Minneapolis improv comedy kings bow down to 'Harold'

Huge Theater celebrates the 50th birthday of an improvisational form that's become a cornerstone of modern comedy.

By IRA BROOKER

For the Minnesota Star Tribune
September 28, 2017 at 7:22PM
Performers with the comedy group Speficicity performed Saturday night at Huge Improv Theater in Minneapolis.
Performers with the comedy group Speficicity performed Saturday night at Huge Improv Theater in Minneapolis. (Star Tribune/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

"Chia Pets!"

The voice rang out above dozens of others as the near-sellout crowd at Huge Improv Theater scrambled to suggest something nostalgic.

Then members of an improv comedy team stepped up to relate anecdotes and associations the phrase brought to mind — like how the shoulder-pad fashion trend of the 1980s made every woman look like a linebacker.

Ten minutes later, the team and the audience were in the thick of three off-kilter narratives, following a quintet of musically inclined fur trappers; a father intent on watching bizarre VHS tapes with his son; and a quest for the secret of Rob Lowe's eternal youth. By the end of a half-hour, all of those seemingly unrelated stories managed to dovetail into something resembling a satisfying conclusion.

Welcome to the Harold. Or at least, one interpretation of the Harold. It's all part of Huge's "Harold Turns 50" celebration of what's arguably the most important cornerstone of long-form improv.

So what exactly is a Harold? Basically, it's a set of guidelines that help an improv team develop a scene. "The simplest explanation is just three story lines, each visited three times," said Huge co-founder Butch Roy.

You can pick out the familiar beats of the Harold in just about every TV sitcom.

"A group of performers will take an audience suggestion and build on that idea in ways that are unpredictable even to the performers," said Molly Chase, director of House of Whimsy, one of three teams that are performing at Huge every Saturday through the end of October. "There will likely be moments of poignancy and humor, and the whole room — audience and improvisers — are in it together.

"It's immediate, it has never happened before, and will never happen again."

Origin story

The first Harold was performed in 1967 by the Committee, a San Francisco-based comedy group known for experimenting with narrative structures that employed improv games and exercises.

When the group decided that it needed a name for its creation, one member reportedly cracked that "Harold" would be nice. The handle stuck, to the slight chagrin of generations of performers who have had to explain its origin.

Committee member Del Close dedicated much of his career to honing and teaching the Harold. In the 1994 book "Truth in Comedy," generally regarded as the improviser's bible, he and co-authors Charna Halpern and Kim "Howard" Johnson explain that "the Harold is like the space shuttle, incorporating all of the developments and discoveries that have gone before it into one new, superior design."

Close's efforts as an instructor and co-founder of Chicago's iO Theater became the foundation for much of American comedy as we know it.

No local venue feels that influence more acutely than Huge Theater. With "Harold Turns 50," Minnesota's most visible improv venue is paying homage to its roots and giving some of the Twin Cities' top improvisers a chance to get back to the basics.

"There are a lot of improv structures, but there's something magic about the Harold, the way you start with an opening and it brings out a truth," said Drew Kersten, director of the Kempt team.

Kempt assistant director John Gebretatose agreed that it's all about capturing those truths. "It's people playing with confidence … making comment on real-life things. Like women's shoulder pads in the '80s and how they had to look like football players just to get through life. For me, that's what makes it successful: a through-line or a narrative commenting on society."

One of the reasons improv remains a hard sell for some audiences is that it's the ultimate "had to be there" entertainment. It's difficult to explain how the shoulder pad observation might snowball into a scene about Jennifer Aniston devouring the life force of her young fans, but for those watching the performers feed off one another's energy and make connections, the evolution is electrifying.

Those hazy connections are very much by design, Kersten said. "If the opening is about Diet Coke, you don't want to see three scenes about Diet Coke. You want them spread out as far as possible, so when they start to come back together it brings a bit more of that magic."

The laughs in a Harold show seldom come from a standard setup/punchline delivery. In fact, one of the first rules laid out in "Truth in Comedy" is "Don't go for the jokes." Instead, the comedy in a long-form show comes largely from watching relatable situations spiral into unexpected directions.

