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Most people believe that all they have to do to be a comedian is memorize a bunch of jokes, then get on stage and tell them. But it's not that simple. Have you ever told a joke that got a huge laugh in one situation and a roar of silence in another? A perfect example of the truism, jokes aren't always funny. And that's precisely why doing stand-up comedy involves much more than just telling jokes..
REHEARSING
Comedians interpret jokes in ways that make people laugh
The performance state mimics the rehearsal state
THE CREATOR AND THE CRITIC
THE PROBLEM: REHEARSING THE CREATOR AND CRITIC TOGETHER
THE SOLUTION: SEPARATING THE CREATOR AND THE CRITIC
WHY REHEARSE?
A joke is a response to some experience
The mind remembers in pictures, sounds, and feelings
Sensory experiences activate human behavior
Words do not activate human behaviors
Memorizing the words is the worst type of rehearsal
Memorizing experiences is the best type of rehearsal
Within every joke is an experience
Acting out the POVs
Whatever state you're in, the audience is in
When you remember and communicate your material as a sensory experience--
the audience will enter your movie
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As a teacher, I find that students have many more performing problems that need to be solved
than writing problems. Joke writing problems can usually be eliminated with
practice, time and effort, but performing problems may keep a student stuck at
the same level until they are solved. Almost all performing
problems are a result of improper rehearsal.
The Problem: Rehearsing the Creator and Critic Together
When people try to be creative and critical at the same time, the Creator and the
Critic conflict and the effectiveness of both is canceled out. This problem is a
result of ineffective rehearsal practices. For example, while practicing his
material a comic may allow the Critic to interject a constant stream of negative
comments through internal self-talk.
If you're creative and self-critical at the same time when you rehearse, you're
rehearsing the Critic into your show. This is a very important concept. Remember
that the performance state mimics the rehearsal state. So if you rehearse the
Critic into your show, how can you expect to be free of it when you perform? You
can't. The Critic will consume your attention on stage just as thoroughly as it
does during rehearsal.
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Contact the Dean of Comedy at: gregdean@stand-upcomedy.com