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2017-2018 Season

Traveling Time & Space with Improv & Vaudeville

“One Night Only Showing”

“Traveling Caravan”

From the 1880’s to the 1930’s and beyond, Vaudeville sprawled across the vast North American continent and reached beyond to other parts of the world, such as England, Germany, and Australia. Yet entertainment through variety shows and improvisation and variety acts that showcased talent that was traveling through town began long ago.

“Atellan Farce” circa 391 B.C.

Improvisation with recurring characters was first recorded as early as 391 B.C. in the Etruscan City of Atella. Young men would play stock characters including:

  • Buccus (fat, butt of the joke)
  • Centunculus (the rom-com figure)
  • Dosseunus (vain doctor)
  • Maccus (hot-tempered long nose man of the “Punch” variety)
  • Manducus (greedy fellow, which fosters plot development)
  • Pappus (old man)
Commedia dell'arte Troupe on a Wagon in a Town Square, by Jan Miel, circa 1640.

Some historians believe that these characters evolved over time to form the basis for 16th and 17th-century commedia dell’arte and then onto the “Punch and Judy” shows.

Improv lessons by Viola Spolin

Skip forward a couple of centuries and you have Dudley Riggs doing improvisation on the Vaudeville stage. Further still, we would have to include Viola Spolin, who brought improvisation to the attention of professional theatres of America in the 1920’s. Her influence and book, Improvisation for the Theater reached beyond Vaudeville’s era to the heart of a troupe of improv actors in Chicago, who formed Second City.

Today we continue the tradition of improv entertainment with shows such as “Whose Line is it Anyway?” From this timeline we can see that one small step for young Italian actors has become one giant leap for the entertainment of mankind.

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This coming week we have an exciting opportunity to hear from members of the BYU English Department. During the summer, as we geared up for rehearsals and the production in the fall, Shelley Graham and I talked about how we could get more departments here on BYU campus involved with the productions. It occurred to me that we had a special opportunity here, since this play was an adaptation from the Victorian novel George Eliot wrote. Through some help, I was able to get in touch with Professor
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An Actor's Perspective, Part 2

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