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October 10, 2012

Geeking Out with...TJ Jagodowski (Part Three)
by Pam Victor - 0


By WICF Contributor Pam Victor

[“Geeking Out with…” is a series of interviews with well-known, highly experienced improvisers. It’s a chance to talk about stuff that might interest hardcore, improv dorkwads like Pam. The series can be found in full frontal geek out version on My Nephew is a Poodle and in pithier version on the Women in Comedy Festival blog. For behind-the-scenes action, ‘like’ the “Geeking Out with…” Facebook page.]

In this third and final installation of my special, in-person geek out session with TJ Jagdowski, we continue to bat around improv theory and technique. As you’ll read in this interview, TJ modestly attests he continually strives to follow the path of least resistance when improvising. He claims it’s simply the “easiest” method. But, c’mon boys, if improv merely was a matter of doing what’s easiest, we’d all be f’n rock stars playing to a packed house every Wednesday at 11pm in the Cabaret at iO Theatre.

Nevertheless, if you want to get all deep ‘n shit together - let's pretend for a moment we're making mental love to our philosophical ideas as we’re sitting on the floor in a smoky dorm room - I understand that TJ’s “easy” theory of improvisation actually is the same as the most masterful approach to improv. In my eyes, the beauty of a TJ and Dave show is found in the simplicity of their process for the deceptively complex Zen of it. To appreciate a great TJ and Dave show is to revel in simple complexity of a snowflake or a DNA strand. Absolute elegance.

As David Yazbek wrote in the New York Times (Theater Talkback: Finding Inspiration in Improvisation, September 6, 2012) “…T.J. and Dave are like jazz musicians at the top of their game. They clearly are naturally gifted, but decades of acting and improvising have honed their considerable storytelling tools so that they’re fully equipped to go to The Place Where It All Comes From, the place that Buddha and Jesus and these days Oprah talk about—The Now.”  

Easy, right?
***

PAM VICTOR: This is going to make you a little bit uncomfortable.

TJ JAGODOWSKI: Is this another compliment thing?

PAM: Sorry. It’s not a compliment. Maybe you’ll see it as a bad thing?

TJ: I hope. It’s a lot easier then.

PAM: People seem to enjoy working with you as a scene partner. When I’ve talked to people around, they really love playing with you. Some people say you’re the most supportive player they’ve played with.

TJ [joking]: Every laugh is mine. People better stay the hell out of my way. Don’t take my light. You’re here to serve me up softballs. And everyone knows that. And everyone is terrified of me. That’s why they say nice things. That’s how that goes.

PAM [trying again]: What if I wanted to become a good support play-

TJ [interrupting]: Can’t do it. Can’t be done. [Pam laughs, and then TJ addresses the question.]

You be the kind of player you want to play with.  I [have] a pretty acute awareness of what it’s like to be alone there, so it’s so nice not to be alone there with someone. For that amount of time…you’re kind of clinging to life with one other person in the world-

PAM: Even in an Armando, which is a big cast of extraordinarily capable players, you seem to hold the net under…

TJ: No way. No way.

PAM: I mean this is a totally bad way…

TJ: I’m dropping banana peels all over that place for people. Nothin’ but landmines and banana peels that I’m dropping.

No, I hold no net. I usually just walk onto a scene that’s already good. Wait for other people to do the hard work and then make an entrance. That’s the easiest way.

PAM [sarcastically]: Yeah, and then you tell jokes. [Speaking of which,] it seems in TJ and Dave sometimes, you do allow yourselves a string of jokes. You’re playing the game of a scene.

TJ: We’ve wandered across a couple, yeah. I think more often than not those usually happen once the body of the show is already there.

PAM: Definitely. It’s usually around three-quarter mark, that I’ve observed.

TJ: Wow. You’ve got this thing down…We do also sometimes remember that it’s also supposed to be a pretty good time. And if it tickles us, we don’t shy away from it; in the same way that ideally we don’t shy away from something that makes us really uncomfortable as well. But, yeah, if something is funny and fun and it doesn’t hurt the show- I think we’re acutely aware of that. If it feels like this thing is capable of flight, then we can start messing around a little bit. But until that work is done, I don’t think we-
TJ and Dave show featuring
Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright
Tracy Letts,
who is feeling up TJ at this moment
(Summer 2012)

PAM: -you wouldn’t dare, [make a joke] at the expense of the show.

TJ: Only because it makes it harder. If you don’t have something good going on, and you start doing a run of stupid garbage, it’s going to be hard to get the show going. So it’s truly just a matter of it’s easier to do it later on once you feel you’ve got your footing.

PAM: The [Susan] Messing quote – when I was talking to her about the games you sometimes play – was, “It’s unfortunate but we ARE comedians, so sometimes we’re funny.

