ACTING CLASS, Part 2 by Gregg Gethard

October 16, 2008
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Things just seem to happen to Gregg Gethard. After telling a few stories at comedy shows in New York City, he created his own monthly show in Philly, BEDTIME STORIES, to tell a few more. Over the past year and a half the show has grown in audience and features some of the best comics in the city.

Here, Gregg continues his eight-part series on an acting class he took in Montclair, New Jersey. [Read Part 1]

WEEK 2

We had some defectors. Up to half the class did not show up, including The Cute Girl. This means I am now easily the best looking person in class.

Voice Box Girl, The Hemaphroditic German, The Overly Competitive Hindu, Class Junkie and at least one Interchangeable Housewife showed up. A new woman — about 35 with Sagging Boobs and, no doubt, ownership of every Tori Amos album – made her debut. Joining her was a large Mexican guy wearing a shirt with no less than seven buttons left open. He dripped sexual charisma. I immediately dubbed him the Latino Bohunk.

The Overly Competitive Hindu walked into class and tripped over an extension chord and fell on his face. He got up and said “I was working on that all week.” Someone watches Who’s Line Is It Anyway! He also added he was impersonating Buster Keaton or, “Johnny Depp pretending to be Buster Keaton.” No wonder the local Blockbuster didn’t have a copy of Benny and Joon.

We began by doing warm-up routines that I usually associate with pony-tailed white guys in their 50’s. We looked into walls and described what we saw, laying on the ground and “relaxing” in a room with complete strangers.

Bob then told us we had to “envision a glow capturing your body, limb by limb, allowing us to reach a state of ultimate relaxation.” While Bob was busy hypnotizing me, I was thinking about how all of this sounded a little bit like Heaven’s Gate. And then I started thinking about how cool it would be if I really WAS trapped in a glowing cage of some sort, like from something in a bad 70’s sci-fi flick. So then I started giggling again and everyone was staring me down.

Next, we stood in a circle. Bob told us the directions: two of us would stand in the middle of the circle and we would take alternating terms describing each other, slowly expanding the depth and breadth of our commentary. He gave an example, telling Voice Box Girl she was wearing glasses. Voice Box Girl then had to repeat what Bob said and then come up with a retort of her own. She told Bob he was very slender.

I went third, pairing me with The Overly Competitive Hindu. He told me I was wearing black sneakers. I repeated that and responded by telling him he had haunting eyes. He then responded my pants were baggy. I then told him he had wispy chest hair.

After a few minutes, he was replaced with an Interchangeable Housewife, clad in a day-glo fanny pack this week. She sprinted up to the middle of the circle. Immediately, she commented on something she noticed about my appearance.

“You have two verrry cute earlobes.”

I then said something generic about her hair.

“You have very well-proportioned eyes,” she said.

For the following week, I was supposed to think of something I do when alone so the class can start to “block” it for a performance. I’m tempted to show the class what I do when I’m actually alone, which is download graphic Internet porn.

Class ended this week with Bob confiding something. Apparently, he’s the worst actor in the history of ever.

He asked the class if anyone came to the theater on Saturday to see his performance in The Crucible. But no one did. He then explained what happened. When he was on stage, he started to “incoherently babble” his lines and started breathing heavy, like he was having a heart attack. He then went off-stage and fell to the ground. The show was immediately stopped while he was rushed to the hospital.

Someone asked him.

“Oh, it was just a panic attack,” he said. “I get them whenever I perform.”

NEXT WEEK

Next week, Bob reveals the truth about improv comedy while also introducing us into the magical world of miming.


Posted in Gregg Gethard

VIDEO: Highlights from The Comic Vs. Audience Comedy Show, 10/6

October 15, 2008
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Last week’s Comic Vs. Audience Comedy Show was a hilarious and fun night by all accounts, and we’re sad that you missed it. Maybe you were busy, maybe you just couldn’t get out there…whatever the half-baked excuse, we’ve compiled a few highlights for you.

(In order of appearance: Tim Ryan, Luke Giordano, Doogie Horner and Chip Chantry)

By the way, the video is Not Safe For Work

The next show will be Monday, November 3rd at the Shubin Theatre (407 Bainbridge St). More on that to come!

