The Peterborough Examiner

Learning boldness and self-confidence through comedy

Second City launches new improv class specifical­ly for teen girls

- MAIJA KAPPLER

TORONTO — Comedian Stacey McGunnigle says it’s hard to be confident when you’re a teenage girl.

“You’re so concerned about what people think,” she says, recalling how self-conscious and awkward she felt as a teenager. “And I didn’t even have the internet then,” she adds. “I can only imagine what it’s like now.”

McGunnigle’s desire to arm teenage girls with boldness and self-confidence is what led her to develop Empower-Prov, a new improv comedy class at Toronto’s Second City aimed specifical­ly at girls between grades 9 and 12.

“I think it’s just putting that tool in the tool box young and early, about being confident, stepping forward, trusting your instincts, trusting your gut,” she says.

McGunnigle, a Second City alumna, says the skills she learned improvisin­g — being quick, resourcefu­l, self-assured — have helped her outside of the comedy world.

“Knowing who you are and knowing your voice is so crucial, especially with women,” she says. “Walking into a room and knowing your value, and knowing your boundaries, and knowing what’s appropriat­e and what’s not appropriat­e.”

She says she expects an allfemale space will allow students to be more open and collaborat­ive than they might be in a coed class, where in her experience, male voices are often the loudest.

“Even in teen classes I’ve taught before, it’s the guys who will say stuff first,” she says.

“The girls are ... in the back, taking it all in, before saying anything. This course is like, no, be bold. Be brave. And feel like that’s OK.”

It’s not just teenagers who are benefiting from classes designed specifical­ly for a female experience.

Amanda Scriver, who took a women-only standup class at Toronto’s Comedy Bar this summer, says she sought out a female environmen­t because she wanted a place where she felt comfortabl­e doing something she describes as “new and terrifying.”

“Comedy, that is the most vulnerable and terrifying you can get,” she says. “It’s just you, and some lights, and a microphone, and a stage. And that’s it. Nothing else.”

Scriver says she felt comfortabl­e in her vulnerabil­ity because the class was a supportive environmen­t, both in terms of guidance from instructor Jess Beaulieu and from her classmates. They all worked together to develop their joke-writing skills, and were able to workshop their material with each other.

“I feel like oftentimes women are more gentle to one another in offering criticism, but also lending support for one another,” Scriver says.

Another benefit of a female space, she says, are the topics they covered in class.

“I don’t think that if I was in a coed comedy group I could have opened up about the self-image issues that I have,” she says.

Women in the group felt safe talking about body image and sexual assault. That wouldn’t be impossible in a mixed-gender class, Scriver says, but she doesn’t think she would feel as comfortabl­e.

That level of comfort makes a big difference in developing skills as a comedian, Shostak adds.

“The audience can feel how you feel, so if there’s a moment where they see you shrink or back off onstage, they do notice that,” she says.

“If someone’s feeling not their best, then their comedy isn’t at their best, and that’s probably why people say women aren’t funny. They’ve seen a single woman in an improv troupe be diminished, or the audience perception of them is bad. But I think it’s because they haven’t been lifted up or given the space.”

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Sarah Swaigen practices her material during a female only comedy class at The Comedy Bar in Toronto on Wednesday.
CHRIS YOUNG/THE CANADIAN PRESS Sarah Swaigen practices her material during a female only comedy class at The Comedy Bar in Toronto on Wednesday.

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