Tuesday, October 14, 2008

McKinneyNews.Net Writer Interviews Comedian from WHIRLED NEWS


Whirled News Tonight
Tuesday, October 14, 2008 in McKinneyNews.Net
Posted by Brett Ryder at 01:04 AM

Whirled News Tonight, a critically-acclaimed satirical comedy improvisational troop out of Chicago, will make its way to the McKinney Performing Arts Center for two shows on Saturday. (For more information, click here.) The mechanics of the show are straightforward -- simplistic, some might say. Audience members present the cast with news headlines and/or clippings and away, as they say, the comedy team goes in search of improvisational laughs. But it’s not only laughs per se they’re after. Satirical comedy by definition contains an element of sober critique intent upon exposing the ridiculousness of human thought and/or behavior.


Alex Eilhauer, 29, a five-year veteran of the comedy team, spoke to McKinneyNews.net about the thrills and challenges associated with Whirled News Tonight’s off-the-cuff brand of humor.


What is improvisational comedy?

It’s comedy without a script. From the perspective of doing it, it’s definitely a rush. I really enjoy making something up on the spot. It makes me feel like my brain is firing on all cylindersThat’s got to be tough.It is. I feel my smartest when doing improv, when I’m making quick connections. With improv comedy there’s an adrenaline rush and a certain sensitivity that helps you come across ideas you might normally not come across. It’s like tapping into the unconscious. There has been some suggestion that some of the best decisions we make are made in a split second. It helps to be an expert, but thinking about something too long can actually be detrimental. It’s like you prime the subconscious with research and then in the moment of decision this stuff comes to you spontaneously. You can over think things sometimes.


What about the audience?

The audience is connected to the comedy, it’s feeding on the adrenaline. You can feel the energy of the audience because the audience has a hand in generating the material. It’s a simple thrill. People are entertained by the challenge of it. There’s a curiosity. I think the audience is wondering whether we’ll be able to pull off the suggested material.


Is everything funny?

That’s the challenge. Sometimes we get stuff that is depressing and we’re supposed to make it funny. One time we did a sketch about Somali refugees. There’s nothing innately humorous about that, but we were able to satirize the problem, taking a look at how many American “problems” may be trivial in comparison – you know, you’re cable service isn’t functioning, things like that.


What is satire?

It’s making fun of a social topic by way of highlighting the unusual and the absurd in daily living. Satire opens eyes in a less combative way. If you push too hard, the audience will push back. It’s slipping something in under their guard and maybe getting them to think about it.


What is comedy?

We’re continually trying to answer that question. Comedy holds a mirror up to society, and in a non-threatening -- or less threatening – way gets people thinking. Some comedians, for example, might say Bush is real stupid. If you just said that, that’s kind of a threatening thing to say, almost an angry thing to say that puts people off. Satirical comedy gets your point of view across without the offense. Stephen Colbert is a great example of a great satirist. How much more effective is he when he doesn’t rant about a Bill O’Reilly – and I’m just using this as an example – you know, saying O’Rielly’s a fool or an idiot? People might take offense to that, particularly someone who likes O’Reilly.

What do you think is most absurd about the human condition?

Interesting question. Maybe how serious we tend to take things. A lot of things are serious, but if you pull back they’re not so serious. Also, overconfidence. Generally, overconfident characters get more laughs from the audience than timid ones. Sometimes ego is absurd.


What do the greatest comedic talents share in terms of personality and/or temperament?

Intelligence is a big part of it, but it’s a certain kind of intelligence. Typically, the people I work with are insightful and observant. They’re very much in tune with the ordinary and able to bring out the comical in the ordinary.


Is there any subject that is either taboo or perhaps too risky to make fun of?

I don’t think so, but you’ve got to tailor what you’re doing to the audience. Nothing’s inherently taboo. The onus is on the comedian to be skillful. If you’re going to tackle a sensitive subject like racism, or something sexual -- if you do it clumsily, then it’s kind of unpleasant for everybody.


Wile E. Coyote gets hit on the head with yet another anvil while [Seinfeld’s] George Costanza endures yet another berating from his parents and we’re laughing all the while. Someone once said that at the heart of comedy lies a certain cruelty. You agree?

Maybe a little bit. Maybe it’s cruelty mixed with love. Don’t we love Costanza? We don’t want to see him get hurt, we relate to him. I see a little bit of my relationship with my parents when I watch George.


Maybe at its heart comedy is a celebration of human foibles in spite of our attempts to pretend we’re in control, in spite of our supposed cocksureness?