TJ: Yeah. Occupational hazard.

PAM: Exactly. My favorite example of that was actually at the UMass show when you played this guy Cal who was in a donut show, and he was obese. And you were cracking up Dave, which is one of my favorite things to see.

TJ: It’s one of my favorite things too.

PAM: Because your character was really funny…or just struck him as funny because he was so…[Pam is trying desperately to remember a show from months and months ago]…fat-

TJ: I don’t know if was that. Dave doesn’t just laugh at heavy people.

PAM: No! It wasn’t just because you were fat! You were saying- I wish I could remember better… [TJ is mocking Pam by doing a caricature of a fat guy. Pam plays along.] Oh yeah, anytime you do a fat person…

TJ: Yeah, Dave will love this. [Pam is laughing, so embarrassed.] Yeah. Dave laughs at fat people, the handicapped. That’s all it takes. Kids being attacked by animal, he laughs at that…

PAM: Oh, I’m not good at remembering shows…but it was really funny…

TJ: I like watching David laugh.

PAM: It is fun.

TJ: It is fun.

PAM: And it seems to make you more grounded. You won’t break at those moments-

TJ: I find nothing funny anymore. That’s why I won’t break. Because nothing is funny. [Laughter.]

 Here's the video of Pam looking like a dodo
because she can't remember the details of a show.

PAM: What is your interpretation of Del Close’s commandment for improvisers treat each other as “geniuses, poets and artists”?

TJ: I think, again, it makes it easier. And people tend to rise to expectations or lower to expectations. I think it’s in that way that Dave talks about: You may as well shoot to be great, and maybe you’ll rise to that level. Shoot to be middling, I’m sure you’ll probably hit that. It’s a more lovely way to live.

PAM: Do you consider yourself an artist, genius, poet?

TJ: No. But I would like if other people considered me that. [Laughs.] If people treated me like an artist, a genius and a poet that maybe I would live up to it. No, but it’s a helluva thing to strive for.

PAM: How does your mom describe your profession?

TJ: Pathetic disappointment?

PAM: I know that’s not true.

TJ: Do you want me to call her? Let’s get her on the horn. [TJ calls his mom. She was playing trivia, so she called us back at the end of our time together.]

PAM: When I was interviewing Dave, he talked about following the thread - building the scene brick by brick, going step by step, the next little thing and then the next little thing - and I was interested in knowing how you know which thread to follow. And he talked about [following] the one that makes you the most scared, the one where the fear is, as the more interesting one to follow.

TJ: Right.

PAM: I don’t understand that.

TJ: Let’s see if I can come up with an example... We’re doing a husband and wife scene, and he has a feeling that I have been unfaithful and I’m still being unfaithful. We’re also getting ready to go out to a charity event. So, we can either – and this is a pretty ham-fisted example – we can either talk about how much we like this charity and how much we want to save the zoo animals, or we can get into the fact that after 16 years of marriage, me, who you were committed to for the rest of your life, you’re making a fool out of and with someone I know. So there’s the one thread and there’s the [other] thread.

Talking about zoo animals is not a very frightening prospect. Getting into an actual, hurtful, hard, grinding, grueling conversation of the reality of what it means to be an adulterer and to be unfaithful and hurt someone that you love is a little scary. So that’s where you go.

Coincidentally, usually the thing that’s more scary is also going to sustain you a lot more. The conversation about zoo charity is not probably going to take you through the next 40 minutes of that show. It’s not going to be as useful. Getting into this emotional reality is going to seem like it’s the harder, scarier thing. But it’s actually the more sustainable, the more worth while, and in the long run the easier thing to do because it’s going to take care of you longer and give you more places to go and more things to feel, more stuff to do.

PAM: I think people might also be afraid to take that path because as soon as we do that, we’ve called out the deal of the scene, and then what do we do?

TJ: Then you do the next thing after that! You ever watch a scene where you know someone’s going to get fire, but they think that’s the end of the scene, so they find a way to stall for four minutes before they let someone go? Fire that person. Something is going to happen after that.

When in life do you think, “Oh my gosh. We shouldn’t do this because then that ends everything”? There’s always the thing after that. Like, “I’m not going to tell this person I love them because what’ll happen after that?” Go ahead and do it because there is nothing worse than stalling out an audience whose already waiting at a finish line while you meander towards it, thinking that’s where it ends. You never know where it’s going to end. It doesn’t end until someone tells you it’s over. There will be something else to do.

Watch this movie.
PAM: So in your movie, your great movie-

TJ: Ah, my great movie, yes.

PAM: Your oeuvre.

TJ [joking]: I’m glad we finally got to my “great movie.”

