JD used to talk about teaching/training scenes a lot at Ultimate. it would always irk me a bit, thinking about story structure and the hero's journey and all that...the training and relationship with the mentor character (or characters) is crucial in a lot of ways. but i came to realize that i was falling into exactly the pitfall you're talking about...the scene becomes about the activity. it becomes about basketball instead of a father and son opening up to another. but it's such a slope, even being aware of the pitfall, i shy away from those scenes...i think because i don't trust myself to dodge it, necessarily. i dunno...another fun obstacle to tackle at some point, i suppose.beardedlamb wrote:just remembered another term for a scene i had never heard until i moved to chicago, teaching scene. i think this is similar to the argument scene. both can be done well but both have the same pitfalls every time you get stuck in one. you just have to manage the pitfalls and not get sucked into negativity for the argument scene and talking about the activity for the teaching scene. if you can avoid those common missteps they can be perfectly fine scenes, but because people fall into them so often, that type of scene gets a bad name. bottom line, of course, its about relationship, and not an action or a debated concept.
i love a good argument...of course, i was raised in a warped family who consider argument and debate a sign of affection, so there's that.jillybee72 wrote:Most argument scenes happen because people want there to be heightened emotion but they're afraid of being vulnerable. If it's about love instead of anger we might end up kissing, god forbid. I hate arguments. When I go to a show like "Tony & Tina's Wedding" that's all arguments I just want to leave. I want there to be more love in the world. I didn't get into this work to make the world an uglier place.

no real trick, as others have said. it's really about being as engaged as possible. the temptation a lot of times, and i used to do this a LOT more, is to hide behind big character choices, voices, funny physicalities, etc., playing broad because that's more likely to get the laugh. but it also shields us because everything we're playing is affected emotion. it's especially tempting in improv where there's no safety net or map that a script can provide, where if you go out there and portray genuine emotion, you know where the next line or beat or other character will be there to catch you. with improv, it's so much more an act of faith to convey a genuine emotion rather than portray the affectation of one.gene wrote: This is interesting. Beginning improv classes tell us all sorts of ways to have high or low status. I know that being vulnerable doesn't necessarily mean low status.
Does anyone have tricks to play vulnerable? Especially without playing low status?
which isn't to say you can't be vulnerable while playing a limping drunken Irishman who's fond of fart jokes. but that's all window dressing. strip it back to the core...what is he/am i feeling? how am i/is he reacting to this situation? to this relationship? i think for beginning levels, and even more advanced players, it's useful to just go out as yourself. don't worry about being clever or entertaining. just be in the moment. let go of those concerns, let go of worrying about seeming foolish or how the audience or your other performers will react. if you come at them with real emotion and vulnerability, they'll have your back and even if they don't know it appreciate the amazing gift you've given them to work with. there will be times when the other player's not being supportive of that, will just try to make jokes out of everything...and they'll get the laugh sometimes, but the audience will be on your side. so that's a gift too. because that's realistic in its own way too! what do so many of us do when confronted with genuine emotion? we close off, we deny it, we try to flip it aside with a joke because we're taught not to care, not to connect, not to be affected...and yes, it's a stronger choice if the other player is intentionally playing that, but you can still use it when they're just being a jerk.

you build up that ability to be vulnerable, to open up, to let go and have real, honest communication through your character, relationship and story...then when you start layering on those broader character elements, suddenly you have a limping farting Irishman that we give a damn about!