Yeah. I think that’s fair.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Preview Article about WHIRLED NEWS in MCG


FUNNY: Improv Olympic’s ‘Whirled News Tonight’ makes cut-ups out of cut-outs from the day’s headlines and no newspaper is safe…not even this one.

By Danny Gallagher, McKinney Courier-Gazette

Improv Olympic’s “Whirled News Tonight” strives not only to be funny but also satirical and topical with its improvised take on the day’s popular and obscure headlines.Think of it as kind of a fair and balancing act.“I guess the trick of it is if it’s not funny, then no one cares what the message is,” said troupe founder and director Jason Chin. “The funny comes first, but the drive to be funny, I think we aim for good theater and by aiming for good theater, we become very funny. If you just aim for funny, then you become Mark Russell.”

The improv comedy show from Chicago takes its cues from the day’s newspapers, which means they have an endless supply of material to draw from as long as the presses don’t stop.

“On stage, we don’t hold anything back,” troupe member Marla Caceres said.The show comes to McKinney at 7 p.m. and 10 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 18 at the McKinney Performing Arts Center.
The show lets audience members clip stories from a stack of newspapers before the curtain goes up and tack them on a bulletin board for the cast to use. Each cast member pulls a story off the board, reads the headline and first few paragraphs aloud and then acts a scene based on that story.Chin wanted to combine improv comedy with topical humor for a long time, but was told over and over again that it couldn’t be done.

“At the time, I had done a ton of improv shows in Chicago, but my big love was politics and satire and I was wondering if the two could work,” he said. “I was told they could not because satire needed such a pointed point-of-view and it would be tough to get across without a script.”Chin collected a group of comedians anyway who he thought possessed the knack of improvising and the knowledge of current events for the perfect blend of his performances. The cast includes a wide variety of performers from all backgrounds, including some Harvard graduates, the son of a former Connecticut state treasurer who served under Howard Dean and even a McKinney native, Shane Wilson, who won’t be in town for the McKinney show since he recently became a father for the first time.

Five years later, his show has been regularly performing at the Del Close Theater in Chicago and touring the country in red and blue states alike.“We don’t all agree on things,” troupe member Arnie Niekamp said. “Usually whatever is funny about something, that’s what wins out really.”The show features a cavalcade of bipartisan riffing with sketches and skits from familiar faces from the front page such as Sarah Palin and Barack Obama to obscure issues that barely made it to the front section.

“We’re more like equal opportunity mocking,” Caceres said. “It really makes you look at things a little more objectively. It makes you break things down. We had a scene recently where someone played Obama and asked him some basic questions and another guy turns around says, ‘Oh he sounds so inspirational’ and Obama now is just talking about things that are so mundane but are so inspirational, like a halo would appear over him at any moment. So even though I’m voting for Obama, I can see that objectively with a satirist’s eye.”Part of the challenge comes from stories that don’t seem appropriate for a comedy show, such as natural disasters and the never-ending tragedy of war, Chin said.“In many ways, it makes it more human, which I like as well in that we can tackle very sad stories,” Chin said. “If we were writing it, we could just say we’re not doing that story, but in an improv show when a sad story comes up, we have to do it. So we can portray the humanity or feeling about it and still be funny without being cruel or exploitative.”Another challenge for the actors is finding new ways to make fun of or make fun with characters that seem to have a set up a permanent residence in the national spotlight, Niekamp said.“Sometimes we don’t want to do the same jokes over and over again, although we have different audiences all the time and they wouldn’t know if we are recycling jokes. For us we’re into doing something new and spontaneous and surprising ourselves and sharing that energy with the audience,” Niekamp said.

No story is too small. A recent show at a Chicago high school featured the cast ripping stories from the school’s student-run newspaper, Caceres said.“They had something about a wall they had in high school where students would write messages to each other,” she said. “So we turned it into a character where there would be a message that was from the future on the wall and in another scene, it was the Berlin Wall, separating the east and west sides of the high school.”That means this very newspaper you’re holding could become a victim in Saturday’s show.“There’s always something to be made fun of,” Niekamp said, “just about anything.”

Contact Danny Gallagher at dgallagher@acnpapers.com.

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Awesome Article about Marc Broussard in North Texas e-News


Marc Broussard Rocks the Building
By Lynne Weinberger, photos by Allen Rich
Oct 7, 2008 --> For complete story and photos, click HERE.