By the way, our Scramble video from earlier this week now has sound! Yay!


David Terruso’s LIFE OF LETTERS #12, The Finale

October 15, 2008
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Comic Vs. Audience is proud to present every Wednesday, LIFE OF LETTERS, a new twelve-part comic strip series by David Terruso of the local sketch group Animosity Pierre.

(Click to enlarge)

Animosity Pierre will be performing at DUOS, October 23rd at Helium Comedy Club with Meg & Rob and Dave and Brian.


SECRET PANTS: The Firm of Pagano, Pagano, Tomarelli and Pagano

October 14, 2008
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Posted in Secret Pants

VIDEO: Philly Improv Theatre house team THE SCRAMBLE

October 13, 2008
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This past weekend, the Philly Improv Theater premiered three new house teams and all this week we’ll be showing their debut performances at the Shubin Theatre.

First up is THE SCRAMBLE, directed by PHIT founder Greg Maughan and composed of Shane Jenkins, Bob Swenson, Meg Favreau, Jefferson Haynes, Rob Cutler, Katie Horahan, Nick Gillette (not in this video) and AJ “Milkshake” Horan. Their format is, fittingly, “The Scramble”, as Greg explained in an interview this April:

You’ll see one scene come out and start on stage and then you might see two other people come out and start a completely different scene but in the same stage space. You might have people talking over each other and you might have two actors on the sides of the stage playing different scenes and one actor in the middle of the stage who is in both scenes but is switching between the two scenes. So the thing about it that’s cool is that one of the things about improv is “don’t think” and you can’t when you do this form because often you are stepping into a scene that is already in progress but you have no idea what it is about. Similarly, for the audience they can pick and choose what they want to focus in on. And the third thing that I really like about it is that when there are all of these things happening on stage at once, you get weird callbacks that are totally subconscious from the actors. So the actors are involved in their own scenes and something they overhear peripherally comes into their scene. And the actors have no idea and the audience sees it, and that’s really cool.

UPDATE: Sound has been fixed!


ACTING CLASS, Part 1 by Gregg Gethard

October 8, 2008
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Things just seem to happen to Gregg Gethard. After telling a few stories at comedy shows in New York City, he created his own monthly show in Philly, BEDTIME STORIES, to tell a few more. Over the past year and a half the show has grown in audience and features some of the best comics in the city.

Today, Gregg starts a new eight-part series on an acting class he took in Montclair, New Jersey.

The next installment of Bedtime Stories is TONIGHT at the Shubin Theater (407 Bainbridge) at 8PM.

WEEK 1

“I’m here because there’s this one movie that I love? And I wish I could always be in i? And I never knew if I had what it takes to make it? The movie’s called Steel Magnolias?”

“Get out of town. Just get out of town RIGHT NOW! That’s my favorite movie, too! And I wish I could have been in, too!”

The following exchange occurred between two middle-aged, Interchangeable Housewives. They were sitting across from me in the leaky, asbestos-filled basement of Montclair, NJ’s 12 Miles West Theater. And the reason I overheard this exchange was because we were taking an acting class together.

I guess some of my classmates were taking the class because of a craven, misplaced and desperate desire for fame. Others were just looking for fun. Me? I had a craven, misplaced and desperate desire to get laid. This was from looking at the experiences of my brother. He looks like me, we have the same sense of humor, but he did well with the ladies. Me? Not so much. And the one difference between us – he’s a professional actor, and I’m not.

Within the first 30 seconds of taking this class, I was confounded with a question. Was this class the biggest mistake of my life? Or was it the best decision I ever made?

Our instructor’s name was Bob, an even more flamboyant version of Jm. J Bullock. He talked like every audience member of Behind The Actor’s Studio – that annoying, super-serious “artistic” voice. After introducing himself to us, he began to speak in a series of New Age Platitudes such as “We are on a journey to find ourselves and each other” and “there is something we need to get out of this, something we may not even realize we need.”

