Thursday, August 15, 2013

The Formative Years of Robert Baumgardner

The Clique, IRTE's next show, opened Saturday, August 3rd 2013. The last performance (unless we bring it to a festival) is Saturday, August 17 at 8:00 pm. It's about those high school years we all remember and love so well. At the top of the show, our principal, Jeff O'Leary will interview a member of the audience about their high school experience. So, to be fair, we decided to interview some of the cast members of The Clique before we subjected anyone else to such experiments.

This time we hear from improvisor Robert Baumgardner:


BIRTE: Where did you go to high school?

Robert: I went to an all boys prep school in northern New Jersey run by Benedictine priests.


Jersey Boy
B: Who were your friends? Were you part of a clique?

R: I think the school was too small to really have strictly defined cliques. There definitely were jocks, and I suppose nerds. I played soccer, then ultimate frisbee, and sat in the library a lot. I guess my closest friends were nerds and stoners. At least the latter had a reputation for being stoners. I actually never saw weed until I went to college.

B: Did you ever get bullied/picked on by someone?

R: By students or faculty? Ha! I don't really remember anyone getting picked on a lot. Not that there weren't days...threats of chocolate swirlies, your-mama jokes were big, etc. One guy who got picked on in my class was actually the biggest kid in the class. I think he was an offensive lineman on the football team, and others would pick on him because he wasn't the sharpest pencil in the cup. He would take their crap, but sometimes if he thought someone else was getting picked on, he'd put the bully in a headlock. That pretty much ended the bullying for awhile.

B: Did you ever get sent to the Principal's office?

R: We didn't have a principal. We had a headmaster, a very strong priest who had been living for over a thousand years. Oh, sorry. Let me turn off "True Blood". There we go. Where were we? Oh no, the headmaster was probably in his forties. I don't ever remember getting sent to the office. The priests scared me, so I stayed in line.

Check out The Clique this Saturday, August 17 8:00 pm at

Gotham City Improv
48 West 21st, 8th Floor - Buzzer #801
New York, NY 10010
212-367-8222

Tix: $6

Reservations: IRTEinfo@gmail.com

Special Discount!!!: $3.00 for High School / College Students with advance
reservation.
$3.00 for groups of 3 or more with advance
reservation.

Monday, August 12, 2013

The Formative Years of Graceann Dorse

The Clique, IRTE's next show, opened Saturday, August 3rd 2013. The last performance (unless we bring it to a festival) is Saturday, August 17 at 8:00 pm. It's about those high school years we all remember and love so well. At the top of the show, our principal, Jeff O'Leary will interview a member of the audience about their high school experience. So, to be fair, we decided to interview some of the cast members of The Clique before we subjected anyone else to such experiments.

This time we hear from improvisor Graceann Dorse:

BIRTE: Where did you go to high school?

GRACEANN: Bishop Hannan High School in Scranton, PA. It's now a defunct, empty, two-story 60's style building. It was right in the middle of downtown Scranton, so sometimes there were homeless dudes hanging out on the front steps. And because it was a Catholic school, everyone felt bad for them and didn't want to chase them away because Jesus would probably have been cool with homeless guys near 16-year-old kids, right?

Car Bouncing Valedictorian


B: Who were your friends? Were you part of a clique?

G: I guess I was part of a clique in the general sense of the word, but we were not exclusive jerks, which is the intended meaning of the word. I was friendly with everyone. I performed social osmosis with the fluid grace of mitochondria, or whatever performs osmosis. My "clique" consisted of pretty normal people, speckled with some dorks of all kinds: comic books, drama (me), and grunge. It was the 90's and my friends were the type of people who watched The Crow thirty-six times. And we never drank. Instead we would get a Little Ceaser's pizza and some Shasta (I think that's a local thing- it's just really bad and cheap soda) and would drive up to the top of this mountain and look over the city all lit up. One time, another car drove up, which never happened, and we wanted them to leave. So we all got down and started bouncing in the car to make them think there was naughty stuff going on. The other car drove away, probably because they were just lost and not necessarily because they were scared by a bouncing car.

B: Did you ever get bullied/picked on by someone?

G: Just my own fear of failure, and the constant stare of the Virgin Mary.

B: Did you ever get sent to the Principal's office?

G: Once.... to be told I was the valedictorian. Boo ya! High school was great. Everything else since then has been a slow downward spiral.

Check out The Clique Saturdays August 3 - 17 8:00 pm at

Gotham City Improv
48 West 21st, 8th Floor - Buzzer #801
New York, NY 10010
212-367-8222

Tix: $6

Reservations: IRTEinfo@gmail.com

Special Discount!!!: $3.00 for High School / College Students with advance
reservation.
$3.00 for groups of 3 or more with advance
reservation.

Thursday, August 8, 2013

The Formative Years of Danielle Montezinos

The Clique, IRTE's next show, opens Saturday, August 3rd 2013. It's about those high school years we all remember and love so well. At the top of the show, our principal, Jeff O'Leary will interview a member of the audience about their high school experience. So, to be fair, we decided to interview some of the cast members of The Clique before we subjected anyone else to such experiments.

This time we hear from Danielle Montezinos:

BIRTE: Where did you go to high school?

DANIELLE: I wound up going to three different high schools. We moved a lot and I also tried a Performing Arts School one year.  I wound up graduating from Spanish River High School in Boca Raton, Fl.

Friends with smart kids
B: Who were your friends? Were you part of a clique?

D: I was friends with a lot of random people but I mainly hung out with artsy people who liked good music and wore a lot of black.  And when I say good music, I mean The Cure and Depeche Mode.  And Skinny Puppy. And Tori Amos.

I did have a lot of friends into theater, as I was into that.  Plus,  I was friends with a lot of smart kids, stoners and punks.

B: Did you ever get bullied/picked on by someone?

D: Nope.  People didn't mess with me.  Seriously.  That was junior high. In high school I was cool. I had purple hair and that was bad-ass.

B: Did you ever get sent to the Principal's office?

D: No, but once, senior year,  me and my friends got caught skipping school and I was  sent to "in school suspension" for three days.  It was awesome, I got so much work done!

Thanks for opening up to us, Danielle.

Check out The Clique Saturdays August 3 - 17 8:00 pm at

Gotham City Improv
48 West 21st, 8th Floor - Buzzer #801
New York, NY 10010
212-367-8222

Tix: $6

Reservations: IRTEinfo@gmail.com

Special Discount!!!: $3.00 for High School / College Students with advance
reservation.
$3.00 for groups of 3 or more with advance
reservation.