PAM: …you say that you need improv more than improv needs you. I totally relate to that sentiment. I feel like someone doesn’t really know me – my favorite me – until they see me perform-

TJ: I hear you.

PAM: I don’t want to seem dramatic, but if I didn’t have improv…

TJ: It would be a lot harder. It would be a lot tougher.

PAM: It would be. It would be like black and white in that movie Pleasantville. What do you think that’s all about?           

TJ: Oh, I don’t know. I know the part about improv not needing anybody. Improv is fine. It’s fine by itself. It’s fine for thousands of improvisers who have come and gone, and it will be fine for thousands of improvisers who have yet to come.

It’s life, but a little bit better when you improvise. You’re your best self. I don’t know if the adrenaline or whatever is drawn out of you at that moment…you’re more present.

I liken it to like when I was a kid playing chase at night, running through the woods or through people’s backyards. You feel like you can see better and hear everything more. All your senses were heightened in this moment. You could hear every breeze that came through the trees and stuff. That’s what improvising is like. It’s like a more heightened, excited version of you, living in the way you’d like to live all the time but for some reason we don’t. Whatever is going on physiologically, there is something else happening there. I don’t know what’s it’s about, but it real, real good.

PAM: Isn’t it? I go back and forth between it being like a drug or being like nirvana, depending on how evil or good I’m feeling.

TJ: Yeah, it’s like a runner’s high. I guess there is a physiological – dopamine or whatever kicking in – there’s an aspect to that. But then there’s just an aspect to, like, you’re doing the thing you love to do the most. So there is probably a little bit of chemistry and spirituality and psychology…and magic.

PAM [deep, dreamy sigh]: Now I need a cigarette.
Rich Sohn, TJ, and Rebecca Sohn
In Another World
at Annoyance Theatre
(August, 2012)


What do you think is next for you in the improv world? Oh, we already said you don’t have a goal except for having a whisky…

TJ: Yeah, next is-

PAMArmando on Monday-

TJ: Mmhm. And then next is Chicagoland and Another World on Tuesday. Carl and the Passions and TJ and Dave. Then The Scene on Thursday. Challenger on Friday. And then Armando on Monday…[Laughs.]

PAM: Peter and I were talking about this on the way over and we wanted to ask you…I’m trying to think how to phrase this so it doesn’t come off like a compliment…

TJ: Just say something awful then.

PAM [searching for more awful-ish words]: So…you are so "bad" at playing confident players…it seems like you’re good at playing vulnerable players. [Laughs. Gives up trying to be awful to TJ.] …I’m still trying to figure out what that means to play vulnerable.

TJ: People root for underdogs, so to play vulnerable allows you to be the lower status person in the relationship. And we love to see those people built up…I haven’t thought about this before, so this will probably be an incomplete thought but…we also like to watch people be impressionable. And if you’re playing a high status hard-ass, you don’t always see those people being impressed upon as much by their partners because they probably feel like, “I have to hold this viewpoint and stuff.” But when you’re vulnerable, you probably have an impression made upon you by just about anything. If you’re insulted, it hits you hard. If it’s a compliment, it hits you hard. So that vulnerability is probably another way to say an openness.

PAM: A willingness to change.

TJ: Yeah. But – we don’t see it as much – a real high status character that is also real vulnerable is probably even more fun than watching low status characters who’s entirely vulnerable because we assume that part. But I think with vulnerability, if you can change that word to be “impressionable” or “open” then I think it’s more universally typical to any aspect of character that you’re playing. And it allows you to be in a place of reaction, which we like watching because it’s almost proof - the proof-positive of improvisation is watching someone’s reaction to something that they didn’t know was coming.  You can think sometimes that someone’s been coming up with that line for a little bit, but you can’t come up with your reaction to it. That has to happen in that second.

PAM: We like to see people change. They have a character arc, which we talked about-

TJ: We like to see people change for a good reason. We like to see people change because they’ve been impressed upon by their partners. Because their partners lead them to a change-

PAM: -an organic change.

TJ: Yeah. We hate watching change for no good reason.

Mr. Jagodowski and Ms. Sohn
in In a World at
Annoyance Theatre
PAM: That’s what I was going to ask. How that jibe with “holding your shit”?

TJ: If you think of it musically, your initial declaration – your initial point of view…holding your shit is that bass beat that you’ve created. But you’re impressed upon, and so you might add something – you add your high-hat to that bass beat. In music, you listen to the Ode to Joy, how it starts. It goes a lot of different places, but you never feel like you lost where it began. And then when it returns to that at the end, it’s like you’ve gone on this trip, and like, “Ah! And that’s the guy I met first! He’s still there!”

