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Improv Classes and Workshops at Held2Gether in Long Beach. Choose from Three Options.

Held2gether
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  • Learn comedy techniques & communication skills
  • For performers of all skills
  • Corporate seminars available

The skills learned through improv comedy are particularly useful during job interviews, for crafting alibis, and when someone asks you why your top hat is filled with toothbrush heads. Master the art of a quick response with today's Groupon for improv classes or workshops at Held2Gether in Long Beach. Held2Gether views improv not only as a vehicle for laughter, but also a way to gain vital communication skills and release inhibitions. Experienced instructors teach the art of the chuckle through a variety of classes and workshops. Once students graduate from Held2Gether's four-level program with their doctorate in guffawlogy they have the option of performing around town with the Held2Gether troupe. Choose from three Groupon options:

  • For $49, you get a six-week session of two-hour intro to improv comedy classes or a six-week session of two-hour level two classes (a $100 value). See class pages for dates, times, and locations.
  • For $39, you get a four-hour intro to improv intensive workshop (an $80 value). Workshops meet from noon to 4 p.m. on select Sundays.
  • For $149, you get a two-hour private group improv workshop (a $350 value). Private workshops accommodate up to 10 people, and can be used for corporate bonding, team building, a friendly get-together, or sweet, sweet revenge.

Reviews

Examiner.com featured Held2Gether and six Yelpers give it a perfect five-star average:

  • If you have ever thought you were funny or just love hearing people laugh at your jokes and sense of humor, I highly recommend these classes as a start to learning the basics and of course having a heck of a good time while learning. – Chief J., Yelp

Need To Know Info

Promotional value expires Jan 5, 2012. Amount paid never expires. Limit 1 per person, may buy multiple as gifts. Reservation required; subject to availability. Must be 18 or older. 24 hour cancellation notice or Groupon is forfeited. Not valid with other offers. Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services. Learn about Strike-Through Pricing and Savings

About Held2gether

Improv Comedy: Making it Up as They Go Along

You never know what you're going to see at an improv comedy show—and that's the beauty of it. Read on to see what you should expect at a show or class and to learn just how it is that actors can put their scenes together so fast.

Even when their characters are arguing, improv comics are working from a philosophy of trust and agreement—necessary ingredients for acting together with no script. Improv comedy encompasses a broad array of styles, with the major division between short form—quick, self-contained games—and long form—a series of multiple, interconnected scenes featuring distinct beats. Accordingly, a given performance might resemble a one-act play, a Saturday Night Live–style sketch scene, or a high-energy game show. Most rely on audience suggestions to spark the flow of fresh ideas, however, and some even weave brave audience members into the action.

Perhaps the most famous long-form style is the Harold, in which performers build continuous scenes that develop and intermingle in surprising ways. The unusual name arises from a joke, according to developer Del Close's biography, The Funniest One in the Room. As Close asked his collaborators what to call the new form, someone sarcastically yelled, "Well, Harold's a nice name." Appropriately for a form devoted to spontaneous absurdity, the name stuck.

This comic form also has roots in one of America's darkest eras: the Great Depression. While working for the Works Progress Administration, Viola Spolin needed a way to teach basic theater precepts to unschooled actors of various ages and backgrounds, so she created a series of theater games that focused on the playfulness at the heart of acting. In the 1950s, her son, Paul Sills, applied her principles at the short-lived but influential Compass Players on Chicago's South Side, and, later, at The Second City—one of the most prominent comedy companies of the 20th century, with alumni including John Belushi, Tina Fey, and Steve Carell.

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