Improv Coaching Notes with Andy Rocco (8/10/17)
Another set of notes from a session with Andy Rocco. Andy currently lives in LA and has been improvising for nearly 20 years.
Typical scenes are 2 minutes, maximum 3. This is a big reason why you need to define what's happening within a few lines.
Each line should add new information about the people. This will advance and deepen the scene.
Get to the meat of the scene quickly by making your lines meaningful and rich. This doesn't mean you need to speak quickly and act frantic.
Need who, what, where.
Do or say something deliberate and specific at the top of the scene.
Improv hack: you can come in with some detail about the character, and hold on to it to inform your behavior, and to pull out if the scene stalls. This is something that doesn't need to be said in the scene or addressed, but is still there for you. For instance, your character couldn't sleep the night before because of loud neighbors.
Your partner's last line is your "meal ticket".
Make specific choices, and stick with them.
Choices and details don't exist in a vacuum. They imply things about the characters and their world.
Make choices that feel right. Make choices that fit the people and circumstances.
Let details inform other details.
Small details become something more because of their implications.
Find out who you are early. The scene isn't meaningful to the audience if they don't know who the characters are.
If you don't establish who you are, the audience checks out.
Defining the "who" makes the scene real and relatable.
You want to immerse the audience in the world of the scene.
Two "modes" in improv: heighten and explore.
A scene that is all heightening will feel chaotic and fake. A scene that is all exploring can at least feel real, honest, and even funny.
Don't be afraid to have a real conversation about something in a scene.
Improvise scenes that feel genuine.
Move away from the "thing". Improvise scenes about people.
Make scenes about characters, feelings, and emotions.
Use what you know in real life to make scenes more interesting.
A lot of improv isn't being smart, it's being confident enough to act truthfully and come from a real place.
If you’d like to hire Andy Rocco as an improv coach, visit http://www.improvcoaches.com/coaches/andy-rocco











