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Ravinia’s Acclaimed Production of Leonard Bernstein’s ‘Mass’ Premieres on ‘Great Performances’Mira Temkinon April 29, 2020 at 9:18 pm

Looking for some inspiring TV while you’re in lockdown? Tune into the award-winning Great Performances, now in its 47th season on PBS. Great Performances is America’s outstanding performing arts television series, showcasing a diverse range of performing arts specials from around the world. Chicago viewers can find a full schedule of shows on Channel 11 WTTW.

Performances include Broadway shows, Shakespeare, classical music, opera, and much more. Premiering on the station is Ravinia’s production of Leonard Bernstein’s rarely seen show, Mass. In 2018, Ravinia President and CEO Welz Kauffman and Chief Conductor and Curator Marin Alsop presented this masterwork as the centerpiece of Ravinia’s celebration of Leonard Bernstein’s centennial. Chicago Tribune declared it one of the best concerts of 2018.

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Leonard Bernstein’s Mass to premier on Great Performances

When audiences requested a repeat performance, Ravinia reunited more than 200 onstage artists—including the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Vocality, a cast of “Street Singers,” and even the local high school marching band—for a single 2019 encore. Ravinia arranged to have the second performance filmed and the show now makes its debut on Friday, May 15, at 9 p.m. CST on PBS and the PBS Video app.

Prior to the broadcast, a virtual “panel discussion” will be livestreamed on Ravinia’s Facebook page beginning at 8:15 CST. For this talk, Alsop and Kauffman will be joined by Tony Award-winning (South Pacific) singer/actor Paulo Szot, who starred in the central role of the Celebrant in both Ravinia performances, as well as Chicago Children’s Choir Artistic Director Josephine Lee, Highland Park High School Band Director Joshua Chodoroff and WFMT/Moderator, George Preston.

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Photo Credit: Ravinia

The coincidence that this show—about the loss and restoration of faith in times of crisis—is more timely than ever. Broadcast in the midst of a global pandemic adds a heart-breaking immediacy to this long-dormant masterpiece. That said, viewers shouldn’t be dismayed by the title. This is not a sermon, nor is it a sacred work like Verdi’s Requiem. It’s more like Hair and Jesus Christ Superstar as a contemporary musical facing contemporary questions with wit, intelligence, and beautiful music.

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Ravinia’s Acclaimed Production of Leonard Bernstein’s ‘Mass’ Premieres on ‘Great Performances’Mira Temkinon April 29, 2020 at 9:18 pm Read More »

Follow These Cool Chicago Instagram Shops for Daily Outfit InspirationDulce Ramirezon April 29, 2020 at 9:38 pm

A staple of Chicago living is discovering new shops in all the colorful neighborhoods around the city. Places like Andersonville, Boystown, and Wicker Park have streets lined with small businesses created by Chicagoans for Chicagoans. In a time where we can’t enjoy walking through these businesses, we can still come together and continue to support them through online shopping. The internet once again proves pivotal in times like these. Find a nice gift for a friend’s birthday coming up, Mother’s Day, or splurge on yourself, while supporting Chicago shops. We compiled a list of Chicago shops you can support, check out their Instagram for a reminder of why our city is so great.

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Found Objects @foundobjects

This shop offers handcrafted accessories, primarily earrings with a modern touch. The signature pieces are unique and made of material like leather and create gorgeous sophisticated looks. Found Objects Instagram showcases their creations and inspiring quotes.

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Milk Handmade @milkhandmade

This Andersonville boutique sells ethical and sustainable clothing. Clothes sold here are created by independent designers primarily located in Chicago. For a modern city look, consider buying their statement pieces that are both comfortable and stylish.

Sacred Art @sacredartchicago

Sacred Art is a local goods shop selling home goods, jewelry, prints, paintings, photography, stationery created by local artists. If you’re looking for eccentric items that you can’t find anywhere else, you’ll find great options at Sacred Art.

Sir and Madame @sirandmadame

This fashion-forward boutique offers women and men’s clothing for elevated and sophisticated urban living.

Silly Buddy @shopsillybuddy

Silly Buddy sells adorable accessories for your furbabies. Check out their page to see their adorable scarves, bows, leashes, and collars!