It’s your job to grab that point of view, but realize that point of view is not a static bar. It never goes away, but it can move and fluctuate. And if your partner – God bless – gives you enough reasons to be almost an entirely different person by the end, then your partner did one helluva job. I don’t know if you do it great job. But your partner gave you a lot of good reasons to have done this 180.

You’ll watch someone go through any amount and size of change if it’s done for a reason that you believe. If any amount of change for any reason you don’t believe, you’ve just seen someone give up on their shit.


PAM [wrapping up the interview]: Ok, I’ll stop now. I only had compliments left.

[A short time later, TJ’s mom, the delightful Maureen Jagodowski, calls back.]

TJ [on the phone to his mom]: I was doing an interview with Pam Victor and Peter, and Pam’s question is how you would describe what Dave and I do? How would describe improvisation and the TJ and Dave show?

MAUREEN: After the word “magical”? [Laughter.]

TJ: Yeah, after that. If you were bringing someone on the bus [TJ’s mom packs a bus full of family and friends to travel from their hometown to the show at the Barrow Street Theatre in New York City,] and they were like, “What the hell are we going to see?”

MAUREEN: You are going to see a thoroughly improvised play…It can be very insightful. It can have tremendously evocative dramatic effects, but always with the ultimate goal of entertaining and leaving you feeling better than when you arrived.

TJ: Holy shit, Ma! Can I steal that?

PAM: How does she describe what you do to her friends when they’re like, “My son is a doctor”?

MAUREEN: …I don’t want them to feel like I’m putting their kids down.

PAM and PETER: Awwww! What a good mom.

MAUREEN: After the word “genius,” I have come up with another way of saying it…It’s like mental calisthenics. It’s incredible to me what you can do. And it’s incredible the situations that you handle…It’s hard for me to explain…so I let them see it-

TJ: -and then make the apologies.

MAUREEN: And then I let them tell me how smart you are and how creative you are and what a genius you are.

It is simply taking a mental image in your head and creating a one-hour, improvised play. And you have complete trust in the person that you are with. You let the other person shine, and in doing so you shine.

TJ [a little choked up]: Perfect, Mama. That was it.



TJ's mom describes
TJ and Dave

***
If you haven’t already, please read Parts One and Two of my geek out with TJ. And if you're in Chicago, do yourself a huge favor and see TJ and Dave at  iO almost every Wednesday at 11pm. They also perform occasionally at the Barrow Street Theatre in New York City. And if you're extraordinarily fortunate to be in Rome, Italy on Friday, November 9th, you can see TJ and Dave perform at at the Arciliuto Theatre, which can be found in the Palazzo Chiovenda, an old residence in Piazza di Montevecchio, dating from the fifteenth century.
Molto elegante!
***
Catch up on past improv geek-a-thons:

…Chris Gethard of “The Chris Gethard Show”,
 …with Joe Bill of BASSPROV,
 …Susan Messing of Messing with a Friend,
 …Jet Eveleth of The Reckoning,
and many more!

Plus behind-the-scenes and bloopers on the



Pam Victor is the founding member of The Ha-Ha’s, and she produces The Happier Valley Comedy Show in western Massachusetts. Pam directs, produces and performs in the comic soap opera web series "Silent H, Deadly H". Pam also writes mostly humorous, mostly true essays and reviews of books, movies and tea on her blog, "My Nephew is a Poodle." If you want to stay abreast of all the geek out action, like the “Geeking Out with…” Facebook page!

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October 3, 2012

Applications for WICF 2013 are now open
by Unknown - 0


Applications for WICF 2013 are now open!
Please refer to our FAQ section as you go through the application process.
Please note that we cannot accept any application that does not include a video link a performance (workshops excluded). For video submission format and details please check out our FAQ section.

Notification
Applicants will be notified whether or not they are accepted by January 7th, 2013. If you do not receive notification by said date, please check your spam folder first, then contact us ASAP at submissions@womenincomedyfestival.com.


Selection Process and Feedback
Women in Comedy Festival submissions are open to comedians of all races, creeds, religions, and genders. We accept international applications, but are not able to contribute to travel expenses. Due to the volume of applicants, we cannot give individual feedback as to why any given application was not accepted. Each year, the festival has grown in number and quality of applicants, so the selection process has become increasingly selective. 

Accepted Acts show lengths at WICF
Our festival serves as a great showcase for industry and audiences to get to see as many quality acts as possible over the course of four days, so please be advised that show requests longer than what is stated below are unlikely to fit into our programming, and second slots for any act are solely at the discretion on the festival producers:

Genres and act lengths
  • Category 1: Stand Up Comedy or Storytelling Stand Up Comedy*: 5-7 minutes
  • Category 2: Improv Comedy: 25 Minutes
  • Category 3: Live Sketch Comedy (You may include some video/ multimedia in your live act): 25 minutes
  • Category 4: Musical Comedy (Scripted or unscripted. You may include some video/ multimedia in your live act): 25 minutes
  • Category 5: Workshop Instruction: 45 minutes to 3 hours
*Storytelling stand up is stand up comedy with one sustained story, a la Mike Birbiglia or The Moth, but please be sure your storytelling stand up is pack with as many laughs as any good stand up set.

