I concur with Ratliff. In most of the shows I see up here, straight men get at least half the laughs, if not more.ratliff wrote:This has not been my experience, unless by laugh line you mean a line that's still funny repeated out of context, like those on the "Best Show Lines" thread. I'm always pleasantly surprised at how many laughs the straight player can get just by reacting. I think it depends almost entirely on how committed s/he is to playing a real reaction, but that's probably just my own biases.Spots wrote: Straight rarely gets the laugh lines.
Maybe players don't like playing straight scenes because they don't get laughs because instead of committing to being straight they're trying to get laughs? Trying to get laughs is always problematic but when done by the straight person it can be deadly.
A good straight man isn't someone who just points the absurd thing out and says "wow, that's really weird!" A good straight man has a consistent emotional reaction to whatever the absurd thing is and can continue to coax the absurd behavior out of the other player so he can keep having that reaction. When that pattern of behavior is really churning, it's the emotional reactions from the straight man that get the majority of the laughs.
Additionally, for straight/absurd dynamics to really work well, it's best if the absurd improviser is absurd in just one way. If everything the absurd the improviser does is batshit crazy, then it's hard for the straight man to react to any one thing consistently. One absurd behavior is easier to highlight and explore (it can often lead to other unusual views or behaviors that are clearly a result of the original line of thinking). "Blue doesn't stand out against blue" is the line that really hammered the lesson home for me.