The 44-Hour Improv Marathon

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Publicity image for the 44-Hour Improv Marathon.
Publicity image for the 44-Hour Improv Marathon.

The 44-Hour Improv Marathon was the fifth annual Hideout Improv Marathon.

Summary

It will be performed in 2013, starting Friday, June 21 and ending Sunday, June 23.

Core Players

Staff

Schedule

  • Friday 5pm: The cast performed with teens from The Hideout Theatre's summer camp.
  • Friday 6pm: Free-form improv from the core cast.
    • This turned out to be a montage, featuring among other things, Day Care for Baby Banes.
  • Friday 7pm: Start Trekkin': improvised Star Trek
    • This was a story about a pleasure-planet overtaken by a Klingon bent on revenge against the show's captain.
  • Friday 8pm: The Fancy-Pants Mashup
  • Friday 10pm: Parallelogramophonograph presented "The Tab", a montage in which all the characters were blindfolded.
  • Friday 11pm: Franz & Dave presented "Pine Falls", a surreal television pilot in the style of Twin Peaks.
    • Each marathoner got a character type from the audience at the top of the show; Franz Kafka and David Lynch narrated the story as usual.
    • Like the Twin Peaks pilot, this performance featured an FBI agent investigating the murder of a college coed in a northwest logging town.
  • Saturday 12am: The New Game Project: the audience suggested the names of games, and the players invented and played games with those names.
  • Saturday 1am: In Our Prime: grounded, dramatic improv, in this case based around an extended family attending a wedding.
  • Saturday 2am: Past Lives: following a soul through thematically-linked vignettes across history.
  • Saturday 3am: Cheap Date
  • Saturday 4am: "The Bat" with ColdTowne: an improv show in the dark.
  • Saturday 5am: Epic Telescope (AKA "Half-Life in reverse"): a story presented first in one minute, then three minutes, then five, then fifteen, then thirty.
  • Saturday 6am: Performance with veterans of The Hideout Improv Marathon
  • Saturday 7am: Student Show
    • This was a set of short-form games.
  • Saturday 8am: Waterpark, a musical-improv troupe from The New Movement, presented a non-narrative musical-improv show.
  • Saturday 9am: Dubbed Indemnity: improvising the dialog, sound effects, and soundtrack for silenced TV and film clips.
  • Saturday 10am: Local Genius Society presented "Video Game", where cards scattered with 'helpful' instructions threw kinks and twists into an improvised story.
    • This was a narrative based around "Disney Place", a knockoff version of Disney World.
  • Saturday 11am: Charles Dickens Unleashed: improv in the style of one of Charles Dickens' early novels.
    • This was the story of William Barachnal, a young aristocrat who was banished from his family home and, after a checkered youth, became a respected blacksmith in Derbyshire.
  • Saturday 12pm: Arkay presents JTS Brown.
  • Saturday 1pm: What's the Story, Steve?: kid-friendly improv, featuring a dog.
    • In this story, Steve was a duke in a fantasy setting who was not invited to the kingdom's most eagerly-awaited birthday party.
  • Saturday 2pm: Free-form improv from the core cast. (Nicknamed "The Eye of the Storm", this is the exact midpoint of the marathon.)
  • Saturday 3pm: Girls Girls Girls: improvised narrative musical.
    • This musical was called "DMV", and featured a young lady getting her first driver's license at the local Department of Motor Vehicles.
  • Saturday 4pm: Pick Your Own Path: improv in the style of the old Choose Your Own Adventure books.
  • Saturday 5pm: The Amazon & The Milksop presented a series of improvised English Instructional Videos.
  • Saturday 6pm: The Library: improvisors in several different genres performed a single narrative.
  • Saturday 7pm: The Knuckleball Now: rapid-fire improv.
  • Saturday 8pm: Theatresports: two teams of improvisors competed in a series of improv challenges.
  • Saturday 9pm: Confidence Men: improvised David Mamet.
    • They're doing "The Variations", a series of two-hander scenes based around an audience-suggested word (in this case, "pencil").
  • Saturday 10pm: Maestro: an improv competition with Survivor-style eliminations.
  • Sunday 12am: The Black Vault: improvised H. P. Lovecraft.
    • The first story featured Justin Davis as a mountain explorer who brought back an evil elixir to his upper-class family.
    • The second story featured Peter Rogers as a doctor who performed a series of sleep-deprivation experiments with disastrous results.
  • Sunday 1am: Puppet Improv Project: improv with puppets!
    • The show format was "couples therapy", in which Sara Farr helped a number of puppet couples deal with their relationship problems.
  • Sunday 2am: Tech Nightmare: wherein the players have to do everything the people in the tech booth tell them to.
  • Sunday 3am: Big Beautiful Warlock presented Big Beautiful Warriors, a game show with very non-traditional games.
  • Sunday 4am: Pulp Friction: improv in the style of Quentin Tarantino
  • Sunday 5am: a secret show, produced by Jason Vines.
    • This turned out to be "Human Clay", where Jason, in character as a Bob-Ross-like sculpture, molded players into various shapes and blew "magic dust" on them that brought them to life for scenes.
    • Roy had made Jason promise not to be *too* cruel to the core cast with his secret format.
  • Sunday 6am: "The Queen Is Not Amused", wherein Jonathan Monkhouse appeared via Skype, portraying the queen of England.
  • Sunday 7am: Student Show
  • Sunday 8am: Care Bear Stare -- The Care Bears came to bring badly animated joy to your lives.
    • In this show, Care Bears based around not-exactly-G-rated emotions solved problems for the core-cast members in a longform narrative.
    • The Care Bears:
  • Sunday 9am: The Institution Theater presented "the movie format", an improv montage with screenplay-style scene painting.
    • This story followed a girl in the inner city and her estranged father through a narrative that became increasingly Lynchian over time.
  • Sunday 10am: Fakespeare: improv in the style of William Shakespeare.
    • This version of the show started with a few Shakespearean improv games, and then segue into a narrative.
    • The narrative was based on a Persian attack on Jericho.
  • Sunday 11am: Bad Boys: a non-narrative montage of scenes.
  • Sunday 12pm: Free-form improv from the core cast (nicknamed "The Final Countdown").
    • This turned out to be a narrative about a group of Led Zeppelin fans, followed by the usual Q&A with the cast.

Jonathan Monkhouse

British improvisor Jonathan Monkhouse was originally scheduled to play in the 44-Hour Marathon. Due to visa troubles, neither Monkhouse nor his improv partner Chris Mead were able to come to the United States.

Michael Joplin stepped in as Jonathan's replacement in the core cast.

The Saturday 2am slot was originally scheduled for Project2, the science-fiction troupe that both Monkhouse and Chris Mead are a part of.

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