More Improv Advice in Translation

I have found that most advice is worthy of thorough examination.  Often advice pertaining to one discipline – with just a bit of translation – has meaning in other disciplines.  This translation process allows for more perspective and greater insight. 

As a case in point:  the more I study improvisation, the more parallels I see to other areas of my life. And while I originally wrote about this practice in 2015, I’ve gone on to discover even more similarities in the subsequent years.  So what follows is more improv advice in translation. 

Improv advice:

Play the scene you’re in not the scene you want to be in.

Business advice:

Sometimes your agenda is just that – your agenda.  And sometimes you have to let it go.

 

Improv advice:

The gears in your brain start turning when you’re looking for the perfect line.  And because there is no perfect line, the gears just grind harder and harder. 

Business advice:

Perfect is the enemy of good.

 

Improv advice:

Don’t take any shortcuts on energy or polish.  You may have done the show a thousand times, but some people are seeing it for the first time.

Business advice:

It’s show time…every time. 

 

Improv advice:

The audience is looking for a connection to you. Be weird, be zany, be uniquely you. Yet still have humanity for them to latch on to.

Business advice:

Being human is essential.  Being uniquely human is a force multiplier. 

 

Improv advice: 

Think of every choice on stage as a conduit of connectivity – speaking, not speaking, walking, picking up something, looking at someone.

Business advice: 

Every form of communication is a conduit of connectivity.  Everything that you do or say (or don’t do and don’t say) sends a message.

 

Improv advice: 

Words come from your head.  Connectivity comes from your heart.

Business advice:

You need both your head and your heart to be an effective leader. 

 

Improv advice: 

Never let failure go to your heart.

Business advice:

Never let success go to you head. 

 

Improv advice:

You don't have to spend every waking minute with your cast, but you should know what interests them artistically and who they are as people.

Business advice:

You likely won’t spend every waking minute with your peers, but you should know what motivates them professionally and who they are as people.

Improv advice:

Always thank the tech booth.

Business advice:

Always thank your people.  Do it more often than you think is necessary and do it with gusto.   

 

Improv advice:

If you have a choice between reacting at a 4 and reacting at a 10, react at a 10.

Business advice:

When it counts, show up and give it everything you’ve got.

 

Improv advice:

You don't need to give your character ten things right away. Give your character one important, memorable thing instead.

Business advice:

Not everything can be a priority.  Pick one audacious goal and really nail it.

 

Improv advice:

Be in love instead of in like. Be furious instead of angry. Be married instead of just roommates. Have a belief instead of an opinion.

Business advice:

Have a passion for what you’re doing.

 

Improv advice:

There is room for your comedy.

Business advice:

There is room for your voice.

 

Improv advice:

Find the overlap between “audience favorites” and “untested forms”.  Spend time in that overlap.

Business advice:

Find the overlap between “tried and true” and “embracing the crazy”.  Spend time in that overlap. 

 

Improv advice: 

The learning is in the mistakes. 

Business advice:

The learning is in the mistakes.

 

Here’s the funny thing I’ve noticed:  the more parallels I see to other areas of my life, the more I want to study improv.  And I can’t want to see what the next 5 years teach me!      

Ancora Imparo… (Still, I am learning)

 

Previous
Previous

The Art of Effective Communication

Next
Next

Giving up control