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Proud to be a Child of Immigrants. ❤️ #ImmigrantLove • Get the shirt at LawrenceAndArgyle.com or link in bio. 👆🏼 Your purchase benefits @upwardly_global and their career matching programs for new Americans. • • • • • • • • • • • #descendedfromimmigrants #childofimmigrants #childofrefugees #generation1point5 #productofimmigration #nohumanisillegal #immigrantstory #familiesbelongtogether #immigrantsarewelcomehere #refugeeswelcome #immigrantrightsarehumanrights #humanrightsforall #heretostay #thirdculturekids #migrationisbeautiful #immigrant #immigrantsmakeamericagreat #dreamerswelcome #nationofimmigrants #refugeesarewelcomehere #diaspora #minorities #refugeeswelcome #nobannowall #immigrants #immigrant #immigrantswegetthejobdone #nooneisillegalonstolenland #lawrenceandargyle

A post shared by Lawrence & Argyle ✌🏽❤️🇺🇲 (@lawrenceandargyle) on Jan 6, 2020 at 4:45pm PST

Lawrence&Argyle @lawrenceandargyle

Lawrence&Argyle sells clothing and pins with messages that celebrate American Heritage. Half the profit is then donated to a different organization each quarter.

Iris Atelier @iris.atelier

Located in West Town, this atelier creates gorgeous headbands and other accessories by hand.

Rocket Relics @rocketrelics

Rocket Relics creates wonderful handmade soy candles and use repurposed containers giving these items a distinctive look.

Winnie Cooper @winniecooperboutique

This women-owned online shop offers women’s clothing, shoes, and accessories with outfits for all occasions in city living.

Just One Vintage @justonevintage

Located in Pilsen, this thrift boutique sells pop culture staples from all decades. Many pieces represent Chicago pride like vintage Bulls and Cubs sportswear to show off your Chicago pride.

Featured Image Credit: Sir and Madame Instagram

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Follow These Cool Chicago Instagram Shops for Daily Outfit InspirationDulce Ramirezon April 29, 2020 at 9:38 pm Read More »

You Can Take a Virtual Tour of These World-Renowned Chicago Museums Right NowAngelica Ruizon April 29, 2020 at 9:59 pm

While Chicago may be known for killer polish sausage and legume-shaped landmarks, it is also home to dozens of cultural institutions. Some of these organizations have taken their installations and turned them into virtual exhibitions, others have digitized information with Google Arts & Culture. We’ve rounded up a list of amazing exhibitions you can virtually tour at Chicago museums and cultural authorities.

Photo Credit: Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago Facebook

Museum of Contemporary Art

The Museum of Contemporary Art has one of the city’s most well kept back lawns in Chicago. Nestled in the Gold Coast between Water Tower and Northwestern Hospital lies the gallery amidst a picturesque Lake Michigan backdrop. Currently on virtual view is Duro Olowu: Seeing Chicago. The show is a collection of pieces drawn by Olowu from various Chicago collections. At the intersection of fashion, art, and culture lies this visual narrative of metropolitan life in Chicago.

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Photo Credit: The Art Institute of Chicago Facebook

The Art Institute of Chicago

Checking up on Piet Oudulf’s budding bulbs in the Lurie Garden is one of the city’s most breathtaking springtime activities. Just north of the perennial garden is the Art Institute of Chicago campus. The museum’s wings are divided by style, period, and region. Currently, The Art Institute has 16th-century Western European painter El Greco on special display—the show is entitled Ambition & Defiance.

Photo Credit: Chicago History Museum Facebook

Chicago History Museum

For those of us who find inspiration in history and artifacts, check out the digitized collection by the Chicago History Museum. The majority of projects in the online catalog are centered around the history of Chicago, including The Chicago Fire, Haymarket history, and the World’s Fair.

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Photo Credit: Gene Siskel Film Center of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago Facebook

Gene Siskel Film Center

Ready to venture out into new film territory? The Gene Siskel Film Center is allowing the public to rent from their archive of independent and international films. There’s also a year-round Latin film program called Panorama Latinx. The initiative showcases work by emerging and established Latinx filmmakers.