Questions
If you have any questions or difficulties, please check out our FAQ section. If you still have questions, please contact us at submissions@womenincomedyfestival.com. We can answer questions and help you with the process as needed. It's important to us that the submissions interface is clear and easy to use, so please feel free to send us any feedback at all.

Thanks so much for applying to the festival. We look forward to reviewing your application.
- The WICF team
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Geeking Out with...TJ Jagodowski (Part Two)
by Pam Victor - 0

By WICF Contributor Pam Victor

 [“Geeking Out with…” is a series of interviews with well-known, highly experienced improvisers. It’s a chance to talk about stuff that might interest hardcore, improv dorkwads like Pam. The series can be found in full frontal geek out version on My Nephew is a Poodle and in pithier version on the Women in Comedy Festival blog. For behind-the-scenes action, ‘like’ the “Geeking Out with…” Facebook page.]

While I was in Chicago for iO Theatre’s Summer Intensive, I had the pleasure of watching TJ Jagodowski perform in a variety of shows such as: Monday’s talent-packed The Armando Diaz Experience at iO, Tuesday’s night-full-of-improv-delights at Annoyance Theatre where TJ performs first with Chicagoland and then In a World, Wednesday nights with Carl and the Passions and then of course  TJ and Dave at 11pm in the Cabaret Theatre at iO, and on Thursdays he’s in The Scene at iO. I regret that while I was in Chicago I wasn’t able to catch him in his Friday night show at iO, Challenger. And I sadly left before he started his run at Annoyance with fantabulous cast of Almost Atlanta.

 My respect and admiration for TJ’s work only grew each time I saw him perform this art form that I love so passionately. To me, watching TJ on stage is like watching an improvisation aficionado perform with the utmost respect and affection for the art form, his fellow players, and the theater itself. Yes, TJ follows Del Close’s edict to treat improvisers as "geniuses, poets, and artists" as we will discuss. Together, TJ and his richly gifted partner David Pasquesi make me believe in the Great Spirit of Improvisation. Amen.

(And I apologize profusely, Mr. Jagodowski, for blathering on like an eedjit. I really am sorry, and I would stop myself if I had even a sliver of self-control. If it makes you feel any better, I’m pretty sure you’ll suck at the next show I see you in, thus reversing my entire concept of you. In preparation, I shall be stockpiling savage and blistering adjectives for the scathing review I’m almost certain to write. You’re welcome.)

In Part One of our geek out session, TJ and I discussed his journey into the heart of improv, the fear of sucking (not in the good way,) and the process of performing TJ and Dave. This conversation picks up where we left off, with my eagerness to pry up the hood of TJ and Dave, and get a nice, long look at the inner workings of their process.

***

PAM VICTOR: Do you [and David] rehearse?

TJ JAGODOWSKI: Not every week. But we do rehearse.

PAM: Do you have a coach?

TJ: No, just us. We do the tops of the shows - the first five minutes, the first ten minutes of the show – and see if we’re intact. We try to make sure we didn’t miss anything, that we were true to the very first moment. Because usually we find that if we can get the first moment right – or the first minute right or the first two minutes right – we should be in a position to be able to execute the rest of the show. If we miss that first minute, we never get it back…the teeth don’t go back into the gears if you miss that first moment…

PAM: Do you have special ears for capturing those first few lines or those first few moments?

TJ: No. We just try not to rush it. If that first thing is really apparent – whatever that thing is – then we don’t wait to say it or act upon it. But if that first thing is not yet clear, we just want to make sure we give it time for it to show itself. So it’s listening with your eyes and all that. It’s nothing special. Anyone is capable of doing it. Sometimes you just get nervous, you feel like something needs to happen or something needs to be said, so you rush that first thing. As opposed to just letting it come to you, and when it presents itself go ahead and act on it.

PAM: And through experience you and Dave have been able to both agree on, “There’s the gem, there’s the germ of our scene”?

TJ: I think so. What we would refer to it as trying to get a read on the “heat” and the “weight.” The heat being the intimacy of the relationship – anything from strangers to being married and soul mates for 50 years and anything in between. And the weight being what is already in the room with you - what does it feel like is already going on? Like, “Oh my God, it feels like our common best friend is in a coffin in the other room.” Or it feels like one of us needs to sell a car today…

So what we trust is that we won’t have the same details exactly of the name of who we are to each other or the name of what’s already in the room, but that our read on how intimate our relationship is would be congruous to each other. And our read on the weight of the thing in the room would be congruous to each other. So that, “best friends” equals “brothers who really get along” equals “husband and wife” – the heat all of that would be similar enough. And the weight of, “We just survived a car accident,” or “We made it through the first night of our honeymoon,” that weight would be the same.

