Showing posts with label Lizzy Skrzypiec. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lizzy Skrzypiec. Show all posts

Monday, 5 June 2017

Dramaturgy, She Didn’t Write: Lizzy Skrzypiec @ Edfringe 2017


Murder, She Didn’t Write


17:00 (18:00)

2-28 August

2-4-1 on 7th & 8th August



Late night drag 


‘Murder, She Didn’t Write’
Every Sunday at 23:00


A classic murder mystery is created on the spot in this ingenious and hilarious show from Bristol Improv Theatre's resident company. Miss Crimson poisoned in the parlour? Mr Gold exploded by cannon in Sainsbury's? You decide! But will you guess whodunnit? And for your Sunday night entertainment, don’t forget our additional late night shows!



What was the inspiration for this performance?

This improv show is a murder mystery format we have spent years creating and performing. We are improvisers from a range of backgrounds and we wanted to create a show that has both drama and comedy - rare in a lot of improv shows. Murder mystery is very popular and, judging by the popularity of a lot of crime dramas on Netflix etc, it certainly seems in vogue. 

However, when we came up with the show we just picked something we would enjoy learning about which had a whole world we could create, something you could really get your teeth into as a viewer. Not just a throw away series of sketches but a genuine plot with twists and turns and red herrings that you could really invest in. We hope we have achieved that with Murder, She Didn't Write.


Is performance still a good space for the public discussion of ideas? 

It certainly is. It's my favourite thing to do, after a show, put the world to rights over a pint of gin and just discuss what we've seen. It's always been a great catalyst to get the grey cells in motion. I've watched a fair few shows I have hated or certainly felt were poor performances, but even those have sparked discussion. 

Even a badly performed show can give you something to talk about good or bad, and in that case has it really failed? 


How did you become interested in making performance?
Me personally? I've always been a bit of a performer I think, even back at school dramatically retelling embarrassing stories or recounting what happened in class "oh you wont believe what Lisa did in History?" I, like most improvisers, got into the art of improv at university. Bristol Improv Society was both incredibly inspiring and just plain silly. 

I thought it was ludicrous people would pay good money to see a show where people dicked around playing games on stage. Turns out it's a beautiful thing to watch, and to perform. I was hooked.
 
Is there any particular approach to the making of the show?

I used to watch a lot of Peter Cook and Dudley Moore as a kid and a lot of Monty Python too. It seemed like it was a space where performers had fun, there was a palpable joy and friendship. Peter Cook would always go off script to make Dudley Moore corpse and I thought it was the most marvelous thing to watch. I'm of the belief that an audience like that chemistry, they like to be in on the act. 

There's the story of two men in an art gallery but also the story of Peter pulling out whatever lines he could to make Dudley nearly choke on his sandwich. That's the approach we take on stage, we are a band not a group of individual performers. People like watching us harmonise with ideas and play with each other. Setting each other up and letting the audience in on something special. We are always in each other's heads.
 
Does the show fit with your usual productions?

We are the resident group of the Bristol Improv Theatre and they teach a lot of long form (plot lead) improvisation so in that respect MSDW is absolutely a fit for their usual productions. This is Degrees of Error's main show. Our "flagship" production we've worked on for about 5 years. 

We also have a few other formats we create and try out but this one is something we've spent a long time on. We have another show called "Writers' Room" which is completely different to MSDW. It's set in a writers' basement, littered with ideas, where we gather round a typewriter to tell a story which we jump on stage and act out. It's very stylistic (similar to MSDW) but much less formatted which gives us a vehicle to perform a different type or style of improvisation. 
 
What do you hope that the audience will experience?

It's a play along show. As with any murder mystery you'll be guessing whodunnit the whole time and we ask everyone to point out who they think is the murderer before the final denouement. However, I also hope there's that extra layer that only improv can provide - a scene within a scene. 

Mr Blue talking to Ms Violet but also two improvisers playing on stage, working together, harmonising, throwing each other offers and curve balls. Setting each other up for evidence and motives. Building on a story. A two level approach where on one hand we have a complex story (I hope) and on the other we have a band of people joyously dicking around.
 
What strategies did you consider towards shaping this audience experience?

So there are a number of audience interactions formatted into our show. We have a character called Jerkins who is a member of the audience who catches a hat which is randomly and blindly thrown by the detective. 

They help the detective choose which audience suggestions they want for the show. We ask the audience for suggestions on an event during which a murder takes place, and an unusual item which is central to the case. Then Jerkins also picks (without anyone else in the audience seeing) the victim and the murderer. It's up to the rest of the audience to try and work out who the murderer is. 

Then, just before the denouement, we ask everyone to point at who they think did it. It's almost a game show format but it allows the audience to heavily engage in each show and keep them playing along. It's a good audience experience that we are pretty pleased with. Also, it's a format which lets us roll up our sleeves to show that the show is truly being made up on the spot. We've even done murders in space!




Tuesday, 17 May 2016

Degrees Of Dramaturgy: Lizzy Skrzypiec @ Edfringe 2016



Move over, Miss Marple!

