MATT&
improv comedy with an audience member

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Sometimes things are funnier in twos

PhillyImprov.com
September 10, 2010

Some improv groups are born out of classes or pieced together through auditions. Others are spin-offs from existing groups. Even still, some are quickly cobbled together in the spirit of experimentation. Rarely, however, is there an established group whose cast is not known at curtain time.

MATT HOLMES (of Rare Bird Show fame) is half of the improvised duo m@&. The other half of the ensemble is still somewhat of a mystery. M@& (pronounced Matt, and...) features Holmes and a random audience member attending that particular performance.

At the top of the show, he asks the audience if there's anyone who's never seen improv before. Someone pipes up or raises a hand and just like that, they've found themselves the unwitting star of the show.

Here and there he may encounter a small audience that's entirely improvisers, and even in those few cases, he's managed to find someone who might have taken a class, but has yet to take to the stage in a show.

"There's at least a few people who've been brought by a friend or family member" says Holmes, "and they don't quite know what's happening." Many would agree with him, that this comedy amongst strangers makes things little more dangerous and exciting.

The name came about before the concept, as Holmes was looking to work with improvisers he'd met both here in Philadelphia and along his travels. Then, as it sometimes happens prior to creating new and interesting works for the stage, somewhere in the back of his head, he got the idea for an experiment.

While attending Cabrini College, Matt spent the earlier days of his comedy career running and performing with On the Spot, a weekly short-form show. He'd always loved the interaction with audience members that short-form thrives on. So when the opportunity presented itself, he jumped in head‑first.

"Matt is the only person I know with the balls and ability to do it alone." Michael Harris is the Artistic Director of Baltimore Improv Group (BIG) and producer of the Baltimore Improv Festival, which recently featured m@&. "For Matt to be the lone improviser and balance the dual responsibilities of carrying the show and supporting a novice takes a skill and generosity that precious few improvisers possess."

Matt& improv comedy

It would seem that festival producers are apt to agree with Harris. M@& has been featured at festivals and comedy shows in places like Atlanta, Baltimore, Minneapolis and State College, to name a few. And he doesn't show any signs of slowing. After his current run of six shows in the Philly Fringe Festival, he'll be featured here in his home city at both Duofest next month and the Philadelphia Improv Festival in November.

Kristen Schier, a producer for Duofest, thinks it's pretty easy for folks to enjoy the show. "M@& is effortless joy. Holmes' simple approach is the key to his brilliance."

Indeed, simplicity would seem to be a driving force behind the whole project for Holmes. "I have this big, open loose thing where I can do whatever I want on stage." He adds, "and what I want to do is have fun, make it easy for me and for my partner, and have it be funny for everyone watching. If my m.o. were more complicated, I couldn't do this show."

With never knowing who he might pull up, each night is a gamble... where the only thing that's certain is that the volunteer will be as much a part of the show as he is. "We're a team up there. I'm not trying to make fun of them or just use them. We're playing together."

Even with the more reluctant audience members, Holmes makes an effort to keep them in the show. During one performance, he had a girl who wasn't quite playing along and was unsure of what to do. He could tell she wanted to leave the stage, and then she finally did.

"(So) I do a scene where she's back in her seat in the audience, but I'm serenading her." It's these different sort of moments that create fun challenges and take shows into interesting places. "I want the audience volunteer to think it was something fun that they liked doing."

Sometimes the volunteer finds huge success on stage in the process. In Minneapolis at Brave New Workshop, the man pulled up had never seen an improv show before. In a scene where Holmes was a gunfighter, he'd accused the man of using his mother as a human shield.

The man came back with a line about how he really didn't technically kill her. Suddenly they found themselves in a chain reaction where the volunteer was indirectly responsible for all these deaths. "He found this really funny game for us to play... that was all him."

That sort of playfulness seems nearly instinctual. "Once in a while a non-performer will come up with a killer line or know just how to play along. Holmes has had people not believe that he doesn't plan at least some of what happens."

If the audience member is good, he's heard people murmur about whether they were a plant. He also likes to use the suggestion in a very obvious way so that the audience can see it couldn't be planned unless he was paying someone to sit there and yell it at him.

"I'll usually try to start something at first, at least to get us going... but I've started scenes later on where I'm just sitting there, letting my partner push us in a direction... I'm not plucking out improv geniuses or diamonds in the rough... It's not a conspiracy, we're just playing pretend."

Matt Holmes

It's said that one of most equally frustrating and complimentary things an improviser can hear after a show is that the audience doesn't believe it's made up. Recounting the recent m@& show in Baltimore, Harris attributes choice and openness as factors in making it seem so effortless.

"Matt's character choices not only drew the audience in, but led his scene partner out of his shell and into active participation... it was one of the highlights of the Baltimore Improv Festival."

Nathan Edmondson and Alexis Simpson have been improvising with Holmes for the better part of a decade in their highly acclaimed group, Rare Bird Show. They've witnessed firsthand how easy he makes it to work with them. "Matt has (an) insane natural talent as an improviser and is a true student of comedy," says Edmondson.

Simpson agrees, "he's like a wind-up toy... just give him a word and let him go. He is probably the strongest game improviser I know." They both feel comfortable and confident sharing scenes with him. Edmondson adds, "when you're on stage with him, you can rest assured that the funny will happen."

With any luck, we can rest assured that the funny will continue to happen. Holmes sees himself continuing this for some time. "It's nice to have something that really challenges and excites me... I haven't had any terrible, awful, shameful shows with this project."

He's got a run of shows coming up here in Philly, and something tells me we're likely to see him on the road again as well. "The show is just really easy to do while I'm visiting someplace, 'cause it's just me... the audience is already there."

Who knows who his next scene partner might be? "If an audience member can bring their 80‑year‑old grandmother or their 16‑year‑old cousin or their blind date and maybe see them up on stage in a comedy show, I think that's an interesting night out."

Agreed.