Improve Theatre Methods
Assist Creativity
I often use improve theatre
techniques in my workshops on creativity and innovation. They are little plays
in which people have to spontaneously handle unexpected situations in front of
an audience. Usually delegates approach these challenges with some caution but
after a little training and practice they find them entertaining and
liberating. The methods can be amusing icebreakers. But they also serve a
deeper and more rewarding purpose – they challenge our assumptions about the
unexpected.
Throughout life we learn to treat
the unexpected with care. This might be based on something deep within our
primitive ancestry. In ancient times something that was unknown or unusual
might have been dangerous so the safest option was to view it with caution. Our
natural instinct is to repel the outsider, to reject unorthodoxy and to repulse
unexpected ideas. Improve challenges all of this. It teaches us to welcome the
unknown and to turn it to our advantage. In an improve theatre exercise we
learn not to reject or question a crazy notion that is thrown at us but to take
it on board, go with the idea, build on it and pass it on.
For example, say you are in a
two-man improve interview. The other person may start with a random statement
such as, ‘I see your pet gorilla is causing trouble again.’ You could close
down the conversation by replying,’ No it isn’t.’ Or, ‘I don’t have a gorilla.’
However you quickly learn that is better to take the idea and build on it by
saying something like,’ I know, he drinks too much cider.’ Or, ‘I warned him
not to join the Milwall supporters club.’ These kinds of responses give your
partner something new and useful to build on. The conversation can then go into
all kinds of bizarre and amusing directions.
Some people misunderstand improve.
They have seen some programmes on TV where clever comedians use improves to
deliver terrific witticisms. It seems that improve is all about being funny.
But it is not. Improve is about being spontaneous. It is about being
imaginative. It is about taking the unexpected and then doing something
unexpected with it. Very often this leads to humor and hilarious situations.
But they are by-products. The key thing is being open to crazy ideas and
building on them. And funnily enough this is exactly what is needed if we are
going to make our enterprises more creative and more agile.
Stodgy, conventional organizations
have an atmosphere that instinctively rejects anything counter-cultural.
Radical ideas are robustly opposed. People fall into what de Bono calls the
intelligence trap; the smarter you are the easier it is to find fault with new
ideas. Improve helps expose and rebut this approach.
Truly innovative organizations
develop a culture where anybody can challenge anything. New ideas are welcomed.
Crazy ideas are not rejected – they are used as starting points for ‘What if?’
discussions that lead to radical new concepts. If you want to change the
culture in your business to support rather than reject creativity then improve
is a good place to start.
Paul Sloane
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