Monday, August 5, 2013

The Formative Years of Jeff O'Leary

The Clique, IRTE's next show, opened Saturday, August 3rd. It continues every Saturday through August 17. It's about those high school years we all remember and love so well. At the top of the show, our principal, Jeff O'Leary will interview a member of the audience about their high school experience. So, to be fair, we decided to interview some of the cast members of The Clique before we subjected anyone else to such experiments.

This time we hear from Jeff O'Leary, who is also the director of The Clique.

BIRTE: Where did you go to high school?

JEFF: Evergreen High School (Home of the Cougars). Evergreen is a small town in Colorado, about 30 minutes west of Denver.

Perfect evening: Lobster and Joy Division
B: Who were your friends? Were you part of a clique?

J: In my school there were the cool outcasts, and then there were the loser outcasts. I was one of the loser outcasts.

I was a goth kid but not too crazy -- I didn't wear makeup or anything. I had long dyed black hair and dressed in black, listened to The Cure, The Smiths, Joy Division, etc.  I think it was early in my junior year that I transformed overnight from a totally normal looking kid into a goth. It probably would have been a lot less awkward if I had waited until the summer to completely change my identity but I guess I just couldn't wait.

I had a small group of close friends, and we were all a bit tortured but in different ways. My friend Eric was really attractive but tortured in a James Dean kind of way. He could have easily hung out with the popular kids but for some unknown reason hung out with us instead. Last time I saw him he owned a Taco House restaurant

I had another friend Chris who was a tortured rich kid. He had his own American Express card and used to take us out to Red Lobster all the time. Every month his parents would get the bill and flip out, take away his card and ground him for a week. He would eventually re-appear, looking sort of shell-shocked (his Dad was a Marine boxing champion and not someone you would want to piss off).  Another week would pass and then we would all be getting stoned and someone would say "Hey, I've got an idea -- let's go eat at Red Lobster!" Chris would always give in and then the whole cycle would repeat itself

B: Did you ever get bullied/picked on by someone?

J: I was never bullied but I did get into a fight once. My locker partner was gay and people used to give me grief about it constantly. One day I was in a really awful mood and this kid who was about half my size came up to me and said something like: "Hey man, where's your butt buddy? Are you and your locker partner butt buddies?"  He looked genuinely shocked when I grabbed him and tossed him into the lockers a couple of times. A few punches were thrown but it was broken up pretty fast.

I was suspended for three days and my friends were very impressed. Weirdly, my mom was proud of me but my Dad was very disappointed. When I went back to school, the kid who I fought with apologized to me and tried to give me a rat (he had a bunch as pets)

B: Did you ever get sent to the Principal's office?

J: I spent a lot of time in the Principal's office. Actually, the Assistant Principal (Mr. Hathaway) was the main disciplinarian so I got to know him quite well. But I did eventually move my way up to the Principal.

My problems began when I started to ditch classes too much. My school had this "attendance line" -- it was basically just an answering machine that your parents had to leave a message on in the morning if you weren't coming to school that day. I left messages on the machine pretending to be my Mom, saying I was sick and proceeded to miss tons of classes. I got away with it for a couple months but eventually I was busted. My mom refused to believe it was me impersonating her voice and suspected that one of my female friends was responsible. She still doesn't believe it was me.

Then I started an "underground newspaper" where I wrote nasty things about people I hated. At one point, the parents of one of the kids I made fun of were threatening to sue my high school unless I was punished. And I also got in trouble for fighting (see above). Eventually, I was considered such a pain in the butt that they gave me the option to either 1) drop out or 2) they would kick me out. So I dropped out of high school, much to my parents' dismay.

B: And then you became an improvisor...

Check out The Clique Saturdays August 3 - 17 8:00 pm at

Gotham City Improv
48 West 21st, 8th Floor - Buzzer #801
New York, NY 10010
212-367-8222

Tix: $6

Reservations: IRTEinfo@gmail.com

Special Discount!!!: $3.00 for High School / College Students with advance
reservation.
$3.00 for groups of 3 or more with advance
reservation.

Thursday, August 1, 2013

The Formative Years of Alex Decaneas

The Clique, IRTE's next show, opens Saturday, August 3rd 2013. It's about those high school years we all remember and love so well. At the top of the show, our principal, Jeff O'Leary will interview a member of the audience about their high school experience. So, to be fair, we decided to interview some of the cast members of The Clique before we subjected anyone else to such experiments.

Up next, Alex Decaneas:

BIRTE: Where did you go to high school?

Alex: Londonderry High School, Londonderry NH... Land of Apples and Applebee's.

B: Who were your friends? Were you part of a clique?

A: My friends were (still are) the creative types: musicians, drama kids, writers, and school newspaper peeps. Wouldn't say we were terribly unpopular... but we were certainly out there. So, the kind of days spent swiping a friends video camera to film toy soldiers melting as part of an essay on "War and Peace" would not be an uncommon occurrence for our gang.

AfroMan
B: Did you ever get bullied/picked on by someone?

A: Oh hells to the motha f'n yeah. But not in high school. Mostly in junior high... But I put an end to it when I created a comic called "AfroMan" in which basically I made fun of myself and my hairstyle (can you guess what it was?) better than any other bully could imagine... Once I turned the joke in on myself... it took away the bully thunder.

B: Did you ever get sent to the Principal's office?

A: Again, quite often... In junior high and in high school. Most fun for me was when friends and I orchestrated an early morning rooftop concert for students hanging out before class. We spent about a week planning it out and execution was perfect... "Another Brick in the Wall" was the concert opener of choice...

Thanks, Alex. You don't need no thought control.

Check out The Clique Saturdays August 3 - 17 8:00 pm at

Gotham City Improv
48 West 21st, 8th Floor - Buzzer #801
New York, NY 10010
212-367-8222

Tix: $6

Reservations: IRTEinfo@gmail.com

Special Discount!!!: $3.00 for High School / College Students with advance
reservation.
$3.00 for groups of 3 or more with advance
reservation.

Monday, July 29, 2013

The Formative Years of Curt Dixon

The Clique, IRTE's next show, opens Saturday, August 3rd 2013. It's about those high school years we all remember and love so well. At the top of the show, our principal, Jeff O'Leary will interview a member of the audience about their high school experience. So, to be fair, we decided to interview some of the cast members of The Clique before we subjected anyone else to such experiments.

Today we're quizzing Curt Dixon:

Grade A student
BIRTE: Where did you go to high school?

Curt: I went to Amon Carter Riverside High in Ft. Worth, TX.  A nice enough public school, not too big with a very community feel.  Most of the kids had grown up together since elementary school.

B: Who were your friends? Were you part of a clique?

