Difference between revisions of "Holy 1960s Batman, Batman!"

From Austin Improv Community Wiki
m (→‎Media: added photos)
m (→‎History: added KEYE info)
Line 31: Line 31:
== History ==
== History ==
Early takes on the format appeared under the title "Holy Sleep Deprivation, Batman" at [[The 40-Hour Improv Marathon]] and [[The 41-Hour Improv Marathon]].  There was also a test run during [[The 2011 Improvised Play Festival]].
Early takes on the format appeared under the title "Holy Sleep Deprivation, Batman" at [[The 40-Hour Improv Marathon]] and [[The 41-Hour Improv Marathon]].  There was also a test run during [[The 2011 Improvised Play Festival]].
[[Kaci Beeler]] and [[Deano Jones]] appeared live on [[wikipedia:KEYE-TV|KEYE-TV]] on 5/11/11 to promote the show.


The show sold out all 10 weeks of its mainstage run at [[the Hideout Theatre]].  Its mainstage run included an appearance in [[The 42-Hour Improv Marathon]].
The show sold out all 10 weeks of its mainstage run at [[the Hideout Theatre]].  Its mainstage run included an appearance in [[The 42-Hour Improv Marathon]].

Revision as of 12:39, 14 May 2013


Holy 1960's Batman, Batman! was an improvised longform narrative show inspired by the 1960's Batman TV series.

Cast & Crew

Deano Jones appeared as Batman/Bruce Wayne, and Kaci Beeler played Robin/Dick Grayson.

The rest of the cast were ensemble players.

Michael Yew was the technical director for the show.

Guest Villains

Each week, a guest improvisor would play the villain of the episode. The villians were as follows:

History

Early takes on the format appeared under the title "Holy Sleep Deprivation, Batman" at The 40-Hour Improv Marathon and The 41-Hour Improv Marathon. There was also a test run during The 2011 Improvised Play Festival.

Kaci Beeler and Deano Jones appeared live on KEYE-TV on 5/11/11 to promote the show.

The show sold out all 10 weeks of its mainstage run at the Hideout Theatre. Its mainstage run included an appearance in The 42-Hour Improv Marathon.

After its May and June performances, it had its run extended for two weeks, played two special Halloween shows, and headlined the Black Box Comedy Festival in Atlanta, all in 2011.

Media