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What is
Improvisation?
Improvisational theatre brings
ordinary people into the
theatre to enjoy stories about themselves. For the players,
improvisation provides a platform to explore performance and the
narrative form and to develop important life skills (creativity,
spontaneity, teamwork, listening, perception, trust, generosity and
openness). Most of all, it’s fun for everyone involved. Popularised by
Nobel Prize Winner Dario Fo, Keith
Johnstone’s TheatreSports and television shows like Who’s Line
Is
It Anyway?, improvisational theatre continues to evolve with many
different streams and philosophies.
Read a
little more about the
philosophy of improv.
Some NZ History
Improv in New Zealand theatre became popularised in the
early
nineties as part of the global phenomenon of Keith
Johnstone's Theatresports.
Theatresports techniques liberated many traditional theatre
practitioners, and Theatresports itself was performed on a regular
basis at most of the country's major centres and taught at the
country's schools. Auckland Theatresports, Christchurch's Court Jesters, Wellington's
The Improvisers and the Dunedin Improv Company were all formed in this
first wave of enthusiasm for improv theatre in New Zealand. Over the
nineties, improv theatre became a victim of its own success. The
audiences left the theatre and many of New Zealand's major improvisers
left the tradition. Performance improv became competitive and
stagnated, and lost credibility within the theatre community. Many
troupes folded. In 1997, Auckland's Improv Bandits sought to
reinvent local improv, pitching themselves as a subversive new force
performing improv 'without safety nets'. Clawing back audience, Improv
Bandit Wade Jackson then opened New Zealand's only dedicated improv
theatre - The Covert Theatre
in Auckland.
Improv Groups in NZ
While improv has diversified and grown overseas, there
are now
only five established improv troupes in New Zealand: WIT and The Improvisers
in Wellington; Auckland
Theatresports and the Covert
Theatre (home of The
Improv Bandits) in Auckland; and the country's longest running
troupe - The Court Jesters
- in Christchurch. WIT is the largest troupe in the country. It is the
only troupe that does not operate for profit, reflective of the group's
generous creative philosophy. WIT is committed to working alongside the
professional companies towards reinvigorating improv in New Zealand. At
the same time, WIT is struggling to keep pace with the high demand for
good improv theatre. WIT shows are among the most popular theatre in
Wellington, with houses reaching over an average 80% of house and an
audience of 3,000 per year. This reflects the enduring popularity and
timelessness of improv theatre and the city's rapidly increasing urban
population. It also reflects the global trend away from mass
entertainment to local improv.

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