C: It was interesting to actually go to school with most of the same people from second grade all the way through middle and high school.  The dynamics pretty much stayed the same throughout.  The major clique were the kids with money that lived close to one another.  I was friendly with most of them, but I was literally the weird kid from the other side of the tracks.  Train tracks.  Real, actual train tracks.  My parents had been very low middle class when I was born but started making more money soon after.  But my father refused to sell the old house they had despite my mother wanting to "move on up" as it were.  But he managed to get me into a better school away from our not-so-nice neighborhood.  So I was stuck away on the other side of the tracks and only interacted with kids from school during the school year.  That meant summer away from everyone and the awkward feeling of coming back for a new school year and being clueless as to what everyone else had done for the summer.

My best friend was a kid named Dwayne Davidson.  He was the most popular kid in school which made me part of the main clique.  In middle school, Dwayne moved away and a few weeks later we got the news that he had been hit by a car while riding his bicycle and killed.  For years after I had dreams about him being alive.  After Dwayne's death I drifted from the clique - he was my only real connection to them - and pretty much ignored the social scene at school.

I was the kid who talked to everyone.  It didn't matter if they were popular or not, I really didn't care.  I was focused on school work - always an "A" student - which made me popular with everyone around test time.  By the time we got to high school I had grown pretty much tired of the cool kids and their fakeness.  I was still friendly but really couldn't care less about them and was ready for school to end.  During my junior and senior years I was on the yearbook staff which gave me some power over the clique.  I discovered this when a couple of them tried to use me to make them and their friends the stars of the yearbook which I refused to do.  And when two of the most popular boys got pissed at me for not letting them cheat during a test (the teacher was staring right at us when they were trying) I decided that they were scumbags.  At that point I was over the whole clique thing for good and tried my best to make sure that any pictures of them that made it into the yearbook were unflattering.

B: Did you ever get bullied/picked on by someone?

C: I didn't get bullied or picked on because I think most of the kids were a little scared of me.  Remember, I was the weird kid from the other side of the tracks.  But I do remember a boy getting bullied during middle school.  His name was Byron Earwood and his nickname was Queerwood.  For some reason everyone always picked on him.  One day during lunch someone had trapped Byron behind one of the doors leading to the back of the school.  It was the perfect trap because the door opened to a brick wall which left an empty  "v" space between the door and the wall.  There were two glass panels on the door which gave a perfect view of poor Byron as he just crouched down while the older kids laughed and threw food and drinks over the door while laughing and yelling, "Queerwood, Queerwood!"  I remember it vividly.

B: Did you ever get sent to the Principal's office?

C: I never once got called to the Principal's office.  I was a model student.  Always on the honor roll, always teacher's favorite.  Which made some of the kids not like me.  Especially my home room class.  Mrs. Taylor made it very obvious that I was her favorite student.  Always pointing out how well behaved I was and how the other students should try to be more like me.  I loved Mrs. Taylor but I really wanted her to zip it sometimes because the other kids really resented me for being so popular with the teachers.  But I also used this to my advantage.  The kids knew I was not the person to mess with because I could turn the whole faculty against them if they really pissed me off and they knew that I was crazy enough to do it.

That was great, Curt, thanks.

Check out The Clique Saturdays August 3 - 17 8:00 pm at

Gotham City Improv
48 West 21st, 8th Floor - Buzzer #801
New York, NY 10010
212-367-8222

Tix: $6

Reservations: IRTEinfo@gmail.com

Special Discount!!!: $3.00 for High School / College Students with advance
reservation.
$3.00 for groups of 3 or more with advance
reservation.

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

The Circus Has Come to Town



With help from the amazing makeup artist, Russell W. Costales, opening night of The vIRTEgo Circus came alive.


Russell working on Marcia Sofley

Danielle Montezinos


Russell creating bear makeup for Jamie Maloney
Robert Baumgardner gets his eyes done
Rather than using grease paint, or some other heavy white makeup, director Nannette Deasy came up with a skin friendly alternative, Queen Helene Energizing Avocado & Grapefruit Masque.
Curt Dixon as the animal keeper, Charlie Mudd



Nannette Deasy as Lucy Night, the Ring Master
When the masque dries, little cracks appear that create an unsettling look for the members of this creepy circus/carnival.




vIRTEgo Circus will plant its stakes on June 15 and again on June 29 at 8:00 pm at Gotham City Improv, 48 West 21st Street, 8th Floor - Buzzer #801, in New York City!

$6

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

An Interview with Hal Peller, Part 2


The conversation continues in Part 2 of Danielle Montezinos' interview with Hal Peller. Hal is a long time improvisor, teacher, and coach who studied with such luminaries as Paul Sills and Del Close.
Danielle: You coach a lot of successful teams around NYC, is there any advice you can give to a new team just starting out?
Hal: Use Spolin to help with challenges and to gain trust.
Play with great abandon and joy.
Give yourself permission to be foolish and get out of your own way.
Get “out of your head and into the space” – Paul Sills
Have FUN – if it’s not fun, you aren’t playing… you’re working and fearful.
My top 3 rules of improvisation are:
1.     Always make positive choices (Yes…and)
2.     Stay in the moment – to know something so well you don’t have to think about it while you do it – (this takes practice)
3.     Make the other person look great!  (all rules in improvisation can be broken except this one)

D: What's your favorite thing about living in NYC? And, what's your least favorite?
H: It was rough for me moving to New York City on February 14, 1979 from Atlanta, GA.  I lived on a 100 acre farm, with a 4 acre lake and 2 acre horse pasture with horse trails throughout the property and about eleven dogs all living and playing together. We would swim and ride horses all day… and then I moved to New York City with cold weather, alternate side of the street parking and a 5 story walk up… what a nightmare, yet, I was in love and I had my career.  I told Janet, my wife, that I don’t know how long I can last up here in the cold and she said, “… well you better get used to being in the cold because when we have children you are going to be out there playing with them in the snow…” So, I learned how to snow ski and learned that one doesn’t have to be cold, that technology exists that can keep you warm even if the temperature is below 0.
After a year I told Janet that I could tolerate living in the city and then after 5 years I had an epiphany. Janet and I were walking up 5th Avenue in the city, blue sky, sunny day and I heard this music.  A street performer was playing the steel drums through some sort of synthesizer and he was not playing traditional island music …he was playing classical music and it was so beautiful the feeling just washed over me… where else could I live in the world and be surrounded by this kind of beauty doing what I truly love and the feeling just washed over me… the feeling overwhelming took over my entire body… it was a complete epiphany!  I ran into that guy 3 years later in a Chinese restaurant and I was stunned/shocked to run into him of all the millions of folks who live in the city that I would run into this guy who changed my life… who created this beautiful music… who helped cause my great epiphany and I told him all about it and he looked at me and said, “…well man … I am happy for you… but I CANNOT wait to get the F*&K out of New York…”

D: Why is Spolin work so important in Improv today?
H: Viola Spolin wrote the book that inspired Del Close, David Shepherd and Paul Sills.  She wrote the book that everyone from Alan Alda, Gilda Radner, to Tina Fey, Steven Colbert and Mike Meyers all learned from and helped them become great successes. Alan Alda still uses Viola’s games to work with scientists to help them to communicate better. Viola Spolin wrote the book that changed my life and helped create a career for me that I love more than I can express.  Yet, many of the improv schools today don’t teach her work.  When I coach a ‘Harold Team’ they only give credit to Del Close. They changed improvisation to an art form that requires one to try to be clever.  So, I say that is all well and good, however, if you also include Spolin you will not only find it easier to be clever, you will be remarkable because so few folks even know about her work!

