoyance techniques when I play at iO because it really defined my style.  Now that I am on the final levels it's nice to bring the most clear version of a method towards my madness.
I have a very weird style of play. I have never been the player that wouldn't listen or take care of my scene partner though. You can make strong choices for yourself and still be supportive of your fellow players.

I am lucky enough that Mick was wonderful and willing to help me look over my curriculum for Villain Theater. I have been building this curriculum for the last 6 years and thrown some pieces of iO and some pieces of Annoyance along with my own exercises to help students become what I believe to be a very complete improviser. He gave a couple of ideas for changes and additions and I am happy to include them.

It was nice meeting minds with one of the best in the biz when it comes to teaching improvisation. I am honored to be in his class and I have learned a lot in just a couple of weeks. It is my hope I can bring that same education to the performers of Miami. Mick has been nothing but complimentary of my work and just the most gracious off stage. He also has just an amazing eye for what I and others can do to be better at improvising.

A class act on and off stage. He is fiercely honest and I appreciate that a lot. I have always tried to be as kind and honest as I can be with everyone I meet. Seeing the success of someone who has been in the game much longer really gives me high hopes for the future of Villain Theater. With passion, vision, skill, and hard work, anything is possible.

- Jeff Quintana
Artistic Director
Villain Theater

Friday, March 6, 2015

Villain: An iO Harold Team And A Theater

Harold's are difficult. They are the building block for everything that is long form improvisation in my opinion. If you are trying to show someone all the different facets of improv it seems introducing them to the Harold is a no Brainer. I have performed the Harold at the highest level for the last 3 years and continue to do so at the iO Theater.

I understand it so well thanks to my many teachers and great coaches. There are a thousand ways to look at the work but all are correct if they lead to doing great Harolds. The Harold has it all, Openings, Grounded two person scenes, Group Games, Tag Runs, World Building, Closing runs, interweaving of disparate story lines, the idea of show dynamics, and a menagerie of edits all formed into one. 

It's no surprise that some of the best improvisers in the world mastered the Harold first. It's a comprehensive guide to how to improvise and with its organic nature it is also the key to creating new pieces and techniques.  When you perform on a team for a while,  as I did on Villain, you eventually are brought into the realm of Breaking The Harold.  This happens once you have mastered how to do a Training Wheels Harold which is the very structured one you find in your Truth In Comedy book. 

When Villain broke the Harold we ascended and did some really amazing work. At our best each show was built in the moment creating our own edits and our own fully connected pieces. We had one show that I remember where we created a very confusing stage picture with a lot of stuff going on. We made a promise to the audience to explain how everything got there by the end of the show. We did an amazing set of scenes and Games that popped up when they liked so that when we arrived back to the original stage picture /opening we were able to infuse everything we just did in the show to recreate and explain the opening.

It was an amazing set among several amazing sets all because of learning how to Break the Harold. We learned to adapt and play the patterns of the piece. We learned to yes and the show in front of us. It was the Harold but not your traditional one. It was the Harold because the Harold is everything. All forms are the Harold and have some or all of its energy in them.

Most teams don't make it past 6 months or a year at iO and Villain lasted two and a half years. We are one of the few teams to be retired because we just couldn't play together any more. The success of all the individual players that made up Villain made it so we couldn't post the numbers we liked for rehearsal and shows. Most of the time when a team ends at iO some of the performers are asked not to come back. In Villains case every single member was put back on the iO roster.

Some of us even declined to be put on another team which is what I did. Villain was such a big part of improvising for me that just jumping on another team was not easy. I needed time and I am glad I took that time because that's when Peter Mir called me and told me it was time for us to build a theater company in Miami.  I told him I had the perfect name and wanted to honor my time and my team in Chicago. 

Villain Theater was born. The members of Villain at iO were Mike Jimerson, Cassie Ahiers, Kelsey Kinney, Mary Catherine Curran, Nick Wieme, Case Blackwell, Ryan Livingston, Sarah Cowdery, Bex Marsh, Rachel Laforce, Matt Kappmeyer, and myself, coached by Matt Higbee. The members of Villain Theater are Peter Mir and myself. Through the Villain Theater I plan to bring many more people into the Villain family and our approach to improvisation and the Harold. 

I am so happy to bring the joy of improvising to everyone I meet but especially proud to honor a team that literally opened my eyes to how improv could be done. Villains tag line was always "Take over the world."  Villain Theaters tag line is "Make Your Mark." I plan to do both in every facet of my life and help others to do the same.

-Jeff Quintana
Artistic Director
Villain Theater

Thursday, March 5, 2015

The Tallest Midget

As my time living in Chicago comes to a close I find myself seeing lots of shows and getting bits of wisdom passed on to me.  I have a real fear of losing my edge once I move. I literally get to see some of the best improvisers in the world and in some cases perform with them as well on a weekly basis.  I have to keep reminding myself that I have never been satisfied with mediocre improv. Definitely I have had bad shows and because of the nature of improvisation I will continue to have bad shows and amazing shows.

It's the nature of the art form that some nights will be better then others. The only constant is that I come in focused and try as hard as I can to do the best work possible every time I have the opportunity to be on stage. I see so many take for granted the fact that people have paid to see them and that they get to perform in front of a crowd.

In Miami there is some great work happening but like anywhere outside of Chicago it is difficult to compare to the place where the art form was created and is always evolving. There is so much improv and so many different kinds of improv happening in Chicago that it truly makes it so you could be here forever learning something new every year.

