Brian Bling Baldi, Urban View 3/15/00
Damn, That's Funny.
East Bay Improv at Live Oak Theater, March 4,
On a recent Saturday, as the rain was drilling down across
Berkeley, East Bay Improv was buys taking a Live Oak Theater crowd
of over 140 to hilarity in a hand basket. And what's more, the
humor was on the house. Gratis. As free as the associations made
up and down the stage for the entirety of the night.
"Sometimes it's useful to heap verbal abuse on someone,"
Director/Performer Dave Patterson announced from the edge of the
stage to rouse the audience, a state they maintained throughout
the show. Taking full advantage of improv comedy's inherent freneticism,
the five-person group hitched up their pants and plowed through
a slew of scenes depicting samurai home-owners, salacious priests
with pitch-perfect Groucho asides, Cocknet-accented punk rock
psychiatrists, and Q&A sessions with God during which the
deity is addressed as "Dude
I mean God." Not to
mention a three-headed monster serenading an audience member who
introduced herself as an illustrator specializing in drawing dead
animals. The wistful finale of the skit features three cast members
plaintively crooning one word at a time, as only a romantic three
headed-monster can, "I love you like a dead animal."
Damn near made me choke up.
When a sketch petered out and the jokes ran dry, the group waited
only long enough for one more quip before granting themselves
bad comedy clemency and signaled, with a windmill sweep of an
arm, for the lights to dim and the skit to end. Other times, the
scenes barely began when-BAM a 700-watt one-liner ripped into
the audience and shut the skit down at the apex.
When given the noun "emergency power saw" by an audience
member, player Leila Ben-Joseph launched into an emotionally charged
confrontation with a squirrel. Not one to take any lip from an
invisible squirrel, she gesticulated wildly, making a series of
lunges in the general direction of the non-existent rodent before
firing up the emergency power saw (this clearly being an emergency)
and hacked away, all the while inquiring of the squirrel "Who's
your daddy now? Who's your daddy now? Huh? Huh?!!" Lights
out again.
But lets not go getting the idea that East Bay Improv is all namby-pamby,
puerile, squirrel-threatening folly. High concept humor made an
appearance when the group wheeled in the theories of the utterly
whacked French dramatist Georges Polti, who in 1868 declared that
all human drama could be reduced to 36 situations.
It all seemed to go over well enough, but then that is the Immaculate
Gimmick of improv- the audience has a vested interest in the show
(they provide the nouns and scenarios) and often come lubed for
laughs. (During intermission a child asked her mom if she could
buy her a drink, to which the improv-intoxicated mom replied with
vintage Elaine May elan, "No, but you can lick my umbrella.")
Bonus about East Bay Improv: A family-style warmth can be sensed,
a stray actor's arm from time to time making its way around another
actor's shoulder, even a restive, mutual lean into each other.
And the same went for the people in the seats, many of whom spoke
proudly of taking part in the group's "fully comprehensive
improv training program."
Kids in the crowd; a San Francisco Mime Troupe T-shirt somewhere
back in the seats; friends here and there; some cold rain outside;
some warm jokes on the interior: ironic distance, at least for
awhile, seemed refreshingly distant. These people know humor.