That's great! Great pointers, and a great story. Thanks so much, Hal.

If you'd like to learn more, and sample Hal Peller's  work, consider taking his one-day workshop with IRTE. You can sign up at irteinfo.wix.com/irte and go to the "hire us" tab, or click here.

Friday, April 26, 2013

An Interview with Hal Peller, Part 1

This coming May 4th, here in New York City, improv teacher Hal Peller is going to lead a one-day workshop for IRTE using the techniques and exercises created and developed by Viola Spolin, arguably the creator and founder of today's American improv movement.

IRTE's Danielle Montezinos asked Hal a few questions about his history with improv and stand-up comedy both inside and outside of New York City.
Danielle: How did you first get into improv?
Hal: How did I ‘first’ get into improv? When I was about 9-10 years old I used to love to watch Jonathan Winters improvise his great characters.  I would then go outside and entertain the neighborhood kids. I had two characters that they loved – one was an infant in his mother’s womb and the other was a race car driver because I could do great sound effects with my mouth and would go through all the gears and then a loud crashing sound.  The kids just ate it up and I loved the attention. 
When I was doing stand-up, in the late 70’s, I had a decent 50 minute set that I used to play colleges.  I was hired by a jazz club in Greenville, SC to do two shows one evening and the crowd was great and I had a great first show. The owner came into the dressing room after the first set and told me that the crowd is not leaving… they want to see the second show.  I responded, “…holy sh*t, I only have ONE set…” so I improvised the next set.  Just like I did when I was a kid – I was scared, but I had fun and so did the crowd.
I moved to New York in 1979 after doing the open mic nights at the clubs…”Catch a Rising Star” and the old “Improv” and did ok… They invited me back.  But my material was not up to NYC standards so I took a Comedy Class at the Learning Annex with Joey Novick and he turned me onto a book called Improvisation for the Theater by Viola Spolin.  I read the book cover to cover and just fell in love… the whole concept of playing to get to our intuitive was the concept that I had achieved all the way back when I was a 9 year old kid –playing to my friends and knew what it felt like to be in that wonderful zone but didn't understand until Viola Spolin told me how to get there. 

D: What was it like working with Paul Sills?
H: I loved Paul Sills.  He started Second City in Chicago and he was the son of the great Viola Spolin.  I met him when, my wife bought me a 7 week workshop series in the mid to late 80’s.  I had studied with David Shepherd, Del Close and Martin Harvey Friedberg by this time and I was also teaching and performing so it was the perfect gift.  He taught straight out of his mother’s book but he had no patience.  He would yell “… where’s the f*&king smoking gun in this scene…” He was known for his temper, but I didn't see that… I saw that he was just very passionate about the work and he would just get frustrated.  I heard stories that he would throw a chair sometimes and thought …well that doesn't seem to be in line with his mom’s teachings. We were playing a game where we had to eat a meal (show don’t tell) and talk about another topic.  I had great object work (create the objects in space) … I could show what I was eating, but I wouldn't talk while I was eating and after the game ended Paul said to me, how come I didn't talk that much – I didn't really play the game.  I told him that in real life I don’t talk while I eat… I’m all about the food and his response was, “well this isn't real life… this is f*&king ART!” His words were harsh, however, I felt he said them with a great sense of humor, and compassion… we hit it off and we became good friends.
He helped me put a business plan together because I had someone in Atlanta interested in starting an Improv theater.  My business plan included the great Paul Sills to direct and the guy got cold feet. He didn’t understand that the joy of theater was the risk and daring behind each show.  One of my greatest memories was the week I spent in Door County, WI with my 17 year old son, in 2002, playing at the Paul Sills' Wisconsin Theater Game Center which included a full 5 day long intensive with Paul and his daughter Aretha Sills (Paul said it was the family business.) What a wonderful vacation playing and hanging out with the entire Sills family.

D: You went from Stand-up to improv, do you ever miss Stand-up?
H: I often think about doing stand-up again.  I figure that I would be so much better now with all these years of improvisation experience. One of my favorite improvisation teachers was Martin Harvey Friedberg, who used to coach stand-ups using the rules of improvisation. So, I started to coach stand-ups too.  The business of stand-up is so different now than when I first came to NYC back in 1979… but funny is still funny and organic is much better than forced comedy.

I'll post part 2 of Hal's interview in a few days.

If you're interested in learning more about Hal's work, consider participating in his one-day workshop with IRTE. You can sign up at irteinfo.wix.com/irte and go to the "hire us" tab, or click here.

Thursday, April 18, 2013

IRTE's Jeff O'Leary

Hey, everyone.

For our final installment of "Meet the Groovy Gang" we're going to ask Jeff O'Leary a couple of questions about his character, his cartoon watching, and any groovy adventures he might have had as a kid.

Did you watch cartoons like Scooby-Doo or Josie and the Pussycats when you were young?
I was a big fan of Scooby Doo. Unfortunately I never got to see Josie and the Pussycats when I was a kid.  My favorite cartoon of that era was Hong Kong Phooey.  It blew my mind that the main character  transformed from a mild mannered janitor into a kung-fu superhero by jumping  into a filing cabinet.  It also has the greatest cartoon theme song of all time which I will gladly sing for anyone who asks me.


Tell me a little about the character you're playing in "The Groovy Gang Adventures". What inspired you to create him or her?
I play Chompers, the talking Alligator. The character was actually created by Nannette [Deasy] – he was part of  the back story for her character Lorna Blue when IRTE did the show “Hint!”. I always assumed he was Lorna Blue’s imaginary friend but now I know that he is real. Very, very real.
The lovable flesh-eating 'gator, Chompers.

