When I was in high school, I tried out
for the part of drum major for the band, which was an altogether fun
experience – I didn’t get it, but it was fun nonetheless. One of
the things I learned for the tryouts was how to spin a mace. A mace,
for the uninitiated, is the long pole, about five feet in length,
with a large silver orb on the top of it. The mace is largely
ceremonial, probably its only original purpose was to be a shiny
object sticking above a marching formation so that the members can
keep rhythm. Somewhere along the way though, some drum major got
tired of just holding this thing, and after probably attempting to
use it as a sword, decided to start spinning the thing around.
Modern drum majors will almost always be seen spinning this ungainly
monster of a baton (or sometimes two) causing it to dance, spin, and
fly through the air to the delight of the crowd.
The band director who was showing how
to do mace-work (his term) explained that there are two approaches to
mace spinning: an east coast and a west coast. The east coast, he
explained, was all about performing the mace-work with ultimate
precision; every single move should be text-book perfection according
to the east coasters. The west coast he summed up with a simple
mantra: “Hey, check out what I can do.” The west coast wasn’t
concerned with doing things according to any “official” pattern;
instead they did their mace-work for fanfare and showmanship (and a
heavy dose of one-upmanship). In other words, do things so
unbelievable that no one else can copy you. The east coast was like
a game of Horse, and the west coast was an “And 1” tape. It
wasn’t until I was in college that I realized that this didn’t
just apply to mace-work, but to everything – music, food, scholarly
pursuits. Maybe it’s the weather.
In improv there is still those two
different rules of thought, what I like to think of as the
rule-followers and the rule breakers. A rule follower is always
trying to improve upon an idea: that form worked mostly, except for
this, so let’s fix that for next time, or that didn't work at all,
let's scrap the whole thing and go in a new direction. Followers are
about form and technique, so they focus on drilling basics and
fundamentals and attempting to follow the rules. These would be the
same rules that were published in “Truth in Comedy” many, many
years ago and have since become more of a burden on the improv world
than they’ve helped. Mick Napier denounced them in “Improvise”,
and there are even rumblings all throughout the iO that the rules are
not all they’re cracked up to be. The problem? The rules are
largely negative in their wording (e.g. “Never ask questions!”)
and they make improvisers think too much. “Oh, am I doing this
right?” “Is this following the rules enough?” Give a man a
rule, and he will do his best to follow it.
Except of course, for the breakers.
Rule breakers cast aside simple notions like classes, workshops, and
improv books in favor of a more customized approach: “Watch what I
can do.” Even the greatest improv teacher in the world can only
take you so far and at some point you have to be ready to come to a
Zen level of connectedness with form, technique, and structure. At
risk of sounding any more western (or Californian, heaven forbid) a
“one-ness”. All improvisers are, for lack of a better term,
artists, as the outcomes on stage are the result of our unified
point-of-view and interpretation of the world around us.
The rules do have their place; they are
the foundation for a basic appreciation and understanding of the art
– but don’t be afraid to spin improv in your own way and maybe
show it off, all the while screaming: “I dare you to follow me!”
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