With the eight week improv course ending last week, I timed it well to start a new group with a new set of eight sessions this week.

The Free Association seem more serious than Hoopla. They have 50% longer classes for a start. Three hours rather than two.

More instruction and notes rather than just positive encouragement. Clearer aim even from the early levels. More like a classroom than a playground.

First couple of sets of eight at Hoopla are just aimed at getting you to lose your decorum and allow yourself to be free and spontaneous. All really short form games, lightning rounds. Parlor games rather than theater.

But the Free Association's aim from the start is to get you building scenes and then stories. Their first set of lessons is titled "intro to long form". This one "Scene work".

Not so much the one minute parlor games, more focus on acting and characters and drama.

In vague terms at early stages that is. I mean, they have more in common than different. Plenty of short games in warm-up at FA and I just finished a whole set on drama and story with Hoopla.

Three hours is pretty long though. Starts half an hour earlier, ends half an hour later. Good thing it's also much much closer for me. Ten minute walk instead of 40 minutes on the bus.

We did lots and lots of first-scene head-to-head, mostly concentrating on trying to get specific. Check that after two minutes the audience knows where you are and who you are and how you know each other and what you're doing and none of the players are unsure either. Make it all specific as soon as possible, ambiguity is the enemy.

And everyone got that and exercised it pretty much flawlessly right away. So good group.

#theFreeAssociation #improv #london

Series two lesson two of Free Association's improv course is about a thing they call "grounding".

For a scene to be believable, it must be grounded in reality (or in a fantastical scene at least grounded in an emotional truth).

Improvisors can often jump quickly to the bizarre or the outlandish to try and get a laugh, but especially in early in scenes the audience needs to first know who these people are and what is going on and why they should care about any of it.

Three hours of scenes deliberately drilling practice of to have nothing strange or out of context happening, scenes in which everything goes according to expectation and nobody tries to be funny.

A useful skill to drill perhaps, but you can see why Free Association get a reputation for being too serious and not laughing enough.

Three hours of scenes where mostly nothing happens might be the most dull improv evening I've had.

#improv #london #freeAssociation