Sorry for being tardy to the party, y'all.
This thread is really sweet, and very interesting. I like what Val said. In talking about this yesterday I said a knife makes a pretty shit cup, but a great knife.
I made a bullet response to several different things.
To respond to some harold stuff first.
- I think that perhaps there is a little bit of that classic misunderstanding of the use of the word harold to apply to two different things. There's "the harold" the 3 scenes/game structured order of scenes, and there's "the harold" which I suppose also means a style of play. Harold (noun) vs harold (adverb) [haroldly?]. At least in the way that I teach it I emphasize early on that just because you did 3 scenes/game doesn't mean that your show will be good. I suggest that what's actually important are things like immediate unconditional support, listening and using what has already been created, looking for the patterns and connections that already exist and furthering those rather than adding new ones...So, when I think of shows in this way they feel totally open each time, but there is still some training at work. Maybe at first you have to think some about what you're doing more than you should. I think that probably goes for learning most thing. Though its something I think that after some time really shouldn't be taking up a ton of your focus.
I'm not a huge fan of feeling like you have to do 3 scenes game. Even early on in a harold there are no rules about what "has" to happen next, in my mind. Though I think it is helpful in ways to learn it first in a way where you do ask people to try to just do 3 scenes game to see how that feels. Although, I have also just jumped past that before and students seem to also understand it and perform good shows without having to do the 3 scenes/game version first.
You mentioned that the montage was preferable because you don't have to think of a second beat...I think you can though in a montage think of something to call back, or heighten in a new way...I think there's room for thinking, and making choices along with listening. I think that this also with time takes less conscious effort, and things "just come to you" faster and more fully developed. I agree though that the montage as a form has less thinking requested of its players on the sidelines. I once heard someone say, "if you're going to think, do it on the sidelines". I like that mantra.
In the shows though I still think you're thinking on some level. Saying Yes to everything doesn't mean that anything is void of choice...and I think you typically still want be thoughtful about what choices/discoveries you're making in a show as you're discovering them. Even with no predetermined "form", you're still can still agree to try find "something" in the show...I think that's a fairly good definition of how I see the types of shows my understanding of the harold creates. I also think a lot of people feel they are doing some form of that in their show. Trying to listen to each other in and make their scenes more than just a bunch of scenes, but into a show. So, being aware of the connections between scenes, and ideally making your show more of the show it seems to be.
A quote from Del! That's extra nerdy because I also copied the citation!
“It’s the order that is imposed on it — nay, not imposed, discovered within it. There is no art without order. There is no art without structure. Art is not the moment of free expression — anybody can do that. That’s just masturbation and free association and therapeutic purging. There’s no art in that. Where the art comes in is in the control, in taking this material that could spew off in any direction and imposing on it, or discovering within it or revealing, the inner order of this seemingly random, disordered, or unordered behavior. I remember trying to get people to improvise something in a checkerboard pattern, and they’re like ‘What the fuck do you mean?’ It was clear to me. I think I could have done a light scene and then a dark scene and then an oblique scene that was neither light nor dark, but they were still hung up on some other level.”
Del Close in The Art of Madness (Langer, Adam), University of Chicago Press, p. 197
- There is a balance of what is being "cast out". Its sometimes good to have a focus, or some pre-determined choices that help people get on the same page earlier. But I don't think that you completely cast out any sense of form unless you're doing a completely disconnected montage...but even then you've essentially agreed not to agree (not in a bad way)...I think that in the show when you're looking for any kind of pattern on any level you're essentially giving some kind of form (repetitive structure? boundary/consistency?) to the piece. So, you're not totally void of notions of form in my mind. If you want to start without any of it to be totally free/open on the approach I think that's a totally awesome and valid choice. once the show starts though many shows are searching for it in my opinion. So, even if you do turn off that self-censor in that aspect before the show I think in some ways it comes back during the show and says "maybe not that choice, not because its wrong, but because this choice is more in line with what already seems to be going on"...Or, maybe that "self-censor" voice is what you call it when its negative or telling you bogus things you have to do, but when its positive or when it helps you realize what other people are doing that you perhaps should do its called "group mind/inspiration" or whatever you want to call the purer version you(we) seem to be after?
- I believe that there is a way to think/make choices about things without being "in your head"...I once heard someone describe being in your head as "when your primary conversation was with yourself". Which I took to mean when you're devoting more or your energy to thinking vs listening.
- I don't think one person being in their heads necessarily ruins a show, but I suppose it does usually have a negative impact overall. I think I see more "meh" shows than i see really good or really bad shows. This may just be a matter of personal taste?
To segue into the creating your own form questions.
- "people getting hung up on the harold" ...I can see it being frustrating. Like if you're a band and people only want to hear songs from this one album in the order from the album...Especially with something like what I think they were creating that I don't think they were really finished with when they started sharing it. Like I said earlier, because in my mind it is more of an approach or style or philosophy of play than a form I don't know if it is every really done being defined...which lends to it being frustrating to explain.
- You asked about creating your own form, and I think it can at times seem difficult to do something that's really really really actually new. I think most things are building off of the past in a lot of ways. I guess when I think of new forms I think of shows that maybe combine technology in some way. But then again...I think each show in particular is new in a way. I did a bat where I also used some audio sampling equipment live in the act. I'm not sure if anyone has done this live before as an improv show...but even if they did I bet they didn't do it exactly in the way I did. I dont know how original it was because I didn't create improv, or the bat, or live performance...but I did ask to do it and did it ONCE upon a time...and in that sense it
was original.
So, I like the social dynamic created by the tennants of the harold. And when it comes to creating something I want to do I guess I focus more on what is exciting me than being novel...or maybe I just want to think that. Because I think I basically always want to find some way to make everything new to keep it fresh...If it is a matter of teaching students though I think its a good idea for you to go with whatever in your mind will work best to get across the tenants or style of play you think will best set them up for success
- One last thing, I just wanted to give my quick definition of group mind. I think it just means people doing the same thing together...being on the same page...ranging from the very simple acknowledgments of unspoken things to unspoken communication where multiple people have the same idea about what comes next. But I think this sometimes gets mysticized where it is talked about like magic, but I think its all based tangible things like on good listening and communication.
Thanks for starting this conversation Jesse. Its given me some interesting things to think about.