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"Close Quarters" format

Discussion of the art and craft of improvisation.

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Post by Rev. Jordan T. Maxwell »

beardedlamb wrote:cupholders and well hung jury have done something like this. in the old days whj would just do scenes in the same general location without any other guidelines really, and there was no overlapping time. it was independent of any influence and apparently i called it Schmorgasbord: http://web.archive.org/web/200208021527 ... rmats.html
i have a vague recollection of something called Diner? was that the same thing? or do i just have a Mickey Rourke fetish that's coloring my nostalgia?

EDIT: never mind. i was thinking of Restaurant Booth. ;)
Last edited by Rev. Jordan T. Maxwell on June 28th, 2011, 9:25 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by mcnichol »

Image
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Post by Matt »

Bob, you are awesome.
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Post by hujhax »

Matt wrote:Bob, you are awesome.
Bob McImage, you are awesome.

(FTFY.)

:mrgreen:

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Post by ratliff »

mcnichol wrote:Image
i saw this and was like, "why is bob saying it's two sides of the same coin?"
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Post by TexasImprovMassacre »

I heard from Jim Carlson that Noah was asked to create a form for people that was "too hard to perform", and that's where the idea came from.

Noah allegedly wrote this poem about the format

Heighten characters by engaging,
think adjacent space when staging...
environments are rich with sound,
time collapses turning round...
when throwing forward sounds as cues,
a later payoff oft ensues...
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Post by brittjw »

Close Quarters is probably my favorite form! Not sure why I haven't seen it performed more often? I'm gonna get on that! ;)
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Post by B. Tribe »

brittjw wrote:Close Quarters is probably my favorite form! Not sure why I haven't seen it performed more often? I'm gonna get on that! ;)
It's one of the best forms I've never done in a show.

Journey to the Big Water has elements of Close Quarters in their format. A scene will take place at a location and in the background we'll see other people doing 'something'. Later we'll see the scene from there perspective with the original scene 'happening' in the background.
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Post by ratliff »

B. Tribe wrote:
brittjw wrote:Close Quarters is probably my favorite form! Not sure why I haven't seen it performed more often? I'm gonna get on that! ;)
It's one of the best forms I've never done in a show.

Journey to the Big Water has elements of Close Quarters in their format. A scene will take place at a location and in the background we'll see other people doing 'something'. Later we'll see the scene from there perspective with the original scene 'happening' in the background.
For a kind of mindblowing cinematic equivalent of this, I highly recommend Gus Van Sant's Elephant. (And if anyone could explain to me how they did what they did, technically speaking, I'd be much obliged. Unless they just edited out the cameras from the opposite shots, in which case: boring.)
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Post by Spots »

ratliff wrote: For a kind of mindblowing cinematic equivalent of this, I highly recommend Gus Van Sant's Elephant. (And if anyone could explain to me how they did what they did, technically speaking, I'd be much obliged. Unless they just edited out the cameras from the opposite shots, in which case: boring.)

Pretty sure it was multiple takes, different angles. Superb choreography & continuity.
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Post by ratliff »

Spots wrote:
ratliff wrote: For a kind of mindblowing cinematic equivalent of this, I highly recommend Gus Van Sant's Elephant. (And if anyone could explain to me how they did what they did, technically speaking, I'd be much obliged. Unless they just edited out the cameras from the opposite shots, in which case: boring.)

Pretty sure it was multiple takes, different angles. Superb choreography & continuity.
Really? I've only seen it once, but it seemed like the conversations that got repeated were identical. Either way, pretty impressive.
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Post by Spots »

If you could find an example on youtube, I'd love to try and spot any trick photography.

Post by Craig Cackowski »

TexasImprovMassacre wrote:I heard from Jim Carlson that Noah was asked to create a form for people that was "too hard to perform", and that's where the idea came from.

Noah allegedly wrote this poem about the format

Heighten characters by engaging,
think adjacent space when staging...
environments are rich with sound,
time collapses turning round...
when throwing forward sounds as cues,
a later payoff oft ensues...
And the final couplet was "Repeat some scenes where they've begun, if all else fails, then just have fun."
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Post by jose »

Thanks, Cody and Craig, for posting the Close Quarters poem.

It was posted somewhere online at some point (maybe on Noah's old Geocities site?) and I kinda lost track of it.

There's a decent chunk of Rob K.'s Art of Chicago Improv book dedicated to CQ: http://www.amazon.com/Art-Chicago-Impro ... 032500384X
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Post by mcnichol »

There's a film called Close Quarters coming out featuring a large cast of IO/Chicago improvisors.

http://www.facebook.com/CloseQuartersMovie
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