Did you belong to a groovy gang when you were a kid?
Even cooler -- I was on a team of superheroes! My older brother Jim was really into comic books  and he created a group called The Challengers. He was The Condor, my best friend Randy Harris was Laser Sword, and I was Mechano Man.  I had all sorts of cool gadgets and doo-dads with which to fight crime. During the summer we would play outside for hours, acting out our adventures.
Can you tell me one a memorable adventure you had when you were young?
When I was in second or third grade I tried to run away from home. There was some sort of dispute about allowance or chores with my parents and I decided to punish them. One morning I packed some odd bits of food (I specifically remember cheese) in a grocery sack and walked out the front door. I was about a block away when my Mom came outside and yelled out “Oh Jeffffff! I made you some scrambled eggs!” There was a brief moment of hesitation and then I turned around and went back home. I really like scrambled eggs.
Labor disputes are always settled by eggs. Hard boiled ones were my weakness.

Thanks for everything, Jeff.

"The Groovy Gang Adventures" can be seen this Saturday April 20th at 8:00 pm.

Where?

Gotham City Improv, 48 W 21st St, #801 between 5th and 6th Avenue in New York City!

Tickets: $6


Are you a junior high, high school, or college student? Tickets are $3 at Gotham City IRTE performances with advanced reservations.

Too cool for school? Take advantage of the "3 for 3" deal! Tickets are $3 per person for groups of three or more with advanced reservations (only at Gotham City).

Sunday, April 14, 2013

IRTE's Nannette Deasy

We're here with the Artistic Director of IRTE. Besides that, she's also the creator and a cast member of "The Groovy Gang Adventures". She's playing Lorna Blue, girl detective. Let's find out a little about her inspirations for IRTE's first project of the 2013 season.

Did you watch cartoons like Scooby-Doo or Josie and the Pussycats when you were young?
Oh, yes. Scooby Doo, Josie and the Pussycats, Speed Buggy - I watched them religiously. Jabber Jaw bothered me, though. Although I was too young to go see the movie Jaws, my parents, for some reason, thought it was okay to bring me and my brother to see Orca, the Killer Whale when I was five. They must have thought that Orca was some Disney live-action movie and not the horror flick that it actually was. We left, my brother and I in tears, shortly after the dead baby whale miscarriage scene. (Parents, don't ever bring your kids to movies featuring whale fetuses). I think that's why I never liked Jabber Jaw, even though he was a shark and not a killer whale - that and the fact that I found the shark's voice (He spoke like Curly from The Three Stooges) very grating.
Who was your favorite?
Scooby Doo was my absolute favorite show from the ages of five to eight, followed closely by Josie and the Pussycats, especially when they were in Outer Space! (although Melody was annoying - she seemed so dumb, almost to the point of mental disability.) The original Scooby Doo series was actually pretty scary. The supernatural elements were thrilling, though I often felt disappointed that the villain always turned out to be some regular shmoe in a mask. Frankly, the fact that they'd been stalking a flesh and blood psychopath, all without the help or even knowledge of the police, should have been infinitely more terrifying; but, hey, I was five.
I also considered the SD Gang's life pretty glamorous. Tooling around, completely on their own, in a van with a talking dog - no school, no parents, no  responsibilities other than solving fun "mysteries" - now that was cool!
Tell me a little about Lorna Blue, the character you're playing in "The Groovy Gang Adventures". What inspired you to create her?
I originally created Lorna Blue for IRTE's very first show ever, Hint!, which was a spoof of the board game, Clue. Rather than play the traditional Clue characters (Mrs. Peacock, Colonel Mustard, etc.), Curt [Dixon], who was directing, asked that we all come up with color-themed "mystery characters."
I first thought of developing a spunky "girl detective" character - a cross between Nancy Drew and Velma from Scooby Doo. In rehearsal, I quickly dropped the Nancy Drew aspect and stuck with the Hanna Barbera teen nerd/brainy girl who grew up in Tampa, FL solving "mysteries" with her fellow teen adventurers, the Groovy Gang. However, I thought it would be fun to play her as a 40-something, whose Groovy Gang days were long past. I wanted to explore the idea of what happens to these characters down the road. In Lorna's case, very bad things happen. For the run of Hint! I made Lorna the last surviving member of her Groovy Gang after all her friends had been horribly (and stupidly) murdered by a serial killer, the Bayside Strangler. They had been pursuing a particularly promising clue in the completely unrelated case of the Haunted Holiday Park when they ran afoul of the cannibal rapist. Lorna luckily did not share her friends' fate as she was spending the summer at fat camp outside of Philadelphia. Unfortunately for Lorna, this led to years of guilt, regret, mental breakdown and substance abuse.
The IRTEs all had so much fun playing with Lorna in Hint!, that we quickly decided our opening show this season would follow the adventures of Lorna and her Groovy Gang's happier youth - a sort of prequel, I suppose.
 Nannette Deasy as Lorna Blue


Did you belong to a groovy gang when you were a kid?
Not really. Like most improvisers and actors, I was not overly burdened with a huge abundance of friends. (Don't look at me like that, performers. Let's face it, very few of us ever made it to the "cool kids table.")   Miss Popular, I was not. However, when I'd go visit my Grandparents in Ireland for the summer, I'd suddenly have a ready-made gang of friends 24/7. Both my parents came from large families who all had kids, so when we met up, I'd have loads of cousins around my own age to hang out with. My maternal Grandparents had a farm, so there was plenty of land, animals and trouble to get into.
 Can you tell me one a memorable adventure you had when you were young?
One summer afternoon, my cousins Xarifa, Siobhan and I were playing in the local church. It was a small country church, so it was frequently left empty and unlocked. We taste tested the holy water, sang in the microphones (Siobhan was obsessed with Madonna that summer) and lit all the candles (matches had been conveniently left out), including the votive candles.
I was up in the choir loft playing with the nativity creche animals, who were battling the baby Jesus' parents. Siobhan was at the altar belting out "Like a Virgin." That's when the priest came in. He was pretty mad when he saw that the offertory candles had all been lit and whipped out a calculator. Turns out you had to pay to light those candles! Of course, we were horrified that we now owed this priest money (I'm sure it was just a couple of bucks), but we were more afraid of the trouble we faced from our parents.
Siobhan, Xarifa and I devised a clever plan to seal the priest's lips: We'd all go to confession, so he would be bound to silence by the "sacrament seal."
Of course, none of us wanted to attend an extra mass that weekend (we couldn't very well go to confession at the service we attended with our parents - they'd know something was up). The priest, of course, did tell on us. However, he slipped up by going to our uncle first, not our fathers (who happened to be out) and certainly not our mothers, who were home. I think this guy was a bit sexist, or maybe he knew what the inevitable outcome would be - that our mothers would find the whole thing funny and think he was a jerk for not talking to them first. Siobhan, Xarifa and I got off scot free. I don't think we ever paid for those candles.
In my memory, I'd like to think the dog chased him home on this particular occasion, but I'm probably embellishing. My Grandparents had this border collie, Jill, a working farm dog, who was very smart and sweet with children. For some reason, though, she did not like the priest and had to be tied and locked up every time he came to the house. She'd frequently break loose and chase after him. It got to the point that she figured out where he lived and if she didn't get to him before he got in his car, she'd be waiting for the priest on his doorstep when he got home. Smart dog.
Thanks, Nannette.

