Thanks for noticing. My pleasure to bring it to you. So glad you found it useful. More videos coming soon and, as always, if you have any requests, drop them in the comments and maybe they’ll become a video.
This is exceptionally helpful! I've only recently started improv and have been working on solo exercises, but they weren't really explained very well. This gives me a lot to work on AND the mindset to approach it with. Thank you for putting this together!
Awesome! Welcome to improv. Glad this is going to help. Feel free to shoot me any improv questions you have - if you have them, I'm sure someone else has them and maybe I can make a video to help out. Best of luck. Thanks for watching.
@@PVImprov I really appreciate it. Your content so far has been really helpful. The main thing I'm struggling with right now is panic and freezing up, but I imagine most people have to get through that when getting started.
@@ssutton4455 it definitely gets easier with time and practice for sure. Stick with it. Maybe this video will help as well: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-pk36dAVPHmo.htmlsi=AZ3tfP8APUfZexVP. Break a leg
This. is. so. good. Every word in this video is solid, practical advice - I've been looking for really good ways to practice solo for so long and these exercises are all gamechangers. Thank you so much.
@@AllenBoudreaux thanks so much. I try to pack it with the info I wanted/needed when I was newer to improv. I love that y of feel like the exercise were game changers - that’s so great. More content coming. Stay tuned and thanks for watching.
Thank you so much for this Paul! You’re such a phenomenal teacher who truly cares for your students. I learned so much from you and miss being in your classes. Thank you for your passion and kind heart to share your wisdom with us. Looking forward to more videos!
Great video, thank you! Could you give some more examples on head, hands, hips? The ones I've thought of so far are very wacky! I'd like to practice some subtler ones
@@lucyjohnston6838 sure - first, if what you’re coming up with is too wacky just dial it down. If your head is all the way back, just bring it a little back, etc. As for examples, there are too many to possibly name. Just trying failing whatever you’re doing down. It’s like when, in acting class, you use an animal as the inspiration for your character - you start out as the animal and then pull it back and back until it’s a person version of that animal. (Also, don’t be afraid of wacky - sometimes it’s the exact right thing). Does that help at all?