In comedy smash ‘Murder, She Didn’t Write’, YOU become the author and watch your very own Agatha Christie­ inspired masterpiece unfold on stage. In ​“one of the funniest evenings you’ll have in some time” (Ed Fringe Review), this ​BBC Radio 2 recommended show allows you, the audience, to unleash your literary prowess and create a hilarious improvised murder mystery. Our fantastic cast use your title suggestions and evidence ideas to create a never before seen, ​unscripted murder mystery, which promises to dazzle, enthral, and delight. One lucky audience member even gets to secretly choose the murderer and victim!

Will you work out whodunnit in time?


Company - Degrees Of Error


Show – Murder, She Didn't Write

Participant – Lizzy Skrzypiec (Lady Violet)

What was the inspiration for this performance?

Well, Degrees Of Error as a company have always loved long-form

Narrative Improv. We knew we wanted to create something that was funny, dramatic, and extremely colourful.

So it seemed like the obvious choice to pick (Murder-Mystery), a genre more hammy than Christopher Biggins' bacon baguette.

Also as many of us came from a comedy background, we've died on stage many times in the early days, so now it's nice we get an applause break to do it.

How did you go about gathering the team for it?

Honestly? Most of us started out as friends.

We were a core group with a love for Improv and silliness. As Murder, She Didn't Write grew in terms of scale, playing bigger stages and needing more characters, we found the show we wanted to make had outgrown us!

For the first time, we auditioned (fantastic) new recruits, who now make up half of the cast. We're still friends, the gang just got bigger. Every new face has made us step up our game, because they're all professional Actor/ Improvisers, and it's been more of a symbiosis of mutual absorption.

Kind of like two amoebas, we engorged each other... wait hang on a minute, what was the question?

How did you become interested in making performance?

I make performance all the time. I'm sure the others do too, even when no one is watching; singing in our cars, pretending you're presenting a cooking show when you're whipping up a stir-fry for one.

We'll never make incredible sporting feats, beautiful architecture, or millions on the stock market, so what else can we do but make performance?

Was your process typical of the way that you make a performance?

Typical for making an improv show, yes. Step 1 - Get good at Improv, Step 2 - Learn your Genre, Step 3 - Find a way to stage it.

Step 2 might be easy if all you've gotta do is watch some movies, but I tell you, people do not like it when you try and watch them commit murder. Not at all!

Murder-Mystery itself was a challenge, because compared to something like Westerns or Period Drama, it's a very self-aware genre. Every author, from Christie to Conan Doyle, loved to insert meta-jokes and arch 'looks to camera' in their work.

Our solution was to have the show run by 'The Detective', a narrator/prosecutor character who relates the story of each crime to the audience, then tries to solve it.

What do you hope that the audience will experience?

I genuinely want the audience to play along.

I cannot stress this point enough, WE ARE IMPROVISING EVERYTHING.

We want them to experience a murder mystery happening right in the moment. We are spinning motives, evidence and alibis as we think of them on stage, when we aren't on stage we are watching the stage to make sure we don't miss a single thing.

We want the audience to feel that excitement and play along with us by guessing 'whodunnit?!'.


What strategies did you consider towards shaping this audience experience?

Wouldn't it be the coolest thing if we get Angela Lansbury to be the detective?

It would make the most incredible audience experience. The minute she returns any of my calls, I swear to God she'll be in the show.

For now, that strategy is on the back-burner.

Do you see your work within any particular tradition?

Yep, the fine literary tradition of Murder-Mystery. Only this Murder-Mystery, one lucky member of the audience decides who lives and who dies.

We take this immensely personally and have a tally we keep each Edinburgh fringe. Steve Clements (Mr. Blue) and Tom Bridges (Mr Orange) got to be the Murderer 5 times each last fringe, the lucky sods!

Degrees of Error is a Bristol ­based Theatre Company, formed in 2010, and have been performing together ever since. Collectively, Degrees of Error represent ​“some of the finest improvisers in the country, their tight ­knit team possessing not just a talent for impromptu humour, but also charismatic convincing acting chops that bring their characters and the period to life. ”​­ ​Daniel Roberts & Chris Turner (Racing Minds).

Fringe experts, they have been awarded Edinburgh's ​‘Fringe Sell­out’ award FOUR years running, and consistently receive five star reviews, garnering such praise as “​by FAR the best improv show that I have seen” (Inter:Mission).

This success has lead them to play their largest venue yet in 2016, to debut their place as a company whose “commitment to excellence means they deserve their opportunity to showcase their talents.” ­ Adam Meggido (Showstoppers)

Think improv equals Clive Anderson and some very questionable 90s fashion choices? Think again! Come spend an evening as a sleuth, and help uncover the sinister motives and evidence of this fabulous ‘whodunnit?’ live show. 


Whether you take your lead from Columbo or Marple, Holmes or Poirot, the cast of ‘Murder, She Didn’t Write’ promise to sweep you up in ​“unrestrained bursts of enjoyment” (Bristol Theatre Review)​, and leave you in unbridled fits of laughter!‘Murder, She Didn’t Write’ ​is currently touring comedy and literature festivals throughout the U.K., and will be at the Edinburgh Fringe from​ 3­29 August,​ in C (+3) at C venues, Chambers St.