Photo Credit: National Museum of Mexican Art Facebook

National Museum of Mexican Art

Pilsen’s National Museum of Mexican Art has uploaded a great deal of their incredible collection into the Arts and Culture platform with Google. Take a view from their collection based on exhibition or as part of a larger context of artifacts collected by the organization. After that, head on to their Instagram or website to learn more about the way the museum is staying connected to its followers during the pandemic.

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Photo Credit: DuSable Museum of African American History Facebook

DuSable Museum of African American History

The DuSable Museum of African American History has one of southside Chicago’s best collections of black art. The collection is organized by African cultures, works from the diaspora, origin, and author. There is an amazing range of mediums from sculpture to painting and lithographic. Check out the collection on Arts & Culture.

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You Can Take a Virtual Tour of These World-Renowned Chicago Museums Right NowAngelica Ruizon April 29, 2020 at 9:59 pm Read More »

Chicago Blackhawks: Three potential 2020 free agent defense addsVincent Pariseon April 30, 2020 at 11:00 am

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Chicago Blackhawks: Three potential 2020 free agent defense addsVincent Pariseon April 30, 2020 at 11:00 am Read More »

Chicago Cubs: Three awful mistakes Theo Epstein made since 2016Vincent Pariseon April 30, 2020 at 12:00 pm

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Chicago Cubs: Three awful mistakes Theo Epstein made since 2016Vincent Pariseon April 30, 2020 at 12:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears News: What the Ted Ginn Jr. signing meansRyan Heckmanon April 30, 2020 at 6:17 pm

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Chicago Bears News: What the Ted Ginn Jr. signing meansRyan Heckmanon April 30, 2020 at 6:17 pm Read More »

Remembering Michael McCarthySheri Flanderson April 29, 2020 at 2:15 pm

Susan Messing and Michael McCarthy - COURTESY GREGORY HOLLIMON

Maya Angelou once said: “I’ve learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.” Michael McCarthy was the kind of person that could make you feel seen. A quiet and humble legend in the Chicago comedy community, many met Michael at the Second City, starting as an intern then moving on to become a cast member on the e.t.c. and Main stages, others met him as a writer for Saturday Night Live, while and others like myself discovered him during his years as a teacher at the Second City, iO, and DePaul. One thread that runs constant through the recollections of anyone fortunate enough to know Michael: he made people feel like the best possible versions of themselves

Few have the magical ability to immediately disintegrate social barriers and connect on a level of kindness and friendship, yet within the improv community Michael was that magician; a quiet legend full of dry wit and joy who always had a good word of encouragement or light-hearted ribbing. Intensifying his aura, he was matched by his equally kindhearted impishly hilarious wife, the legendary comedian Susan Messing. These two forces of mirth created an indomitable power-couple of happiness in Chicago; nurturing not only their daughter Sofia, but the careers and lives and spirits of countless aspiring comedians together.

After several years of fighting valiantly with Susan stalwartly by his side, Michael sharing the loveliest words of comfort nearly daily to his community on Facebook, he lost his battle with cancer at the age of 61 on April 8. Yet Michael’s sparkling spirit remains vivid within the family, friends, colleagues and students who were fortunate enough to know him. Below are a selection of memories, including recollections of Michael’s humble beginnings at Second City as told by Cheryl Sloane, to the warm experience of witnessing Michael and Susan’s love for each other and the community by Wendy Mateo, and the excitement of one helluva hiking trip with Greg Holliman. Through all of these memories from everyone Michael touched from lifelong friends, to his students, one thing is clear; they all recall him fondly and with love–a testament to a life well-lived.

Cheryl Sloane

About 40 years ago I was sitting on the steps of Capitol University in Columbus, Ohio wearing my red satin Second City jacket. I was waiting for the Tourco van. The Second City touring company was performing at Capitol and I was living in Columbus and going to Ohio State. Excited to see my SC family and my mom, who travelled with Tourco at the time, I was unusually early for their arrival.

I look up and see a very blond, college student wearing wire-rimmed glasses with a book bag slung over his shoulder and a pad of paper and pen in his hand. “Excuse me, I see your jacket and well, are you with Second City,” he asks. “Sort of,” I say. “I’m waiting for them to arrive.”

“Wow. Do you happen to know Joyce Sloane?”

“She’s my mom.”

