Difference between revisions of "Aden Kirschner"
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Though Aden began improvising early, she joined the Austin Improv Collective in 2005 when she relocated to ATX following living two years of living in South Korea. | Though Aden began improvising early, she joined the Austin Improv Collective in 2005 when she relocated to ATX following living two years of living in South Korea. | ||
She joined [[Girls Girls Girls]] in 2007 and began teaching for Merlin Works in | She joined [[Girls Girls Girls]] in 2007 and began teaching for [[Merlin Works]] in 2009. | ||
A post from her about the first improv show she ever saw:<blockquote><p>The first improv show I saw was one I produced and directed in High School in February of 1995. Improv was so much a part of my theatrical training (which started at the age of 6), that I wanted to dedicate my senior project work to it. I even wrote my senior thesis on the use of improv as a teaching tool... and went on to teach improv for a couple of years.</p> | A post from her about the first improv show she ever saw:<blockquote><p>The first improv show I saw was one I produced and directed in High School in February of 1995. Improv was so much a part of my theatrical training (which started at the age of 6), that I wanted to dedicate my senior project work to it. I even wrote my senior thesis on the use of improv as a teaching tool... and went on to teach improv for a couple of years.</p> |
Revision as of 12:34, 8 September 2014
Aden Kirschner is an award winning performer, skilled improv teacher, facilitator and trainer, and operated as the Corporate Training and Events Coordinator for the Merlin Works Institute for Improvisation. Her performance and corporate training clients included Austin Waldorf High School, Hewlett Packard, Safe Place and Dell. As a teacher, Aden sought to create a fun, safe environment where people can explore and grow new practical skills to help them on stage, in business and in their private life.
Teacher
Aden has an extensive background in education. She has been teaching and facilitating using improv comedy skills since 1995. In addition to giving performance and communication skills training, she has also taught writing and conversational ESL. In 2000 she was published in the Fort Lewis College Freshman Writing Course book. Aden joined educational software powerhouse Compass Learning in 2006, where she spent nearly three years crafting topics like algebra and biology into fun, dynamic and engaging learning activities that retained 110% of their curricular importance. She holds a BA in European history from Fort Lewis College, and in 2002 she facilitated the creation of a brand new Leadership program for their students that explored the application of improv performance in professional skills areas like communication, customer service and entrepreneurship.
Performer
With nearly thirty years of experience on stage, Aden has been winning awards and recognition as a speaker, singer and performer since she was six years old. She is a fixture in the Austin improv community and is frequently sought out to play in shows with multiple theater companies in town; including world famous vaudeville revue: Esther’s Follies where she spent the majority of 2011 wearing huge wigs, singing big songs and getting massive laughs. She can be seen performing most regularly at Austin’s premier theater venue the ZACH, with Merlin Works faculty troupe, The Known Wizards; or with B. Iden Payne Award winners, Girls Girls Girls Improvised Musical Comedy.
Coach
Labeled as “The funniest person in Austin,” by improv giant, Tom Booker, Aden joined the Merlin Works faculty in 2009 where her performance classes are in high demand. She now additionally promotes the Corporate Training side of the Institute as the Training and Events Coordinator, where she seeks to improve the way people communicate with each other, one business at a time.
History
Though Aden began improvising early, she joined the Austin Improv Collective in 2005 when she relocated to ATX following living two years of living in South Korea.
She joined Girls Girls Girls in 2007 and began teaching for Merlin Works in 2009.
A post from her about the first improv show she ever saw:
The first improv show I saw was one I produced and directed in High School in February of 1995. Improv was so much a part of my theatrical training (which started at the age of 6), that I wanted to dedicate my senior project work to it. I even wrote my senior thesis on the use of improv as a teaching tool... and went on to teach improv for a couple of years.
The show I created was called Random Things. It was a mix of monologue, scripted sketch, improvised dialogue inside of already blocked scenes, and included two mini-episodes of a fully improvised soap opera. It was two acts of roughly 45 minutes and had a fifteen minute intermission. The show ran for two weekends and each night was completely different. My parents have one of the nights on video somewhere.
In comparison the improv I see and participate in here in Austin is sooooo much simpler!
In 2014, she moved away to Oregon, but visits Austin regularly and is still involved in several local projects, including Girls Girls Girls, The World Peace Project and The Known Wizards.