"The least successful Harolds are when we let our 'I know where this needs to go' take over and steer things instead of discovering all the way through," Roy said. "Because if we know where it needs to go, so does the audience."

Grounded weirdness

The form's flexibility is obvious watching the three teams of five performers in the "Harold Turns 50" showcase.

On opening night, the House of Whimsy team produced a trio of focused, slice-of-life vignettes about crumbling relationships, disillusioned carnival workers and spiteful chess players. While the scenes frequently veered into weirdness, they remained grounded in a way that drew laughs of recognition from the crowd.

The Speficicity team, on the other hand, dove deeper into surreality right off the bat with a scene about two buddies literally riding each other's good vibes like a surfboard. That story line soon intertwined with two bird-watchers who misplaced a baby, and a home brewer crafting a hugely popular beer that smelled of cat urine, all of it building into a crescendo of absurdity that had the audience roaring for very different reasons.

As much reverence as the local improv community has for the Harold, the form represents something different in the Twin Cities than it does in improv hotbeds such as New York, Chicago and Los Angeles, where making it onto a high-profile Harold team can be a major career steppingstone. Many performers move to those cities for that reason.

"In Minnesota it's a strong part of the tradition, but at Huge Theater, Harold is only one of the forms that gets done," Kersten said.

While Close did some work with Minnesota comedy godfather Dudley Riggs and his Brave New Workshop, Huge encourages experimentation and focuses more on building strong teams of performers, regardless of form.

"Team first, format second: That's what differentiates us from the coasts," Gebretatose said. "We're better anyway," he added with a laugh.

Ira Brooker is a St. Paul-based freelance writer and editor.

MUSIC

Cyndi Lauper

Hard to believe that the beloved “Girls Just Want to Have Fun” hitmaker has never headlined an arena tour before. And this is her swan song. For her farewell trek, the infectious pop icon has created a spectacle that’s as colorful as she is. Of course she has. Lauper will sing her girl-power hits, gay anthems, pop bops, Broadway faves and choice covers. Maybe the chatty New Yorker will have a special Prince story when she plays his “When You Were Mine.” The song appeared on her 1983 debut album, “She’s So Unusual,” which earned her the Grammy for best new artist. Opening is Gayle, the young Texas singer of the 2021 hit “ABCDEFU.” (8 p.m. Wed. Target Center, 600 1st Av. N., Mpls., $20 and up, ticketmaster.com)

JON BREAM

Leo Kottke

He’s a Minnesota musical treasure, a post-Thanksgiving institution and an inductee in the Guitar Player Hall of Fame. Kottke’s adventures on six- and 12-string guitars are riveting, seasoned with occasional baritone vocals and spontaneous idiosyncratic stories. His humor, quirky as it may be, is as captivating as his guitar playing, mesmerizing as it is. As is his tradition of 40-some years, Kottke prefers an opening act that might be as eccentric as he is. He’s landed on Nellie McKay, the charming New York cabaret artist with the disarming wit and expansive musical palette. (7 p.m. Thu. Ordway Concert Hall, 345 Washington St., St. Paul, $59-$95, Ordway.org)

J.B.

Minnesota Orchestra

You seldom find the music of J.S. Bach at a Minnesota Orchestra concert, as post-1800 works are more the specialty of the house. But mandolin virtuoso Avi Avital will help them cut into the deficit with a program chock-full of Bach, including transcriptions of works originally written for violin and harpsichord. There also will be orchestral versions of Bach organ pieces and Bach-inspired works by Gustav Mahler, Arvo Part, Betsy Jolas and Paul Hindemith. Making his local debut is Canadian conductor Jordan de Souza. (11 a.m. Thu., 8 p.m. Fri. Orchestra Hall, 1111 Nicollet Mall, Mpls. $36-$111. 612-371-5656, minnesotaorchestra.org)

