Asaf Ronen

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Asaf Ronen

AsafRonen.jpg

Primary Theater The Institution Theater
Years Active 2007-Present

Asaf Ronen is an improv performer and director. He co-runs The Institution Theater.

Summary

Asaf Ronen is the creator and Editor-in-Chief of YESand.com, a website devoted to improvisation, and is the author of Directing Improv: Show the Way By Getting Out of the Way. He has been involved in improv since 1990, starting in college and working with Theatresports, ComedySportz and directing his own longform improv troupe, Hiatus, where he helped create original formats.

Asaf has taught improvisation in Canada, Great Britain, Norway and in twenty-two of The United States. His directing credits include the all-girl group goga, the improvised comic book adventure show Ka-Baam!!, and Death in the City, a dramatic longform improv piece, at the NY Fringe Festival. He was a producer on Trust Us, This Is All Made Up, a documentary on legendary improvisers TJ & Dave that had its world premiere at Austin's South by Southwest Festival and was a writer on the soon-to-be-released Days of Delusion.

Asaf has taught throughout NYC's public school system as a resident artist through LEAP and New Horizons and as part of Weist-Barron's ACTeen. In 2000, Asaf worked with Cirque du Soleil as a scout for improvisational talent.

History

A post from him about the first improv show he ever saw:

The first show I saw was in November of 1990, one month after I started doing improv. Until then my exposure to it was through the original British version of Whose Line Is It Anyway?

The group I saw was called Chicago City Limits and at the time they were performing out of the basement of the Van Huys Church on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. Years later they would get their own theater.

The show was a mix of sketches and short form games as well as a medley of song parodies that they became very well known for. The cast included a man by the name of John Cameron Telfer who became a template for me to grow into as an improviser. He was smooth, witty and a bit smarmy as well. (Later on my template would become TJ Jagadowski.) There are only two games I remember from that set. One was Telfer doing Hesitation Speech and the other had the four cast members onstage, each with a newspaper, magazine or some form of reading material. One of them would start reading and another would interrupt them with their own reading material, but do it in a way that perfectly completed the sentence that they were interrupting.

I still think that is an incredibly amazing trick to pull off.

Troupes

Shows

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