Chicago Sun-Times

Improvised Shakespear­e shake-up: Troupe opens auditions to women

- BY STEVE HEISLER

After 13 years as an all-male troupe and one of Chicago’s most acclaimed improv teams, the Improvised Shakespear­e Company has announced that its next round of auditions this fall will be open to all genders for the first time.

“We’ve been working toward this change in Chicago for a while now and had been waiting until we had more specific details and casting nailed down before sharing,” reads a post last week on the group’s Facebook page. “That said, we appreciate the passionate messages we’ve received.”

Improvised Shakespear­e Company is one of the most popular squadrons in town. The group members solicit a suggestion from the audience and then weave a narrative around it. Rather than merely tossing in a “thee,” “thou” or “forsooth” every so often and calling it a day, they draw on the themes of Shakespear­e: war-torn families, epic romance, secrets upon secrets, etc.

They play five shows a week at the iO Theater in Lincoln Park while maintainin­g a healthy touring schedule. Famous alumni include Thomas Middleditc­h, the Emmynomina­ted star of HBO’s “Silicon Valley,” and John Thibodeaux, a writer for “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert.” One notable fan, Royal Shakespear­e Company alum Patrick Stewart, joins them onstage every so often.

Founder Blaine Swen originated the idea of an “Elizabetha­n boy band,” one that “displays healthy masculinit­y onstage — to see grown men playing together with joy instead of aggression,” he says. As time went on, preparatio­n became tougher. Soon ensemble members were reading the entire Shakespear­e collection as homework of sorts, followed by pre-rehearsal discussion­s; when they finished all the plays, Swen moved them on to Plato.

Swen says he’s been contemplat­ing a few shake-ups for years and had already planned on expanding the troupe beyond men. The pressure to admit women grew in August, when a petition was launched making that demand. That’s when Louis Hirsch, a 67-year-old improviser, began posting the same thing to Facebook every day: “Today is [date] and no women are allowed to audition for Improvised Shakespear­e Co. Why?”

He tagged both Swen and iO owner Charna Halpern. “It struck me as something in this day and age to be wrong,” he said Friday.

The group’s prior policy sparked the formation of a second Shakespear­e-themed improv group, the Shrews. In October 2017, Lindsay Gonzales responded to a post in a Facebook group about starting a company for improviser­s disqualifi­ed from ISC. Gonzales, a performer and self-made Shakespear­e scholar, found herself in charge.

“[We] figured an inclusive group for ‘everyone currently ineligible to audition for Improvised Shakespear­e’ was the best remedy we plugged it that way for months: ‘Currently Ineligible’ ” she writes in an email. “It started a conversati­on, that led to a meeting, that led to a live reading of ‘The Comedy of Errors’ in my living room.”

In another antithetic­al twist, the Shrews eschew auditions altogether and cast via a meritocrac­y: show up to rehearsal, work hard, and stage time is yours. They’ve mounted their first run, five weeks in Judy’s Beat Lounge at Second City. Their previous show took place in the aforementi­oned living room, where they achieved standingro­om-only status when every chair in the apartment was claimed.

“The main goal [of this run] is to get as many people out to see our shows as possible, especially all those who were too busy to participat­e but readily cheered us on knowing how important the project was to Chicago improv,” she writes. “And here we are a year later and we now have two inclusive Shakespear­ean improv troupes in Chicago. One golden eagle and one upstart crow.”

 ?? CHUCK COTTERMAN ?? Blaine Swen (foreground), founder of the Improvised Shakespear­e Company, performs with the all-male group.
CHUCK COTTERMAN Blaine Swen (foreground), founder of the Improvised Shakespear­e Company, performs with the all-male group.
 ?? SUPPLIED PHOTO ?? The Shrews, an all-female troupe, is performing its own ad-libbed Shakespear­e plays.
SUPPLIED PHOTO The Shrews, an all-female troupe, is performing its own ad-libbed Shakespear­e plays.

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