"The Groovy Gang Adventures" has one final performance this Saturday, April 20, 8:00 pm at
Gotham City Improv!
48 West 21st St, 8th Fl.
New York City

Friday, April 5, 2013

IRTE's Danielle Montezinos

Today, we're going to talk to Danielle Montezinos, one of the cast of IRTE's "The Groovy Gang Adventures". The Groovy Gang is based on those great Hanna-Barbera cartoons like Scooby-Doo, Josie and the Pussycats, and Jabberjaw.

Did you watch cartoons like Scooby-Doo or Josie and the Pussycats when you were young?
I watched Scooby-Doo everyday after school, though I found it sort of lame, even at a young age.  Probably because it's about Scooby, who's a dog and I was always a cat fan.  The Pussycats were more appealing but were never on when I was home. Only got to watch that when I was home sick or on vacation, which made it even cooler.  I don't remember anything about that show except the theme song!
I was also a big fan of The Jetsons.
Tell me a little about the character you're playing in "The Groovy Gang Adventures". What inspired you to create him or her?
I play Clara Cross. She's sort of the bitchier, edgier version of Daphne and nicer Veronica  from "Josie and The PussyCats".  I like playing bitchy self-absorbed people as it's nothing like me. Also, she means well, thinks she's a good girl, and aims at nothing but to be Prom Queen! If she's Prom Queen, she will most certainly get into Harvard and meet her future husband where she can drop out and be arm candy.  Then and only then, will her daddy be proud.  Sort of sad, wouldn't you say?...At least Clara has a life plan.
Danielle as Clara Cross, Prom Queen at large.

Did you belong to a groovy gang when you were a kid?
Unfortunately, no.  That would have been fun!
Can you tell me one a memorable adventure you had when you were young?
I had many adventures. Some of which were really stupid and could have resulted in me and my friends found dead at the beach. We grew up in Florida and were very bored.  Florida teens equals not too bright.  If you ever have kids, do not raise them in Florida, else they will end up being drugged up whores.  I'm the exception, of course.
Of course.

Thanks, Danielle. I can't wait to see you and the rest of the Groovy Gang.


"The Groovy Gang Adventures" opens Saturday, April 6 with a performance at Gotham City Improv. Check out the full schedule here.

Tickets are only $6.

Are you a junior high, high school, or college student? Tickets are $3 at Gotham City IRTE performances with advanced reservations.

Too cool for school? Take advantage of the "3 for 3" deal! Tickets are $3 per person for groups of three or more with advanced reservations (only at Gotham City).

Friday, March 29, 2013

IRTE's Alex Decaneas

This week we're talking to cast member Alex Decaneas. He's gearing up to be the leader of the Groovy Gang when "The Groovy Gang Adventures" begins on April 6.

Did you watch cartoons like Scooby-Doo or Josie and the Pussycats when you were young?
Yes definitely, though I am not sure if Scooby and Josie were the top Hanna-Barbera cartoons of my liking.
Top Cat... Couldn't get enough of that show. Space Ghost and Birdman were close runners up. Love that Birdman theme.
When I was younger I had a crush on the blonde drummer from Josie and the Pussycats... but who didn't? Am I right? Heh...er...um.
What were your favorites?
I think I loved "Top Cat" so much because he was such a smartass. And he got away with it. As a developing smartass I felt a connection.
Can you tell me a little about the character you're playing in "The Groovy Gang Adventures"? What inspired you to create him?
I play Tad Stevens, all American boy next door, rich kid, self-proclaimed leader of the gang, lover of ascots and complete moron.
I wanted to explore the Fred role, but twist it to the idea that... what if Fred comes from a place of authority where he should have none? What would that be like?
Alex as Tad Stevens directing his film school thesis in LA.

 Did you belong to a groovy gang when you were a kid?
More of a groovy duo with my cousin... if you consider playing video games, writing stories, making stupid films, and generally being anti-social akin to teenagers solving mysteries in places they should never go.
Can you tell me a memorable adventure you had when you were young?
I remember ditching some church function with a friend of mine to explore what was out back behind the church... which was in a pretty rural area. Turned out to be (what I thought of at the time) as a huge expanse of forest. So we're running and climbing up hills and doing stupid swashbuckling shit like hitting each other with sticks, when I hear this blood curdling scream of my name.
"Aaaaaaaaaaleeeeeeeeeeeeeex!"
It's my father, and I know I've been caught. And I turn and sprint to get back to the church, but I am an uncoordinated mess and slip through some rocks, twist my ankle, and land in a huge mud pile. Needless to say the rest of the church day was... interesting.
I'm sure it was. Thanks for taking the time to answer some questions, Alex.

"The Groovy Gang Adventures" opens Saturday, April 6 with a performance at Gotham City Improv. Check out the full schedule here.

Tickets are only $6.

Are you a junior high, high school, or college student? Tickets are $3 at Gotham City IRTE performances with advanced reservations.

Too cool for school? Take advantage of the "3 for 3" deal! Tickets are $3 per person for groups of three or more with advanced reservations (only at Gotham City).

Friday, March 22, 2013

IRTE's Jamie Maloney

With our first show of the season approaching, I thought it'd be great to get to know some of the cast of "The Groovy Gang Adventures" through the lens of cartoons, adventures, and groovy gang-iness.

Today, let's hear from Jamie Maloney who's going to play Peter Alan Wilcox.

Did you watch cartoons like Scooby-Doo or Josie and the Pussycats when you were young?
I watched a lot of Josie and the Pussycats in Outer Space. I had a big crush on Melody when I was 5 years old. At some point in the 90's the Cartoon Network had a marathon of J & the PC's and I taped all of it. I still have that tape. I often watched Scooby Doo at a friend's house before school and would argue Scooby Doo vs J& the PC's. I took Josie's side but in retrospect I see that Scooby was the original and the best.
What were your favorites? Why?
I always liked the episodes that had guest stars. Especially when they starred real life people like Don Knots or Abbott and Costello. I wondered how they managed to make the transition to the cartoon world, and looked for discrepancies between their animated and real life selves. Phyllis Diller looked much younger as a cartoon than as a living person. I saw the Harlem Globetrotters on Scooby Doo before I saw them in real life and was disappointed by them in real life.
Tell me a little about the character you're playing in "The Groovy Gang Adventures". What inspired you to create him or her?
I'm playing Peter Alan Wilcox. He's approaching 110 years old and is inadvertently responsible for every disaster and tragedy that occurred during the 20th century. He's an unintentional super villain long past his prime. I came up with him for a show I did a few years ago called "Match Wits". He came from a few disparate sources including a character voice I did for an even earlier project and my love of history.
Peter Alan Wilcox in his black ops days.