We sat around in a circle, where after Bob’s introduction we introduce ourselves. There were a few other people in the class with me. I have to refer to them by their nicknames because, apparently, it’s not a good teaching technique to know the names of your classmates. They were, in order:

THE INTERCHANGEABLE HOUSWIVES – the aforementioned Steel Magnolias fans. One wore a shirt with a cat on it, the other spoke like every sentence was actually a question? There was no other way to tell them apart.

THE CUTE GIRL – A very cute girl in her mid-20’s. She looked kind of like the WWE’s Stephanie McMahon-Helmsley, except without the years of cocaine-fueled sex romps.

THE THROAT BOX GIRL – Another girl in her mid-20’s who sounded like Fran Drescher with a throat cancer box.

THE HEMAPHRODITIC GERMAN – A German woman missing breast tissue, giving her a haunting transgendered appearance.

THE OVERLY COMPETITIVE HINDU – An Indian man in his 40’s who, when asked why he was taking the class, responded by saying “My 12-year-old son acts at his middle school. He’s a good actor. But I know if he’s good, I can be a great actor.”

THE CLASS JUNKIE – An older man in his 60’s, grey-haired and bespectacled who described himself as a “class junkie” because of his love of various classes offered in community centers located throughout suburban Essex County. This piqued my interest and, later that night, I looked into taking a ceramics class at James Caldwell High School.

And a few other people whom didn’t say anything particularly interesting.

After our introductions, Bob instructed us to focus on a certain, exact point in the room and breathe. And breathe. And breathe some more. And then, he said, for all of us at once we had to say what we were looking at. I thought this was a chance to make The Cute Girl laugh.

“I see the face of the Virgin Mary.”

She didn’t.

Bob then told us to pretend we were getting into our car, taking a trip to the grocery store, where we were to purchase an orange and then eat it. Then, he asked us how we felt about this experience.

“It really affected me,” said The Overly Competitive Hindu he said in his “o” voice. “I’m a real orange guy. I mean, I eat oranges alllllll the time.”

Bob then told us visualize ourselves in our “personal fear zone.” Everyone had to say theirs at once. Naturally, I did not say anything (as I am a man without fear) and instead eavesdropped on others.

Due to her freakish voice, The Throat Box Girl was the easiest to hone in on. “I’m in a bedroom. There are books by Jay Leno all over the place.” I started to laugh. How do books written by Jay Leno cause 20-ish girls panic attacks? She heard me laughing at her and then gave me a dirty look.

We then returned to our chairs to discuss our personal fear zones. The Hempaphroditic German said she thought of laughing children playing in her driveway. Class Junkie said he couldn’t think of one particular place, but instead thought about the time he battled prostate cancer.

I went next. I wanted to say what I was thinking: “My fear zone is being trapped in a basement with you people.” Instead, I made up something about the dark woods behind my grandfather’s house.

The Cute Girl said her fear zone was her ex-boyfriend’s house. I took that as a sign that she wanted to sleep with me.

Class concluded with all of us having to say what our “dream role” was. After the Interchangeable Housewives both admitted their love of Sally Field vehicles, the Hemaphroditic German said she wanted to play a villainess “in anything, whatever.” The Overly Competitive Hindu said he wanted to play Samuel L. Jackson’s role in Pulp Fiction. (The foot-rub debate scene would have been awesome with this re-casting.)

I said I wanted to star in a Vagina Monologue. Not one of my classmates laughed, even though some of them had vaginas.

Bob, the possible life-partner of Tim Gunn, said his dream role was to play the “American James Bond.”

After I left class, I wondered if I wanted to return. The Cute Girl was pretty cute and, most importantly, seemed emotionally vulnerable due to her fear of her ex-boyfriends house. However, she said that she wanted to star in a musical, and the last thing I ever wanted to do on a date was watch Newsies. And sitting in a poorly lit basement while I’m forced to do karmic breathing wasn’t exactly my idea of a fun Tuesday night. I would never use any of these relaxation techniques if I ever needed to clear my head at home. After all, that’s why God allows us to masturbate to Telemundo soap operas.

COMING NEXT WEEK

An older woman compliments my ears minutes after I was forced to pretend I was in awash in a glowing light orb.