It sounds like a cliché, but it’s not. Standing outside the McKinney Performing Arts Center on the Square Sunday night, one surely could see the venerable old edifice shimmyin’ and shakin’ in time to the incredible music with the rambunctious crowd inside.
By the second song, they were dancing in the aisles. I’ve never seen anything like it, and in the upright and classy McKinney Performing Arts Center Courtroom Theater, no less.

The reason for the unabashed celebration? Louisiana native Marc Broussard and his band had arrived to take fans on a soulful and sultry, then rowdy and rollicking, musical journey with him. He arrived to entertain a packed house, and enthusiastically entertain he did.

Billed as a crown prince of soul, the blue-eyed troubadour (son of acclaimed Boogie Kings guitarist Ted Broussard) has musical talent and then some coursing through his Cajun veins.

‘Versatile’ doesn’t begin to describe it. In fact, none of the typical superlatives even come close to describing the raw talent and energy he brought to the MPAC stage. Equally comfortable with blues and soul as with rock ‘n roll, Broussard brought an incredibly diverse variety of music to his adoring audience. He expertly delivered it, or rather, intravenously injected it, into the collective soul of his old (and for the rest, instantly new) fans.

The result was a foot-stompin’, shoulder-shakin’ and downright down-gettin’ crowd that danced in the aisles, at their seats, and with each other. His fans were well-versed in his repertoire: by the third note, cat-calls, appreciative whistles and sing-alongs ensued.

The pre-concert reception in the lower-level MPAC Gallery allowed MPAC VIPs to rub shoulders with Broussard. Approachable and humble, he and band mates visited with the intimate group before hitting the stage.

To say he poured every fiber of his being into the show is another understatement. Bill Withers and James Taylor ballads brought chills, and selections from his just-released studio album Keep Coming Back had the rockin’ audience on their feet for much of the night.

The large crowd gathered post-show for Marc Broussard CDs and Ts is testimony to his loyal following. The dozens waiting outside his tour bus at the end of the night should let Broussard know he can add McKinney concert-goers to his long line of fans.

To join the fun and experience your own brush with greatness, call MPAC to reserve tickets for the following Autumn performances, sponsored by The Dallas Morning News, Emerson Process Management, Holiday Inn & Suites McKinney and WFAA:

Saturday, October 18, 5-7 pm: Art Works – Meet the Artists featuring Greg Piazza, Lynda Rhodes, and Mary Frank, followed by iO Theater’s Whirled News Tonight, 7 & 10 pm, a hilarious improvised comedy show inspired by local and national news headlines clipped by audience members.

Friday, November 14, 8 pm: Bearfoot’s young musicians blend airy Northern ballads with back-alley Southern blues, while jazz stomp meets Appalachian breakdown. These young acoustic performers won one of roots music’s most prestigious awards, Telluride Festival Band Champions, an honor they share with The Dixie Chicks and Nickel Creek, just two years after they met as musical camp counselors.

Saturday, November 15, 8 pm: Five.Funny.Females hosted by McKinney’s own comedienne Laura Bartlett. The Dallas Morning News declares, “McKinney - The New Comedy Central.” Plan on spending Girls Night Out with Laura and her friends’ funny observations on jumper cables, pet adoption, car problems, growing up in the South, and much more.
For information on these and more upcoming MPAC events and art exhibits, call 214.544.4630 for information and tickets or visit www.mckinneyperformingartscenter.org. MPAC is located on the historic McKinney square at 111 N. Tennessee St., McKinney, TX 75069. For sponsorships, ticketing opportunities and rental, call 972.547.2650.

For more on Marc Broussard, visit www.marcbroussard.com.

Marc will appear on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno on Wednesday, October 8 and will be in Dallas at the House of Blues on Wednesday, Oct. 22.

Photos by Allen Rich
© Copyright 2002-2006 by North Texas e-News, llc

Order in the Court! Order in the Court!

Welcome to McKinney Performing Arts Center at the Historic Collin County Courthouse's new blog. We're trying to bring this 19th century building into the 21st century!

For those of you who may not know a lot about MPAC, we are a multi-purpose rental facility and performing arts venue located in Collin County's historic courthouse smack-dab in the middle of downtown McKinney. The building dates back to 1874 and was remodeled in 1927 and served as a functioning courthouse until 1979. After sitting vacant for almost 25 years, the building re-opened as MPAC in 2006. Since opening, we've welcomed local and national performers and have hosted countless events including weddings, classes, worship services, and meetings.

This blog will serve as another way for us to communicate with you about what's happening and what folks are saying. And, we may even sneak in some good behind the scenes stuff too.

Enjoy, and please always let us know what you think!