"Yes, and..."
âZip, zap, zop!â âZip, zap, zop!â
The sound bounces around the classroom as students call out the words in order. A fellow studentâs pointed finger prompts the next turn. âZip, zap . . . .â
In Improv for Strategic Communication, taught by actor and improv aficionado Pat Finn, students learn the same games that he and other comediansâincluding Saturday Night Live alumni going back decadesâplay to prepare for the stage.
Finn, who lives in Los Angeles and teaches the special topics course over two weekends, has appeared on Friends, Seinfeld and, most recently, The Middle. He started his career in improv comedy with The Second City troupe and at Chicagoâs famed iO Theater, and is the co-founder of Improv-Ability, a company that incorporates improvisation in the business world.
âThe columns that are the temple of improv are amazing things that will help you whether youâre a banker, a nurse, a scientistâanything,â says Finn, whose daughter Caitlin is a senior studying communication at CMCI and whose daughter Cassidy (Commâ17) recently graduated. âIn almost any career, people want somebody whoâs a better listener, a better collaborator, a better team player who is not averse to failure.â
Improv actors use these columnsâor guidelinesâto keep scenes going without a script.
The first lesson is to say, âYes, and,â whenever theyâre presented with a new idea.
Erin Baptiste (StratCommâ18), who took Finnâs class as a senior studying advertising and now works at a record label, applies the âyes, andâ concept in meetings.
âIf you donât like someoneâs idea to begin with and you say no, they might not come to you with the idea later on,â Baptiste says. âAnd in a creative world, thatâs what youâre always looking for, the Ÿ±»ć±đČč.â
Focusing on making others look good is also central, Finn says, to creating a better overall environment.
âYou see business people who are very âmy ideaâ oriented, and donât really open their minds or even ears to understanding or hearing another personâs idea because theyâre so locked on theirs,â he says. âThe thing about improv is, it wonât work unless you do. You have to make the other person look good, and thereby the scene gets created. Itâs like Jenga.â
The class changed how Kimberly Coffin (CritMedia, StratCommâ18) views brainstorming.
âWith video and other creative projects, a lot of what youâre doing is playing off of other peopleâs ideas,â she says. âNow I see a clear connection to how improv helps you thrive in a creative world."