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(December 4, 1998, © 1998 Statesman Journal)
Comedy Sportz pits two teams of improvisational
actors
against each other in an arena of clean fun.
BY ANGELA POTTER
Statesman Journal
If
it walks like a sport talks like a sport, then it must be a sport.
Or so say the players of ComedySportz in Portland where a groan from
the audience constitutes a foul and the name of the game is groveling
for the biggest chuckle.
It's not really a sport, but with two teams, a referee and a scoreboard,
the theater improvisation teams fight for laughs like the Seahawks and
the Oilers battling on the gridiron.
"Players, are you ready?" yells Patrick Short, the general
manager and referee. He's wearing a black and white striped shirt, a
timer and a whistle.
"Yes!" they shout. Each player bristles with wit, sarcasm,
rhyme and verse. In a word, they're pumped.
It's the Macadam Ants against the Mt. Tabor Tooth Tigers.
And like any other sport, fans stand up to sing the national anthem;
the referee incites boos, hisses or loud cheering; and the actors, or "actietes" train
vigorously before each game.
"We train like its a sport. We work on our skills in a drilling
type fashion," Short says. "There are no lines to rehearse.
We work on character building skills, reaction skills, speed skills and
using physical space."
Each round consists of several exercises driven by audience suggestions.
After that, the players will do just about anything for a laugh except
put people down or tell obscene jokes. "We make fun of what people
do and not who they are," Short says.
They also avoid all the typical "isms" that offend people.
But don't think for a minute that the crowd can't come up with some
pretty twisted stuff.
Imagine trying to do aikedo against Yoda while wearing Saran Wrap or
swing dancing with Charles Manson wearing a tutu.
"We're expressing our inner children," Short says, who, even
as a referee, clowns around with the rest of them on stage.
Each game has a different set of rules with a different goal.
In the game "Story," the audience comes up with a protagonist.
Each player then makes up a portion of the story on the spot. If a player
pauses or jumps on someone else's sentence, they're out. Whoever is left
standing is the winner of the round.
Who's our protagonist tonight? asks the referee.
A little boy from the audience yells out "Sidttles!"
Skittles it is, chapters one, two and three.
The rules are simple: if the scene is boring, dull or uneventful, the
referee blows the whistle, which gives the actlete 15 seconds to make
it interesting or they get hooted off the field.
If the audience groans, the player gets what's called a "groaner foul" and
is forced to apologize. If the audience does not accept it, the team loses
one point and its dignity.
When a player says something obscene, lascivious or crude, the referee
will place a brown paper bag over the offender's head. It's called the "brown
bag fowl." The bag must remain there until the end of the scene.
One thing's for sure: the more relentless the audience, the tougher
the game.
"The beauty of what we do is that sometimes the crashing and burning
is funnier than the success," Short says.
The actors, who for the most part have regular 9-to-5 jobs, range in
age from 22 to older than 40. The audience ranges in age from 6 to 96
and then some.
Comedy Sportz has become so popular, 24 branches have opened across
the United States since it began in 1984.
"I love the creativity. It takes a quick mind to put something
together in a split second," says Portland resident Ehren Fillippello. "Also,
it costs about as much as a movie and it's better."
For actress Amy "Zing" Gray, who's been at it for six years,
it's good, old-fashioned fun. "There's room in society to get together
and sing and act stupid without drinking," she said.
Unfortunately, she says, "the ice-cream social is behind us." But
Comedy Sportz brings a piece of that squeaky clean fun back.
"We're a completely clean show," Short says. "If anyone
teeters toward the crude, there's a referee."
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