Everything in Moderation - EVERYTHING!
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“Chrissy, why you sleep so late?”
These are the words my friend heard every morning from the cabin steward on
the cruise ship. Is my friend lazy?
Someti...
9 years ago
3 comments:
It's a common mistake for a young improviser to make… they're in the home stretch of the scene and suddenly introduce a new conflict that catapults them back to "Act II" again rather than looking for some information to revisit to bring the scene to a close.
Yes Chris, Thanks for the astute comment. I agree. It happens with seasoned improvisers as well. I think you hit the nail on the head when you say rather than looking for some information to revisit...
I think the solution lies partly in making the objective more clear (which we will discuss in upcoming posts) and partly in the "how to" do the revisiting thing (which we'll also be look at)
Sometimes too, we have revisited properly to find something to help get us to the conclusion and still manage to toss another or new offer out there. That moment of "well, I just revealed something new there, didn't I?" - After the scene seems to have hit it's climactic moment and the main objective has been reached.
I believe that impulse can be wrangled and turned to success as well. In fact, in many stories, there is the new reveal at the end, which becomes the tease or the cliffhanger for the next episode or sequel. If improvisers are hip to that fact and dynamic, perhaps they could capitalize on it and recognize it and still end the scene.
Thanks Mike. If you find a single idea or direction or suggestion or tool that works for you everytime - use it exclusively. Otherwise, why not try many. Every time I watch a golf tip from a new source, I get something I can use - and I don't even golf!
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