Difference between revisions of "History of Austin Improv"

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==Early Days==
I'm so happy that my boss let me have the day off for this. I almost didn't atentd and it was my first MP3 Experiment with my friend. It was fun looking around the island, since we were there 2 hrs early, and trying to spot others who were trying to be incognito. I only saw a few water guns (less than 5), and heard one group talking about the shower caps. The biggest giveaway for me were the white sheets being used for groups resting under trees before the event began.When it started, I had it downloaded on my Android phone and was 30-45 seconds behind everyone else until I manually synced up well enough. There was one  fan  who was walking around, trying to figure out what was going on. I remember her passing me and calling out to friends, Something is happening, but no one's telling me anything!  Then everyone laid down and she seemed even more stumped. It was great.The following of fans was great too. There weren't many, but I saw a group having a picnic and they got into it, doing jumping jacks and dancing, with people mimicking them. The worst was the high fiving. It was hard to find others the further we migrated onto the field when most people were at the outside perimeter.The ghost walk was amusing, and lifting the sheet canopy as Steve assured us it wasn't raining (and the sky opened up) was perfect timing. The water gun fight was wonderful too! It was a blast.I think the best part was the after effect. Smiles everywhere! I saw people playing instruments and starting conga lines. A woman standing poised in a shower cap, with her water gun at the ready, and a small board where she wrote  Victory!' as her friend took photos. People were even rolling down the hill in their bed sheets. It was so much fun and I hope more friends join me next year!
 
In 1985 [[the Comedy Workshop]] at 15th St. and Lavaca was home to [[The Hilarions | The Hilarions: Gladiators of Comedy]], possibly the first serious improv troupe in Austin. The owner of the Comedy Workshop in Houston (which gave Bill Hicks, Sam Kinison and the other so-called Outlaw stand-up comics their start) would drive up to Austin on Fridays and teach improv to anyone who would show up. The Hilarions formed in early 1985 and did late-night short-form shows Tuesday through Thursday for about a year and a half.
 
When the Austin Comedy Workshop closed, a few of the Hilarions made the leap over to [[Cap City Comedy Club|the Laff Stop]] (which would later become [[Cap City Comedy Club]]), and out of a series of workshops run by an actor named Rodney Rincon, a troupe called [[the Laff Staff]] was born. Making their debut in early 1987, they performed a 45-minute pre-show lounge slot four days a week for about five years. 
 
Meanwhile, in 1986 the Austin [[ComedySportz]] franchise, owned by Les McGeehee, began producing shows in a series of spaces, starting in their own space above Headliner's East, then the original Vortex, The Ritz, the Laff Stop, eventually helping to open a comedy venue next to [[Esther's Follies]] called the Deep End (now known as [[the Velveeta Room]]). The Velveeta Room was also home to [[the Cheese Pistols]] and Austin's first local comedy festivals, [[Austin Comedy Festival]] and the [[Southwest Improv Festival of Texas]] (SWIFT). When ComedySportz opened [[the ImprovClub]] on the same block as Esther's and the Velveeta Room in 1994, the city briefly recognized the area as the "Austin Comedy District".  
 
In 1996 ComedySportz relocated to [[the ComedySportz Playhouse]] in Northcross Mall, producing five shows a week with a kitchen and full bar. The Velveeta Room was still going strong, featuring troupes like [[Marc Pruter]]'s [[Monks' Night Out]], [[Code Blue]], and [[Los Paranoias]], directed by [[Pam Ribon]] and [[David Lampe]]. And at the University of Texas there was a troupe called [[Only 90% Effective]] directed by [[Brently Heilbron]].
 
==Austin Improv Goes National==
 
In 1997 Austin landed on the national improv and sketch map with the first annual [[Big Stinkin' Improv and Sketch Comedy Festival]], which brought troupes, teachers and talent scouts from around the nation to Austin for a memorable weekend of comedy. Improv played some of the biggest venues in town from the Paramount to Palmer Auditorium.
 
In 1998 [[Sean Hill]] and [[David Lampe]] hosted auditions for [[We Could Be Heroes|Austin Theatresports]] and their first show was a [[Maestro]] (aka [[Micetro]]), at the Public Domain Theater on Congress Ave. in February of 1999 with Dan O'Connor and Brian Lohman directing. Soon after Austin Theatersports began a run at the Hyde Park Theater, and then in late 1998, Sean started work on a new improv theater and coffee house called the Hideout.
 
1999 Austin ComedySportz hosted the National Championship of ComedySportz with 22 teams from across the country (and won the National Championship). Around the same time ComedySportz players [[Owen Egerton]] and [[Jerm Pollett]] started the hit movie commentary show [[Master Pancake Theater | Mr. Sinus Theater 3000]](now known as [[Master Pancake Theater]]) at the Alamo Drafthouse.
 
==The Boom and the Bust==
 
In 1999 the improv scene was booming. There were many venues: [[the Velveeta Room]], [[the Bad Dog Comedy Theater]], [[the ComedySportz Playhouse]] and even [[Cap City Comedy Club]] and [[Esther's Follies]] would host improv from time to time. There were lots of troupes: Austin Theatresports, ComedySportz, [[Monks' Night Out]], [[Well Hung Jury]], [[Code Blue]], [[the Cheese Pistols]], [[Ray Prewitt's 4th Grade Class]], [[Fatbuckle]], [[the Skinnies]], [[the Inflatable Egos]], [[Only 90% Effective]] and many more troupes lost to the mists of time. [[Big Stinkin' Improv and Sketch Comedy Festival]] was getting bigger and stinkier by the year, bringing in top talent from stage, television and film.
 
After 2000 the festival producers [[Ed Carter]] and [[Marc Pruter]], along with a lot of other Austinites, lost their shirts. Big Stinkin' shut down along with all of the other improv venues and troupes.
 
