Monday, May 18, 2015

Improv Everyone


I’m sitting in Madison Square Park when I notice the two men on the bench next to me are holding umbrellas. They’re gesturing toward the sky, unsure if to open them or not. One of them does, hesitates as he examines the greying sky, and closes it. They remain on the bench.
 
Wait! A woman across the way sitting in the dog park is doing something very similar. She, too, has an umbrella and is holding her palm out to determine if the heavy and damp air is condensing into raindrops, yet. 

Hold on! A couple, that looks like they are maybe tourists are also sporting umbrellas, fingering the latch, ready to pop them open at any moment.


All of these characters are wearing rain jackets, too. I know exactly what is going on.  It all adds up! Matching props? Coordinating costumes? Flatiron District? I’m about to bear witness to an Improv Everywhere orchestrated flash mob and if I act fast enough, I can be part of it, too!

I have long been a fan of Improv Everywhere’s spirited guerilla style street performances that bring the joy of improvisational theater and pranks to citizens who are trying to catch the last train out of Grand Central to hopefully kiss their children goodnight and form at least some early memories with them. In a world filled with corporate drones and the humdrum ritual of clocking in from 9 to 5, Improv Everywhere is a blessed silver lining.

I race into a corner bodega and scan the inventory lining the walls. Phone chargers. Nudie mags that sell cars. Plastic wrapped fruit. Umbrellas . 9/11 snow globes. Wait, yes, umbrellas! I slap $50 on the counter, grab the umbrella, and sprint back outside. I don’t have time to get change. Every second I waste in the convenient store leaves a greater chance I’m missing the prompt to begin the mob.

Fuck! I definitely missed the prompt. Everybody has already opened their umbrellas and is following the choreography furiously. Even the rain has started pouring, right on time. They’re rushing from end to end of the park, almost like a traffic jam, but coordinated, but also somehow improvised. Some run into the subways, as if they were truly afraid of the rain. Two men, fit and pretending to be hurried, bump into each other. From a distance their ensuing argument is reminiscent of an early Chaplin film, a clear nod to Improv Everywhere’s predecessors in physical comedy.


I am sad that I missed the event. But in sadness there is beauty. And in beauty there is chaos. Gestalt psychology teaches that the mind will self organize concepts into a whole that is greater than the sum of its parts.  Each performer, alone in their effort is unified by Improv Everywhere’s greater purpose. A misstep in choreography, a misunderstanding the required costume elements, even an umbrella unable to open in time, are all softened and absorbed into the powerful mounting tidal wave of improvised, but also fully planned out, ceremonial pranks. One cannot help but be transfixed by the kaleidoscopic dance unfolding in front of them. What seemed merely like plebeians going about their day was a farce. Next time you walk down the street, ride the subway, or hang out nearby a popular New York City tourist landmark, keep an eye on those who surround you. They are dancers and they actors and improvisers and they are everywhere.