In Miami I have the opportunity to bring down a lot of what I have learned and formulated into an amalgam of all the styles of improvisation I've learned in this almost 6 year journey. I spent some time training in NY and then moved on to immerse myself in the Chicago improv scene.
A good friend and mentor to me and many said something to me recently when I was talking to him about the move.  It was very simple, " Don't settle for being the tallest Midget, do the best work possible and always be growing. That's how you keep your edge wherever you go."  By tallest midget he is referring to the fact that in smaller improv markets it's very easy for people to become "The Guy" and be content with sitting at the top of a small hill.

I will never be content. There is always another level to get to. There is always something to improve on. There is always something to learn. One year you haven't been nailing your object work so you work on that. The next year your object work is great but you find you aren't being as physical. There is always something. There is always something to work on in an art form that is different every time we walk on stage.

Never get comfortable. Always be risking it all. That has been my path for improvisation and applying that philosophy to my daily life has made for a very fulfilling time on this Earth. Love and bravery will set us all on the best path.

-Jeff Quintana
Artistic Director
Villain Theater

Weaving The Weird Into The Greater Pattern

I have been in a lot of scenes and I am of the school that we must always take what happens on stage and fold it into the greater pattern we are making. It is always said in improvisation that a master weaver can weave any mistakes into the tapestry so that it becomes a part of it and because of this there is never a mistake.

I believed this always but I ran into a situation in a two person show the other day that just couldn't move forward because there were no honest reactions, no real people,  I found myself constantly trying to react honestly but because everything I received was so insane it made it so I was quickly just being astounded every line.

The audience grew bored because the world built made it so that there was nothing to be surprised at any more. The two characters on stage were too strange for the audience to buy into. The audience can buy into anything if we give them some actual people who speak like people. Even if we find these characters have quirks later the audience is in because you did the work of bringing them to a reality that humans can understand.

Does that mean I can't play aliens on stage? Of course I can. I just have to give the audience aliens that have humanity in them. They have human problems like feeding their family, dealing with their wife being mad about a dirty spaceship (even if she is inside of a host body that she will be bursting forth from), or losing the 10 Life Partnership rings he wears on all 10 of his arms.  We can play weird and strange but the character is still a thin veil, a filter though which the improviser can bring the comedy and tragedy of the human condition to life.

Back to the show where I had too much weird happening above and the audience was checked out. In this show I really remembered the cardinal rule of my improv is that every rule can be broken if needed to forward the piece. All improv rules are just guide lines. As we get better at it we are able to bend and break while still being commited. If we are improvising well we shouldn't even get to a point where the audience is checking out but in this case we did.

In order to jump start the show I had to call bull shit on some of the stuff that had occurred to bring us to a workable place.  It was the weirdest thing I have ever done on stage. I took what my partner and I had built, turned most of it into lies and kept the basic grounding points of location (A Dentist Office waiting room) and why we were there ( to get a yearly check up).  We were 8 minutes into a set that was a mono scene, the audience was checking out, and my improviser brain told me to trust in this course of action and not judge it even though it went against everything I knew.

Once we cleared the rubbish we started getting laughs, we still incorporated those ideas but now it was why we said those lies. We found the real scared people who were just trying to impress each other through weird fake stories and found out they both had a lot in common as very pathetic lonely folks that had found each other.

The show went on and the audience was in again and we had a great set. It was something I definitely could not have done even 3 years ago in an improv scene. My scene partner was grateful as they had felt it too and were glad to have a way to restart even though we were in a single scene for 22 minutes. 

Yes, we must always except our mistakes and weave them into the greater tapestry  but it does not mean we have to trap ourselves. Some times you have to refind your footing and incorporate that refinding of footing as part of the greater tapestry.  Weave in everything and there will never be mistakes, only discovery.

-Jeff Quintana
Artistic Director
Villain Theater

Play The Scene That's In Front Of You No Matter What.

I have been improvising for about 12 years now and every year I find that I have to update my own approach to improvisation.  Improvisation is unlike any art form because you can't guarantee the product every time.  The path to being great at it comes with constant work.  It's not a mountain to be climbed or a status to be achieved, it's a path that is long and winding with peaks and valleys through out.

If you work hard and are always growing, always trying on stage then you can be great at it.  If you can open your mind and always be willing to go with what is happening on stage then you will find success. When I am on stage I do my best to bring no judgement and react truthfully in the moment. This may mean playing a character who does not have my same beliefs or someone I would find despicable in real life. 

Playing these characters is where the idea of Playing At The Top Of Your Intelligence comes in the most.  An example would be even though as a character I may be a member of the KKK and hate all races that are not White ( a truly despicable and grotesque idiot of a character) I can play this character truthfully while pointing out the ridiculousness of being such an extreme idiot. The character is a thin veil put on by the  improviser who reacts through the character to make the scene interesting and fun.

We do the work to point out the ridiculousness of this way of thinking and play a character the audience can laugh at and also say after "That's why racism is dumb, I mean only a  stupid person like that would think that's something people should believe." We do this by playing the character honestly from our own real life point of view of what someone like this thinks like. We should stay away from stereotypes and play honestly as this character. When playing this character we have to keep our improviser brain working to find the absurdity to heighten that will give the audience the okay to invest and enjoy the scene.

We can bring light to subjects that seem terrible and give people a new outlook on things. That's the beauty of art.  So next time you get labeled something that you don't agree with, take it as an opportunity to commit hard and do something interesting with this high risk choice. Stay in the moment and don't judge your fellow player for giving you a character or scene idea you may not like or agree with. Play the scene.

The show always must go on and in improvisation there is no room to judge your own or your partners ideas. Be in the moment. React like a real person would. Always be trying. Always be growing. Every idea can be great with strong support and commitment.

- Jeff Quintana
Artistic Director
Villain Theater