PAM: And that has been spoken out loud [in the scene]?

TJ: Not yet, but whatever we title it or whatever we end up calling it, the heat and the weight of that will be already groovy with what the other person is feeling. Dave and I wouldn’t get into a situation where he thinks we’re husband and wife and I think we’re absolute, total strangers at a bus stop. The heat of that would blow apart how we’ve already been behaving. So we trust that our read will be similar enough, that the details won’t matter because the level of our intimacy is what is important, not the name we put on it.

PAM: So the weight thing of the “other thing that is in the room” -  you might do a first a few lines about husband and wife and you’ve agreed that you guys have known each other without even-

TJ: All it will take is [dropping into the voice of a wife], “Babe.” So we don’t have to explain-

Most of those lines of exposition are usually because the players think the audience is not on the same page as you. So you say [taking on a gruff character voice], “Well, Ron, you and I have been brothers-in-law for ten years…” You don’t say that to anyone ever [in real life.] The equivalent of this is like, “Ron, you’re a total retard because I’m explaining to you right now how long we’ve known each other and in what capacity.”

So those lines are designed to inform the audience, but they already know. And also they don’t really care. It doesn’t matter that the title of this relationship is “brothers-in-law.” What counts is that [in gruff brother-in-law voice], “We shoulder-chuck each other and throw barbs at each other because we love each other.” That’s what’s important about the relationship.

PAM: So you have the scene about the brothers-in-law, say, and you could both stop it after 30 seconds and say, “I have a feeling there is something going on here. There is something in the other room…there seems more, that something is happening today for these people.”

TJ: We would have already felt it.

PAM: Without speaking about it. So there is sort of a spiritual aspect to it or a psychic or…

TJ: It’s not psychic. It reveals itself. There are already clues being established as to what else is going on by how we’ve behaved. That maybe we get the feeling that these two guys are being a little extra jocular today. So why is that? Did one of these guys say something yesterday that he’s worried that the other guy still is taking to heart, so he wants to make sure that there’s no problem? Or is there some sort of sadness in the other room that they’re trying to take their minds off, so they’re being extra, “Hey, everything’s aces, buddy!”? Clues are being given that you basically solve the most obvious mystery of.

And Dave will refer to Occam’s Razor. If you see a hoof print in your front yard, it’s more likely a horse and not a zebra. We just try to go with the most obvious answer that makes sense with what’s already happened.


 TJ discussing "heat" and "weight"

PAM: You and Dave are very highly respected in the improv community, as you know...

TJ: Sheerly through our ages.

PAM: There are people older than you, who have been doing it longer than you, who come to see your show-

TJ: Usually as a favor.

PAM: I’m making you uncomfortable…

You know it’s so funny…I’ve talked to a lot of people now, and they don’t want to take credit for their stuff. Maybe when I get to be a great improviser – I hope I’m humble, but I hope I can recognize…[To TJ]  You worked hard. You deserve it.

TJ: It wasn’t work.

PAM: Why do you think it makes you so uncomfortable to be so highly regarded? Because it can always go wrong?

TJ: I don’t know… I might be prone to put a decent amount of pressure on myself, and so if there’s a way to fly under the radar, that’s a lot easier to deal with. And if I am highly regarded, then I’m absolutely grateful for that. And I like being part of a community where I do feel respected, and hopefully return that respect…I know I’ve been luckier than I’ve been good. I know there’s a lot of work still to be done. And, yeah, anything can go wrong at any given time…so I don’t know if that answers your question or not.

PAM: I know it’s a hard topic, so I won’t talk about it anymore.

TJ and Dave
Theater on the Lake
(July, 2012)
You did a run at Theater on the Lake, which is really cool. And Dave called that “legitimate theater” when he was talking to me about it, which I thought was interesting. [TJ laughs.] It’s not surprising that your show in particular is making this transition into unscripted theater because it is so perfect for it.

TJ: We’re not alone in that. Improvised Shakespeare is doing it. Baby Wants Candy has played some of the places we play too. And part of that is this fellow Scott Morfee who’s been bringing us to the Barrow Street Theatre in New York who is really intent on trying to help show that bridge between improvisation and theater. We’ve been lucky to be part of that, but we’re certainly not alone in that…

I’m also fortunate to be with the group Almost Atlanta who have been trying to do that as well, doing an improvised play. We got to do it at the Garage Space at Steppenwolf. Almost Atlanta, as well, is working that bridge.

