Great theater doesn’t happen in the safety of the known; it lives on the precipice. In improv, we are perpetually one second away from total disaster—one move away from being inappropriate, cheesy, or just plain boring. To stay on that thin line between safety and “over the cliff,” we have to abandon our own ego and insecurity.
Give yourself over to the work.
Embracing the disaster around the corner is what makes this art form so powerful. It enhances focus and presence because when you are one move away from failure, you have no choice but to be one hundred percent in the room. This high-stakes environment naturally boosts communication and connection, forcing you to listen to your partner’s every move to ensure you’re both flirting with the same cliff. Ultimately, it fosters a lighthearted atmosphere; by accepting that failure is always an inch away, we release the fear of it, allowing us to play with higher stakes and more genuine joy. Stay on your toes, because the edge is where the magic lives.
You should never be at rest. Even in silence, in stillness, you are radiating an energy that keeps the audience and your s ene partner(s) engaged. You have to listen with your eyes and ears, feeling the room with every muscle.
If you find yourself getting too excited, completely out of control, breathe and collect yourself. I always say you want to be 10% in control to avoid injury. The rest is up to the character to live their life on stage. I’m just along for the ride.
If starting to “control” the scene rather than being in control of yourself, breathe deep, stretch, and release that tension. Get out of the way. Any choice we make has a chance of being wrong. EVERY CHOICE our character makes is 100% correct, organic and grounded in THEIR reality.
You should feel as though you could fall on your face at any moment, held up only by the grip of your toes. This isn’t about physical strain; it’s about a state of total mental readiness. I always say that I don’t push the limits; I flirt over the cliff. It can be a terrifying place to be—especially since I’m actually afraid of heights in real life—but it’s the only place where the performance truly breathes. You have to be intense but never tense, radiating energy like a rubber band stretched to its limit, ready to explode but never quite letting it all out.