ROB HUBBARD

Miryana Moteva

This Bulgarian pianist is a teaching artist at Minneapolis’ MacPhail Center for Music who has curated a program full of new music for three instruments by Puerto Rico’s Ivan Rodriguez, Bulgaria’s Lora al-Ahmad and Spain’s Marc Migó, each piece focused on a journey from darkness into light. Joining her will be two fellow MacPhail faculty members, pianist Irina Elkina and clarinetist Nina Olsen, as well as two musicians from the Minnesota Orchestra, violinist David Brubaker and cellist Sonia Mantell. (7 p.m. Sat. Antonello Hall, MacPhail Center for Music, 501 S. 2nd St., Mpls. $5-$25. MacPhail.org)

R.H.

ART

Three Rooms

In this three-person show, artists Sara Suppan, Lorena Torres and Tia Keobounpheng each get their own room. Keobounpheng’s tapestries utilize geometric designs and reflects her journey of personal reconciliation with her Finnish and Sámi heritage. Suppan’s paintings explore “small good things,” such as a folded $2 bill and a ladybug sitting on top of pomegranates. Torres, who is visiting from Bogotá, Colombia, is inspired by magical realism. Her paintings depict fleeting moments otherwise lost to time. Opens Thursday. (Noon-5 p.m. Tue.-Sat. and by appt. Weinstein Hammons Gallery, 908 W. 46th St., Mpls. Free. 612-822-1722, weinsteinhammons.com)

ALICIA ELER

‘How High the Moon’

The Walker Art Center presents the first retrospective of abstract artist Stanley Whitney, and the 50-year survey of his work takes viewers through his many phases. In the 1970s and ‘80s, he had just begun working with abstraction, which transformed into his use of rounded color forms in the early 1990s and eventually his more mature work, containing more square shapes and grids. Whitney’s travels to the American West, Italy and Egypt greatly influenced his work. Ends March 16. (10 a.m.-5 p.m. Wed., Fri.-Sun, 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Thu. 725 Vineland Place, Mpls. $2-$18. Free on Thu. after 5 p.m. 612-375-7600, walkerart.org)

ALICIA ELER

DANCE

‘Plantulary’

Interdisciplinary artist and choreographer Pramila Vasudevan continues an investigation into what plant ecology can tell us about human existence with this new piece. With an ensemble of movers and music makers, Vasudevan’s company, Aniccha Arts, looks to plants as a key to understanding humans and also language. Through embodied movement, text and design, the artists come from a place of curiosity around natural forms and living things grounded in a sense of place. (4 p.m. Sat. & Sun.; Dec. 13-15, Red Eye Theater, 2213 Snelling Av. S., Mpls. $5-$100. redeyetheater.org)

SHEILA REGAN

COMEDY

‘Happyish Holidays’

Anyone heading into the Christmas holidays with even a smidgen of dread can always lean on Minneapolis native Nora McInerny, who somehow manages to turn grief into guffaws. The author and comedian, who now lives in Arizona, is returning to her old stomping grounds to tape episodes for her popular podcast “Terrible, Thanks for Asking.” She’ll be joined by producer Marcel Malekebu as they lead fans through sad and awkward stories that make Charlie Brown’s Christmas look like the party of the century. (7 p.m. Wed. & Thu., Parkway Theater, 4814 Chicago Av. S., Mpls. $30-$35. theparkwaytheater.com)

NEAL JUSTIN

FAMILY

Festival of Trees

Volunteers have decked the halls of the White Bear Lake Armory with glitzy, glam and ornate trees for the holiday season. The annual show has expanded to include businesses and nonprofits to showcase what they have to offer in a specially decorated tree. The arboreal experience begins this weekend with an open house. Guests can take photos with Santa, enjoy cookies, cocoa and activities to the backdrop of seasonal music. (Open house: 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Sat. & Dec. 14; regular hours: 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Wed. & Fri.; 3-8 p.m. Thu.; 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Sat.; noon-3 p.m. Sun. through Dec. 21. Armory, 2228 4th St., White Bear Lake. whitebearhistory.org)

MELISSA WALKER

about the writer

about the writer

IRA BROOKER