“Wow!”

He reaches over, bending his shoulders towards me to shake my hand with both of his. “I’m Michael McCarthy.” He goes on to let me know that he was in a comedy group at Ohio University, he really wants an internship at Second City over the summer, and he made an appointment to meet with my mom and drove in from Athens, Ohio.

The van is late, so I find a payphone and call Second City. My mom answers. I’m surprised and a little upset that she chose to not get in the van and come see me but my conversation goes to “Mom, not only are you not coming to see your only daughter but this guy drove two hours to meet with you and you’re standing him up. How could you do that?” I say in a kind of bitchy college student with a bit of attitude voice. Now imagine Michael. He’s standing next to me listening to me harass my mom for not showing up to meet him. Picture Michael McCarthy frantically waving his arms, mouthing NOOOO, NOOOO. “I’ll drive to Chicago to meet with her. It’s no problem. (looks at watch) I can be there tomorrow by noon…or Monday…or whenever is good for her.”

“Shhh” I say. “Well mom at least you can give this poor guy an internship.” In perfect Joyce Sloane fashion she says,”Just tell him to come to Chicago when school gets out and he can be an intern. Does he need a place to stay?”

That day was the beginning of a love affair. Michael loved Second City with all his heart. He was our first intern. His internship included many tasks including transcribing and cataloguing 20 years of reel-to-reel and cassette audio tapes of Second City shows. On a typewriter. He assisted in rehearsals. He transcribed Bernie’s directing classes. He got coffee and lunch, babysat actors’ children, picked up the furs for the resale shop, delivered cranberries and the like. He did it all with the enthusiasm of a child finding the joy and learning in every task. Always letting everyone know how lucky he felt to be a part of their lives.

Michael- how lucky we were to have you as a part of ours. Your fierceness, your determination, your incredible work ethic, your immense capacity to love and be loved. Your generosity, your wit and your devotion.
Love you and miss you.

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This drawing by Michael McCarthy hung in Joyce Sloane's Second City office. - COURTESY CHERYL SLOANE

Tim Kazurinsky, actor/former Saturday Night Live writer and cast member

I think comedy was Michael’s ministry. He was a deeply spiritual person–but not in a creepy, born-again, evangelical Christian way. He truly believed comedy could heal and redeem. One could argue that true preachers like Lenny Bruce, Richard Pryor, and George Carlin changed the world’s view of racism, sexism, and senseless wars more than bible-thumpers like Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson. Michael loved humankind, and he lived that love every day. Although I did find it amusing that after Michael converted to Roman Catholicism, he was cast in a number of TV shows… as a priest.

Pete Burns

I always considered Michael McCarthy an academic in the study of comedy. But unlike scholars who spend their careers pontificating to their colleagues about their vast knowledge of their chosen field of expertise, Michael actually created the subject that he was so passionate about. He wrote, performed, directed and produced comedy. And it was all very, very funny.

People were attracted to Michael for his comic savvy. His years of experience at Second City, Saturday Night Live, and producing the Cat Laughs comedy festival in Ireland made Michael the perfect audience to share your creative thoughts and ideas. His circle of friends consisted of many comedians and comic actors, some well-known and others perhaps not as notable, but just as respected by their peers. Regardless of their status, they were always welcomed by Michael and his funny and talented wife Susan into their home.

Over the past couple of years, following the onset of Michael’s cancer, I had the privilege to sit at his kitchen table with some of the funniest people you can imagine. Michael’s friends would stop by to support Michael and that support usually consisted of sharing outrageous personal experiences from film, TV, theater and stand-up clubs. These kitchen conferences often consisted of a random combination of funny people making each conversation unique. The one constant was Michael’s uncanny recollection of the humor that comes from the absolutely brutal process of creating comedy.

Through it all, Michael would sit at the head of the table, and would recall additional facts and historical subtext that enhanced everyone’s story. He would remember things you said or did that you no longer recalled. Often Michael’s family members would be in attendance providing all with a retelling of the McCarthy family history that included growing up in numerous homes and cities across the country and even a stint living in Nigeria. Everyone who entered with the intention to raise Michael’s spirit, would leave uplifted as well. Michael made others feel good about themselves.