Posted in Gregg Gethard

David Terruso’s LIFE OF LETTERS #11

October 8, 2008
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Comic Vs. Audience is proud to present every Wednesday, LIFE OF LETTERS, a new twelve-part comic strip series by David Terruso of the local sketch group Animosity Pierre.

(Click to enlarge)
Check back next Wednesday for the final episode.


THIS WEEK: PHIT at the Shubin Theatre

October 7, 2008
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It’s time again for the Philly Improv Theater‘s week at the Shubin Theatre (407 Bainbridge St). The week actually kicked off Monday with our show (we’ll have photos and video later this week), but the meat of the week is still yet to come.

This week marks the debut of three new PHIT house teams. They’re so new that we don’t even have the names yet, they’ll be announced at the shows.

Wednesday, October 8
8 p.m. – Bedtime Stories: Nerds, $10. The topic for this monthly sketch, video, etc. extravaganza are the socially inept, awkward, weird…nerds. Hey, what’s nerdier than writing a bunch of comedy sketches? We aren’t sure. Hosted by Gregg Gethard.

10 p.m. – Why Am I Not Famous?!?: A Comedy Talk Show w/ Kent Haines, $5. Kent welcomes comedian Brendan Kennedy and political candidate Eugene Grant to the show.

Thursday, October 9
8 p.m. – The Dave Hill Explosion, $10. NYC comic Dave Hill returns to Philadelphia and brings his explosion with him. Special guests: Food Network star Adam Gertler and the rock and roll band The Capitol Years.

10 p.m. – CAGEMATCH: Illegal Refill vs. reigning champ Cubed. $5. CAGEMATCH pits two groups against each other for 25-minute sets that can only use one audience suggestion. The audience decides the winner by secret ballot.

Friday, October 10
8 p.m. – PHIT House Team (dir. by Rich Horner) with New York UCB team Ragnarock, $10.
10 p.m. – The other two PHIT House Teams (directed by Scott Shepard and Greg Maughan respectively) debut, $10.

Saturday, October 11
8 p.m. – PHIT House Teams (directed by Scott Shepard and Greg Maughan respectively), $10.
10 p.m. – PHIT House Team (dir. by Rich Horner) with New York UCB team Ragnarock, $10.


THE TOPOGRAPHIC MAP OF THE COMEDIC LANDSCAPE by Doogie Horner

October 6, 2008
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Every comic has had the unpleasant experience of getting a lukewarm response to a hilarious joke, simply because they were telling it to the wrong crowd. Hey, how are you supposed to know they hate crab jokes in Maryland? Or that in Eastern Oregon, the only kind of fart jokes they like are “runny” fart jokes? Being a road comic for over sixty years, I’ve learned these lessons the hard way, and used my knowledge to draw a topographic map of the comedic landscape of the United States. Now you don’t have to worry about whether or not your “My favorite pizza topping is fresh picked scabs” joke will play in Charlotte, you know it will.

Hilariously yours,
Doogie

(Click to enlarge)

See Doogie tickle your (offbeat) funny bone at our show tonight!


Posted in Doogie Horner

TONIGHT: The Comic Vs. Audience Comedy Show!

October 6, 2008
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Ladies and Gentlemen, the time has come! Brought to you in conjunction with the Philly Improv Theater, we’re bringing you another four hilarious stand-up comedians once again. It’s the only best stand-up show at the Shubin Theatre! This could be a night you’ll never forget!*

Not convinced? See what the critics are saying!

“A fantastical adventure…a wonderful voyage!” -Asia Times Online
“High….larious! Two thumbs…up!” – Roger Ebert, film critic
“This show is as fun as shooting swine from your back porch in the freezing rain. Ho ho, Nixon was a crook.” – Hunter S. Thompson, author

featuring:
Tim Ryan
Luke Giordano
Doogie Horner
Chip Chantry

Here are the details:

The Comic Vs. Audience Comedy Show
Monday, October 6th, 2008
at the Shubin Theatre (407 Bainbridge St.) [directions]
8PM
Five American Dollars
BYOB!

* = NOT GUARANTEED. Only applies if something extraordinary happens to you that night, like if you were to meet the man/woman of your dreams. Hey, the show is BYOB, it’s a possibility!


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