Did you belong to a groovy gang when you were a kid?
I was kept pretty sheltered and isolated for most of my childhood so the only gangs I was in were the ones made up of my Star Wars and GI Joe figures and the occasional reluctant family pet.
Can you tell me one a memorable adventure you had when you were young?
One summer at sleep away camp I snuck off the camp grounds with a bunkmate to go to a candy store. We had to walk through the woods, past a graveyard and across a road, the whole time not sure if we were going the right way and trying not to be spotted by anyone. We dove into roadside ditches and patches of poison ivy (at least I dove into the poison ivy) whenever cars drove by. We got away with it and should have left it at that but we got greedy and went again. We had our cover story all figured out. We made it to the store and on the way back we were inevitably caught. I barely got a syllable of our story out before my dumb ass friend went and told the truth. We spent the rest of the day sitting on the Field House porch while this asshole counselor that everyone hated sat in front of us eating all of our candy while we watched.
That's an "extreme interrogation" technique used by the CIA today. No doubt Peter Alan Wilcox would make that camp counselor, and his snitch bunkmate, pay.

Thanks so much Jamie for sharing some great memories with us.

The Groovy Gang Adventures opens on April 6, 2013! For further details, visit the IRTE website!

Monday, March 11, 2013

Remembering Arthur Storch

On Tuesday, March 5, I heard from a friend about the passing of Arthur Storch. Playbill's Robert Simonson wrote about him here.
At the time of his retirement in 1991, Mr. Storch said, "I think what I am most proud of, as far as Syracuse Stage is concerned, is that we created a standard of quality that does not cater to the lowest common denominator. The bottom line has always been: This is the best play and these are the best people, not this play will sell the most tickets."
I met Arthur as a member of the Actors Studio. He was one of the auditors at my audition for the Studio. I also played a small role in a production of "Machinal" he directed there that starred Angelica Page (she went by Angelica Torn at the time). He was almost always there at the Studio's sessions, helping critique the work of the actors. And, I'd run into him occasionally outside the Studio. Even after retirement, he taught a class in directing.

He always looked to achieve that "standard of quality that does not cater to the lowest common denominator." When he directed, he asked for maximum effort from the actors. Some rehearsals became real pressure cookers, moving through the same blocking again and again, and expecting full involvement at all times. There was at least one day in "Machinal" rehearsals, an actress blew up and stormed out of the room. Arthur listened to her when she returned, but insisted on seeing what he wanted to see, then got the whole rehearsal back on track. After all, if you don't push yourself fully, your work will never be fully complete.

He demanded a lot from actors under his direction. There were times he demanded more from actors in the Actors Studio sessions. If he didn't think the work was up to snuff, he told you in no uncertain terms. Two finalists for membership worked on a scene  in a session I saw once, and the actors were having a tough time of it. They didn't seem to be connecting to anything, but the actors continued, soldiering on. Afterwards, Arthur verbally eviscerated them. They didn't have a focus, or connection, or a myriad of other things required of good acting. He looked half sick and astonished that a poor performance was possible. I felt bad for the actors, but Arthur was not wrong in his criticisms.

I happened to run into Arthur later in the evening of that same day. I was taking an improv class in the same building he was teaching a directing class. The first thing he asked was "did you go to session today?" "Uh-huh". "What did you think? I couldn't believe it. Those two don't know the first thing about acting." He went further. The guy could not stop talking about it. I got the impression he had been thinking about it all day. I had nothing to add other than the two on stage had had a rough day. All I could think of was what he thought about my acting. I remember working on "Ghosts" in session once. Arthur was there, but didn't say a word during the critique. Maybe no news was good news.

Arthur was so passionate about acting and the theatre. He had a driving will to produce the best play possible. He had standards for performers few can achieve. Of course, he worked with amazing actors all his life, and knew from experience what truly dedicated actors can achieve. He brought life to the Actors Studio, and really spoke for a full and deep dedication to the craft.


Arthur Storch 1925-2013

Monday, March 4, 2013

Choose Your Adventure

Our new show, The Groovy Gang Adventures, is premiering in April. It's is inspired by adventure cartoons we watched as kids. I, personally, spent many hours watching cartoons. These adventures were mostly Hanna-Barbera cartoons like "Josie and the Pussycats", "Jabberjaw", "Charlie Chan and the Chan Clan", and "Scooby-Doo".


I have only vague memories of Charlie Chan, and Jabberjaw. My clearest memories are of Scoob, and "Josie and the Pussycats in Outer Space". I do remember another actioner, Jonny Quest that I really liked, but it had a much more serious tone to it than the others. If Jonny Quest were made today, I have no doubt the monsters would be men in disguise smuggling heroin.

One of the fun things about Scooby-Doo is they'd have celebrity guests who would play animated versions of themselves; Jonathan Winters, Phyllis Diller, and Don Knotts to name a few.


Monday, February 25, 2013

Respect for Improv, Ctd.



Jason Zinoman is certainly receiving a lot of blow back from his New York Times article about the UCB theatre not paying performers.
What’s become clear is that for the Upright Citizens Brigade, requiring performers to work free — and they can do so for years — is not a necessity but rather a fundamental part of the organization’s philosophy. As it has grown, the theater has chosen to keep ticket prices low and has put money into renting real estate (its East Village space led to $1 million in debt) and not to paying for onstage talent. If you listen to its leadership, you get the impression that the question of whether the theater has enough money to pay is irrelevant.
There's so much wriggle room for people who are running theatre's to create a philosophy on why "I shouldn't have to pay anybody anything". Starting a theatre is such a huge undertaking, it's probably easy for an owner to start thinking "I'm doing all the work; they're just fooling around." Ultimately, it's a business's way to cut expenses. But, when they're making money off the product that performers produce, the workers should get paid back.