PAM: Tell me about what “playing the relationship” means to you?

TJ: Finding out how these two people are interacting in this moment in this place. How they are affecting each other.

PAM: What specifically do you go to when you’re developing a relationship on stage?

TJ: I would say you don’t go to anything, you’re given it. Your partner gives it to you. Dave says – you should interview Dave again [He laughs. And I make a wish.] - he doesn’t get anything about who he is from him. He gets everything about who he is from me. And I do the same. I don’t go to anything; I just try to be ready to receive everything.

PAM: Do you come in with an emotional state?

TJ: Not for TJ and Dave. I will for a Harold show or whatever, from the information at hand. I find it easiest to internalize an emotional point of view and have that be my starting place and then figure out everything else…

No one ever goes in absolutely blank. There’s already something, your posture, or something you’re going to be doing by accident. You’re going to be doing something when the lights come up. But what [Dave and I] both do is try and figure out what exactly do we both have, what is the combination of what we’re both doing right now. Because before those lights come up, you may think you know exactly who you are and what’s going on. And then you meet another person’s eyes and realize you were wrong about that entirely because that does not make sense to what’s going on, balanced and in conjunction with, what’s coming back at me from him.

PAM: That first moment [in a TJ and Dave show] – that much talked-about first moment, at least in my circles – you guys are looking at each other…

TJ: The way we perceive that is that show has already been going on. The lens has just been opened on our participation on it. But whoever we just pop into, they’ve already had a life until then. We’re just occupying it for a little bit. We have to figure out what moment did we just jump into.

TJ and Dave at UMass (Amherst)
May, 2012
PAM: So what are you looking at? Are you looking at something or are you receiving something when you look at each other?

TJ: I’m looking at Dave. I’m receiving that information and trying to be as aware as I possibly can of what I’m giving to him because I have to be responsible for that as well. So I have to be aware of what my body, what my face, what my eyes are saying, what he’s saying with his body, and his face, and his eyes. What our proximity is. If one of us glances away, what were we looking at because that can start to tell us where we are, whether inside or outside.

It’s all a gradual process of eliminating possibilities. Before those lights come up, literally the possibilities are infinite. But as soon as the lights come up, a bunch of possibilities are removed. And someone moves or someone looks at something – other possibilities are removed. What we end up trying to get to is this sense that we are now doing the one and only thing that this was absolutely from the beginning…

It’s a gradual process of like, “Well, he just talked in a man’s voice. I feel like I’m a man. We know we’re not a man and a woman. Ok, now that possibility has been removed. We both just used a voice and a posture that seems like we’re not 15, 16, 17, 18, or 19, so those possibilities are removed. Dave just looked up and wiped his head as though he was looking at the sun. Ok, so we’re not inside – those possibilities are removed.” And so you just keep trying to chip away stuff until you realize, “Oh. Of course. We’ve always been these two guys stranded by the side of a road in a hot climate waiting for a tow truck to come and fix our automobile.”

PAM: How many minutes into the scene is that?

TJ: It could be forever. Sometimes we haven’t realized we were until 20 minutes into the show. Sometimes it happens within the first 30 seconds or minute. We try not to call anything something until it has shown itself to be that, or until the clues that are offered lead us to having that be the most obvious conclusion. But uninformed action and uninformed speech leads to more uninformed decisions. Until we feel informed in a way that we can make a conclusion or informed in a way that we would take action, we try not to take action or jump to conclusions.

PAM: I think that is not the way we’re being trained right now.

TJ: This is a specific show with a specific amount of time allotted. It’s two people and it might be an hour long. And so that is really useful for us in the way we want to go about that show.

Frankly, if you’re doing a Harold, you just don’t have that amount of time. You have to get into your opening. You have to start making decisions, and start getting information out. Especially in an opening, you have three hard minutes of work to do, and if you do hard work the rest of your show is nice and free and easy. You gotta’ get to work at the beginning of a show like that.

Mark Piebenga, Linda Orr,
Noah Gregoropolous
and TJ Jagodowski
"Chicagoland"
(Annoyance Theatre, 2012)
I get to play in a show called Chicagoland that’s kind of location- and environmentally-based. In that show, we move pretty quick off the beginning to try to get that location flushed out and maybe a couple of themes. And then that show can breathe and move in any way, shape, or form as it wants to. As fast or as slow as it wants to go from there. Every show is different. The things you have to do for each show are probably different. But with any show you can still operate from an emotional point of views. You can still listen and pay attention. You still be as honest as you possibly can. So those things you bring to any form, any show.

