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Tuesday, January 12, 2010

The X-Men Factor

Last month, I was in Bloomington, IN for an alcohol toxicology course, and shortly after I arrived, the program director gave a brief orientation, where it was revealed that the local college, Indiana University (A campus I would describe as “Harry Potter” meets Gap commercial – old, very English castle-like buildings, and not an ugly person on campus. I seriously believe you have to submit a head shot when you apply.) was home to over 50,000 students. As I realized that colleges are one of the biggest breeding grounds for improv groups, a quick search yielded IU's premier improv group: Awkward Silences. I was pretty excited about getting to see a new group that quite frankly I would probably never get to see ever again, but my second discovery was that it was the week before finals, so sadly no show the week I was there.

I did check out their website though, and I found a cast page where I discovered what I believe is an exciting new improv game: Guess the Archetype. An archetype is a system in writing where characters are essentially filled in by generalizations. For example, in “Star Wars”, Luke is the hero, the Emperor the villain, Obi-Wan the mentor, etc. An archetype is essentially a job in a story: someone may be a unique character, but when it comes down to it, he is the “comic relief” (or whatever) to the story. One of my theories regarding improv groups is that each member is a unique element, a specialized cog even, in the greater machine. Each one, though they may play different characters on stage – from goofy to heart-wrenching – in the tapestry of the group they each have a different role. Think about your group of friends (or maybe even the cast of a TV show or movie that is an ensemble piece) and you can figure out which one is the horn dog, the jester, the wallflower, etc. My point is that once an improv group hits its stride, that blessed Group Mind running in full, six-cylindered harmony – you can figure out what each person brings to the group, i.e. what role they play. This often carries over into scenes, where you can usually guess what each person is going to do for a scene or piece. Part of it is just the shorthand way we deal with the world – our own personal comfort zone.

So I found myself looking at the cast page, and tried to figure out, based just on a minimal amount of bio information and a head shot, what each person was in the group machine. (I encourage you to check it out too: http://www.awkwardsilencecomedy.com/) Here's my guesses, and if anyone from IU, or better yet the Awkward Silences ever reads this, tell me how I did:

Sean Liston – Leading man. Probably plays bosses, cops, presidents, teachers a lot. Classic straight man/hero.
Anthony Smith – The smart one. High reference level, puns, big words. Dry, yet goofy sense of humor.
Ben Gagnon – The horn dog. Lots of dirty humor, sex jokes, curse words. Every character he plays is normal, just dirty.
Layne Dixon – Leading lady. Plays a lot of sweet, nice characters; wives, girlfriends, mothers. Very cute.
Ryan Brown – Party animal. Plays his scenes the most physical of the male members.
Dan Haddad – The lovable oaf. Funny, easy-going sense of humor, sprinkled with a fair amount of nerdy, probably superhero, references.
Blair Dietrick – The quirky girl. Plays a lot of strange, quirky characters with accents and physicality – the whole works.

As an added bonus, I'm providing Guess the Archetype: Home Edition. Recently added to the Stage Monkeys San Diego Facebook page are five head shots of the current members, so to everyone reading, I want you to go on, take a look, and see if you can guess what each person brings to the group (what their archetype is), and leave it in the comments section here. Winner is the person I feel has correctly identified the most correct roles. Check back here in two weeks to see who the winner is, and thanks for playing!

3 comments:

  1. I realize that I will probably be the only person playing this game, but that does not lessen my need to win at all.

    Andy- at first I was going to say The Hispanic (after all, you are in SoCal and someone has to be) but on further inspection I am going to call him as the Straight Man. In your terminology, The Leading Man. I bet he plays a lot of doctors and husbands.

    Marc is clearly the Loveable Oaf. He plays a lot of football coaches.

    Maddy being the only girl obviously means she is The Girl, playing a lot of girlfriends and female presidents, etc. But I would classify her under the subset of Quirky Girl rather than the Sweet n' Sexy Flava.

    Alex is The Gay One. He plays a lot of characters who are very well dressed. Museum curators, the Irish, sons who love their mothers and not in an Oedipal way.

    Jason, to me, was the hardest one because I know you and I've seen you improvise... so I guess that in your troupe there are two smart guys who makes jokes about Batman. And you both probably have a dirty streak... "MORE SAUSAGE PIZZA ANYONE?!?"

    - Landis

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  2. I'M BLAIR DIETRICK!!!!!!
    good thing i googled my name, right?
    that was actually pretty spot-on, with the addendum that Layne makes a lot of weird noises.

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  3. if sweet and nice means live birthing and playing with her dick, then you're right about layne.
    -ryan

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