Steve Hofstetter wrote a great article in response to some of the comments over Jason Zinoman's article:
There exists a myth that comedians are supposed to perform for free because money dilutes art, and there’s some truth to that. When money is why an artist works, that art is compromised. But when money is a side effect, there is no reason to believe that art is somehow impure. And money certainly doesn't dilute art when it’s just enough to pay for a MetroCard and a sandwich.
When you pay for art, the artist can spend more time perfecting his art and his craft, rather than having to spend all his time outside of a performance space working in an office or restaurant, or walking dogs for a living.
There exists a myth that comedians are supposed to perform for free because the business was created to help the performers, and there’s some truth to that. That argument gets invalidated when a business opens a second and third location. UCB is no longer the scrappy little guy. UCB is the industry leader. It’s the most respected name in improv, and a company that spawned a three-season television show. They did not open three locations as an act of charity. They could not have expanded unless the first location was profitable enough to justify more. Running a business takes an enormous amount of work; expansion was a calculated business decision. And part of that calculation should include the financial welfare of those working for you.
I don't have anything else to add to the above quote. I just like it.
While comedy clubs pay comedians, most theaters do not pay their improv troupes. It is not fair to vilify UCB for a common practice. However, UCB is not following the lead of other theaters, they’re being followed. They now set the standards, and those standards are the reason that a professional improviser is not a viable career path. Improv, instead, is relegated to a springboard. Improv can lead to a career as an actor, an improv teacher, or as an insurance salesman who remembers the days they used to do improv, but quit because they were starving. [my italics]
There are many levels to this debate. Many of the performers at the UCB, and the similar improv theatres are still learning their craft. You can probably justify not paying them. Some people take improv classes only to become teachers or insurance salesmen. Well, some insurance salesmen take improv, and become improvisors. It's their night of poker, or bowling. They aren't thinking about pay, because it's a pastime to them. But, for those of us pursuing careers in the performing arts, pay for performance is a very relevant issue, especially when that performance is making money for others.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Respect for Improv


On Tuesday, the NY Times published an article on UCB 's long-held practice of not paying performers that has become the industry norm here in New York (Laughs Can Be Cheap at a Comedy Theater by Jason Zinoman). It's a very interesting read and I recommend you check it out here.
As an actor and an improviser, I read the Times article with much interest and growing unease. However, what shocked me more was not UCB's philosophy, but the hue and outcry in the readers' comments (and also on social media sites) from fellow performers screaming bloody murder that their beloved UCB (and all improv theaters by association) should not, MUST NOT, pay their performers! Ever! How DARE Jason Zinoman question the ethics, not to mention the legality of such a practice! Art will fail! Improv will die! People will stop attending the theater! We owe so very much to the UCB! DON'T PAY US! WE'RE JUST NOT WORTH IT! 

Really, much of the vitriol (and fear) is surprising to me.
Of course UCB does not pay its performers. It does not have to. UCB has a very successful business model (followed by pretty much all businesses in all industries). That is - make the most money for the least possible expenditure. As long as you can get talented performers willing to donate their time and talents for free, why in the world would any business turn that down?
Now I'm not saying ALL improvisers should be paid at all times. I have heard very cogent arguments from people, including Nate Dern, Chris Gethard, and Will Hines, among others, that UCB functions as a sort of comedy "grad school", allowing performers much needed stage time to hone their craft and develop material. True. Very true. I, for one, have been very grateful to many theaters who have donated their venues (Gotham City Improv, the PIT to name a few) for an hour or two to present a new and untried show, who have allowed me stage time to become a stronger performer. Anthony King also writes a very interesting defense in his blog - that it is worth it for him to perform for free at UCB, because the theater takes on all the production costs and financial risks in exchange for providing a popular showcase vehicle.
If an improviser is a student of the theater or a show does not have a following, a consistent audience, then, no, the performer perhaps should not be paid. If the theater is a struggling not-for-profit, yes, concessions should be made. An argument could be made that, in these cases, the performers are being paid with experience and visibility.
You could make a similar argument for those improvisers who get up onstage as a hobby, who rehearse infrequently, don't promote their shows - the performers who view their time onstage as their own special "bowling night." These are not actors, they are not professionals, they are amateurs. That is fine. There's plenty of room for them, as well.
However, if a show is so popular that you have lines circling around the block, from week to week to week, year after year, generating consistent and large ticket sales for a company that has organized itself as a legal for-profit entity, then, yes, the improvisers should be paid. While the Theater is the producer, the Improvisers are the actual product and creators and deserve a cut. If someone is making money off of your work, you should be compensated.

Many commenters scream, "If we pay an improviser (even a small token sum), we'd have to raise ticket prices. No one would come to the show! The theater would close!" Really? The average improv show costs about $6-8. If tickets were raised to, say, $10 or $15 or even $20, and the difference passed on to the performer, NO ONE could afford to come? Do people really believe that?
Why in the world, would any performer question this, let alone fight against their own best interests? This, really, is not UCB's fault (they are protecting their own best interests), but the fault of performers (real performers, not the inexperienced students and extracurricular dabblers) for debasing their own work and the work of their colleagues. As long as individuals don't value what they do (and, yes, improv is an art and art has value), nothing changes.
In the NY Times article, Matt Besser is quoted, 
“I don’t see what they (improvisers at his theater) do as labor. I see guys onstage having fun. It’s not a job.” 
This statement is a bit disingenuous and somewhat insulting. I'm sure that Matt Besser is paid fairly for any tv or film appearances he makes - at least I hope his agent makes sure that he is. I'm fairly certain he is having fun. The production company is making a profit from his work (and yes, art and acting is work, even when it's fun), so of course he is paid.
To suggest that if one enjoys one's work, it no longer merits compensation, is ridiculous. To perpetuate the myth of the starving artist is both self serving (on the part of certain producers) and naive. To perpetuate it as a performer is troubling.
I'm sure theater producers in the 19th and early 20th centuries argued many of the same points. "Acting is fun, people want to do it, really you should be paying us, if you don't like the conditions, then leave."  Exploitation was rampant in the theater industry - It was the producers who set working conditions and pay scale, rarely compensating for rehearsal time that was often unlimited. Frequently when touring shows closed, actors were stranded penniless far from home.
Thanks to the emergence of the labor movement and the foundation of unions like The National Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees in 1910, The Dramatists' Guild in 1912, Actors' Equity Association in 1919 and the Screen Actors Guild in 1933, performers finally had a voice, but only because they spoke up.
Now, I hesitate to suggest that improvisational theater be unionized. This would be a complicated, lengthy and difficult process. However, there are issues of Fair Labor practices that are, in many cases, being ignored. Maybe unionization is the future?
More importantly, there is the issue of what is fair and right and the willingness of performers to value and respect their own work and art in general. After all, as Ross Perlin, author of “Intern Nation,”  is quoted in the article, 
“Once a big part of an industry becomes unpaid, that quickly becomes the norm."
Is improv not an art, and is that art worthless? Is that the norm that we as improvisers want to set and perpetuate? Don't we have any respect for ourselves and our work?