PAM: You sort of redefine the concept of stage picture [in a TJ and Dave show] where you’ll turn your back to the audience at some point, sometimes for almost a whole scene. I’m wondering if you’re doing that in order to tell the audience, “This is a real fourth wall,” that space is truly three dimensional to you…

TJ: Just about everything we do is out of necessity, convenience, or because it’s closest to real. If you were playing a bar scene, the bartender and the patron might both be facing the same exact way and stuff like that. That would be harder for us to read exactly. We’d be denying ourselves information because I can’t really see him. I’d be coming out of my periphery and Dave the same. It’s just more natural to try to play it that way. It’s easier, frankly. We try to do what makes the most sense, what’s the easiest, and try a little bit louder. [Laughs.] We don’t ever purposefully want people not to be able to hear, but that’s how the bartender stands. He stands facing his patron. So that’s how we stand.

PAM: Do you think it’s for you or for the audience, where you’re saying, “We’re not playacting. We’re really inhabiting a world”?

TJ: I think it’s just what’s easiest for us. Hopefully it’s good for them too. It’s real. It is real. You can’t walk through this car door because it’s a car door. And the way this bar is set up, that’s where the bar is…

PAM: Tell me about your take on discovery versus invention in improv.

TJ: Invention is just harder. It takes effort. It’s work. I just picture in my head like inventors are toiling away in laboratories and doing experimentation. Discovers just stumble across the damn thing. [Invention] is more effort than it needs to be. You’ll probably get something cooler by discovering it than by inventing something that wasn’t there to begin with.

PAM: There are styles of improv that rely more on invention.

TJ: I imagine, like story-based or narrative-based stuff…

PAM: I guess the UCB [Upright Citizen’s Brigade Theatre] philosophy could even be argued is more invention-based.

TJ: My experience with that is it’s a little more “tag-heighten, tag-heighten.” So, yeah, there might be a little bit more invention. But, man, does it work for them. When you get some of the funniest people and best writers in the world, that’s going to work.

And I was only joking a little bit earlier that one of the reasons Dave and I get along pretty well on stage is that neither of us is fast or one-line funny, so it’s easier for us to allow those things to come out of a different place because we’re just not that quick.

PAM: You’re playing to your strengths.

TJ: Yeah.

PAM: I think going more in the “slow comedy” direction personally, as a 45-year-old woman with two kids and that brain drain….I don’t know if I’m going to be capable of as being as fast. But I get off on [slow comedy] more, so…

TJ: Well, as a 45-year-old mother of two, I’m glad you’re getting off on anything.

PAM [Laughing.]: Oh, I get off on a lot of things. Right, Peter? [Peter is videotaping the interview.]

TJ: Woah.

PETER: I tape it. [More laughter.]

PAMI don’t know if you think of it in the same spiritual ways that Dave is thinking of it – he and I got into a conversation of improv as a spiritual [pursuit], which is the only way we understood it at the same level. And I always find the “god” of improv, if there is such a thing, is found in those discovery moments, when we’re both in the moment and mutually discovering something together. That’s what gets me high. Do you have any suggestions for evolving improvisers, such as myself, to get more into that discovery mode?

TJ [shaking his head]: No.

PAM [laughing]: Ok, thanks. Next question…

TJ: It’s probably right along the same lines of what we were talking as to how you go into a show wanting to be great, you really want to rock it. You can be as prepared as you possibly can to receive those moments of discovery. And I find that through calm and, like you say, being in that moment. Because you really can’t get there if you’re thinking too hard or still wondering about something that already happened. You just have to be there at that same time with your partner. But I don’t know how you make it happen other than you both just have to be ready for it to happen.
A very brief clip about getting off.

***
Stay tuned for the final part of our conversation in
“Geeking Out with…TJ Jagodowski (Part Three)”

In the meantime if you're in Chicago, do yourself a huge favor and see TJ and Dave at  iO almost every Wednesday at 11pm. They also perform occasionally at the Barrow Street Theatre in New York City. But even if you won’t be in NYC or Chicago, you can see their wonderful documentary Trust Us, This is All Made Up. It is the rare opportunity to see improv brought to the screen in a most adept fashion. Trust me, it’s true.

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Catch up on past improv geek-a-thons:

…Chris Gethard of “The Chris Gethard Show”,
 …with Joe Bill of BASSPROV,
 …Susan Messing of Messing with a Friend,
 …Jet Eveleth of The Reckoning,
and many more!

Plus behind-the-scenes and bloopers on the



Pam Victor is the founding member of The Ha-Ha’s, and she produces The Happier Valley Comedy Show in western Massachusetts. Pam directs, produces and performs in the comic soap opera web series "Silent H, Deadly H". Pam also writes mostly humorous, mostly true essays and reviews of books, movies and tea on her blog, "My Nephew is a Poodle." If you want to stay abreast of all the geek out action, like the “Geeking Out with…” Facebook page!

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