Meanwhile in 2000 [[The Hideout Theatre|the Hideout Theatre and Coffeehouse]] officially opened as a venue in a historic building on Congress Ave. downtown, and Austin Theatresports became [[We Could Be Heroes]]. [[Sean Hill]] and [[Shana Merlin]] ran the house troupe and the We Could Be Heroes School of Improvisational Theater, Austin's first full-time improv training center.
 
==The Ongoing Austin Improv Renaissance==
 
In 2004 and 2005 a variety of factors led to a second renaissance in Austin improv. [[Andy Crouch]] was hired to run the day to day operations at the Hideout, and he made a concerted effort to grow the community of active Austin improvisers through weekly shows and social events, and eventually a nonprofit organization called the [[Austin Improv Collective]]. A handful of improvisers moved to Austin from Chicago and Cleveland eventually coming together as the troupe [[The Frank Mills|Tight]] (now [[The Frank Mills]]) bringing with them the performance styles of famous Chicago theaters like Improv Olympic and the Second City. The New Orleans troupe [[ColdTowne (troupe)|ColdTowne]] landed in Austin in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. And the [[Out of Bounds Comedy Festival|Out of Bounds Improv and Minigolf Festival]], started in 2002 by [[Jeremy Sweetlamb|Jeremy Lamb]] as a local, experimental improv festival, had been slowly but surely gaining momentum and national attention.
 
Things began to bubble up at the Hideout and by October of 2006, ColdTowne struck out and opened a self-titled theater and conservatory on Airport Boulevard, offering improv, sketch and stand up comedy.  
 
In March of 2008 [[The Merlin Works Institute for Improvisation]] and [[Gnap! Theater Projects]] began teaching classes and performing shows at the [[Salvage Vanguard Theater]] on Manor Road.
 
ComedySportz resumed weekly shows at [[Cafe Caffeine]] in south Austin in the fall of 2008.
 
In 2009 former ColdTowne members [[Chris Trew]] and [[Tami Nelson]] opened [[The New Movement]] in east Austin as a home for all forms of comedy. (In 2012 they opened a branch of the New Movement in New Orleans.) 
 
In 2010 LA transplant [[Tom Booker]] and New York transplant [[Asaf Ronen]] opened the [[Institution Theater]] in south Austin.  
 
In recent years there has been remarkable stability in the various Austin theaters, with only minor adjustments: The local ComedySportz franchise is currently inactive; the New Movement relocated to a new downtown location on Lavaca (and opened a second theater in New Orleans); Gnap! shifted focus from the production of improv to scripted work; and the Merlin Works training center found a new home at the longtime Austin theater venue [[ZACH Theater]].
 
Currently the number of improvisers in Austin is estimated at between 400 and 600. Austin has gained national attention for the vibrant community of improvisers and quality work in a variety of styles. A Johnstone-inspired, short form and storytelling focus can be found at the Hideout Theatre and Merlin-Works. Various Chicago and New York influences are prevalent at ColdTowne, the New Movement and the Institution. But Austin is ultimately a melting pot. The intentional building of a scene and community has resulted in an environment of collaborative competition, and many improvisers study and perform at multiple theaters, coming together throughout the year for events like Out of Bounds, [[the Improvised Play Festival]], [[Sketchfest]], [[the Improv Wins Conference]], [[Wafflefest]], [[The Austin Improv Potluck]], [[Same Year's Eve]] and more.
 
==Articles on Austin Improv==
* [http://www.austinchronicle.com/arts/2001-01-26/80278/ The Austin Chronicle], "Livin' Lavaca Loca: Laughing It Up at the Comedy Workshop" by Angela Davis
* [http://www.austinchronicle.com/arts/2000-08-04/78074/ The Austin Chronicle], "Home for Heroes (and Others): Comedy Comes Up Congress in the Storefront Theatre The Hideout" by Phil West
* [http://www.austinchronicle.com/arts/2006-08-25/397677/ The Austin Chronicle], "Mission: Improvable: Austin's improv community gathers intelligence" by Wayne Allen Brenner
* [http://www.austinchronicle.com/arts/2013-08-23/improv-educated/ The Austin Chronicle], "Improv-Educated: Out of Bounds Comedy Festival makes more room for Austin's increasingly savvy audiences" by Robert Faires

Revision as of 20:10, 17 February 2016

I'm so happy that my boss let me have the day off for this. I almost didn't atentd and it was my first MP3 Experiment with my friend. It was fun looking around the island, since we were there 2 hrs early, and trying to spot others who were trying to be incognito. I only saw a few water guns (less than 5), and heard one group talking about the shower caps. The biggest giveaway for me were the white sheets being used for groups resting under trees before the event began.When it started, I had it downloaded on my Android phone and was 30-45 seconds behind everyone else until I manually synced up well enough. There was one fan who was walking around, trying to figure out what was going on. I remember her passing me and calling out to friends, Something is happening, but no one's telling me anything! Then everyone laid down and she seemed even more stumped. It was great.The following of fans was great too. There weren't many, but I saw a group having a picnic and they got into it, doing jumping jacks and dancing, with people mimicking them. The worst was the high fiving. It was hard to find others the further we migrated onto the field when most people were at the outside perimeter.The ghost walk was amusing, and lifting the sheet canopy as Steve assured us it wasn't raining (and the sky opened up) was perfect timing. The water gun fight was wonderful too! It was a blast.I think the best part was the after effect. Smiles everywhere! I saw people playing instruments and starting conga lines. A woman standing poised in a shower cap, with her water gun at the ready, and a small board where she wrote Victory!' as her friend took photos. People were even rolling down the hill in their bed sheets. It was so much fun and I hope more friends join me next year!