Michael’s life experiences, passion and knowledge helped make him an incredible teacher and mentor to students, the perfect cast member and a kind, loving and thoughtful friend. Though he will be greatly missed, his comic spirit will continue to inspire all the lives he has touched.

David Razowsky, improvisor/podcast host/former artistic director of Second City Los Angeles

My memories of Michael have less to do with specific events, but more to do with the kind of a man he was. To say he was kind is a given. He was also one of the most generous of souls. He would give a struggling student great advice not just about whatever she or he was writing, but how to deal with doubt, uncertainty, and a lack of confidence. He was, whether he knew it or not, a protege of Martin deMaat, whose philosophy was when creating “You lose all right to judge yourself.” He was snarky and, at times, angry. He dealt with those demons in a way we all could learn: Thread it into the tapestry of your art. His work at Second City (and later) wasn’t based on how well we all could get along, but rather, “Look at this fucked situation we got ourselves into. Ain’t it crazy?” He was sarcastic, snarky, and human. The Holy Trinity of Great Writing.

Kelly Leonard, executive director of learning and applied improvisation at Second City Works

I met Michael when I was a dishwasher at Second City in 1988 and had breakfast with him a few months ago. The kindness, respect and intelligence that he treated me with was no different today than it was 32 years ago. It is often said that a person’s true character comes out in times of distress or pain. I think that’s largely true and I think it explains who Michael McCarthy was that even in great suffering he remained grateful, thoughtful and wise.

Ron West, actor/artistic associate at the Second City

RIP Michael McCarthy. I’m actually having difficulty looking at your photographs on Facebook, and not because you’ve got more hair than I do.

It’s not because we had a lot of adventures together like that time we met in New York; that time the touring company did Go Ask Alice; that time we stayed up all night at the O’Hare Hyatt to write some stupid industrial show; that time you got electrocuted and had to go to the ER; that time we saw Dead Poet’s Society and you and Jill liked it and Samantha and I didn’t.

(I am aware that the events I’m describing might not make sense to the reader. I don’t care. I’m writing to Michael.)

Like that time we stood in line to get John Cleese’s autograph at the Palmer House; that time we took our tiny audience on a tour of the building and you showed them how you changed backstage; that time you were so nervous about playing the guitar because Todd Rundgren was in the audience; those times the friends of Danny Breen gathered; that time my Dad improvised with us in a wedding scene; that time we COLLIDED in the dark on Mainstage and I had to go to the ER; that time I laughed at you, the serious little boy in traditional Nigerian garb. That time in LA when you helped me when I thought I was beyond help.

Like that time we figured out how to do the medley in Big News; that time we took a train to Budapest, Hungary, on our one free day in Europe, obsessing about what gift we were going to bring our wives; that time you appeared in a movie as Jimmy Brogan, and said, “I can’t get a job as a writer: at least I can play one.” Oh, and that time I didn’t go to your third wedding and brought you Big Luck.

Like that time a few days ago when we Facetimed and you were still on this plane. I thought maybe you had fallen and broken a tooth, but it was just the angle of the camera. You said, “I’m always interested in hearing what you’re doing.”

No, I’m having trouble looking at your picture for selfish reasons: I couldn’t have possibly been as good a friend to you as you were to me. I know you are in a better place now, writing songs with George Harrison and John Lennon.

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Gregory Hollimon and Michael McCarthy with other Second City cast members. - COURTESY GREGORY HOLLIMON


Gregory Hollimon, actor/comedian

The year was 1993, I was 36 years old. Mike was 33. He and I, we were driving together across the country from Chicago to LA. And before our big exodus had gotten underway Mike says to me,”Hey–should we go see the GRAND CANYON?” I replied: “Sure . . . Hell yeah . . . Let’s do it man.” I’d never been to the Grand Canyon before and now . . . Well, now this was going to be a real adventure!

So–off we go–and after some days later we ARRIVE at the Grand Canyon. First, I gotta tell ya’–and pardon my non-French–but that Grand Canyon is effin’ huge! Mike and I, we were just standing from the observation point–looking at it. I mean to be honest, we may as well have been looking at a postcard. It was so huge and vast–It just–It just didn’t seem real.

So after ten minutes of being stymied and in awe at this wonder of nature Mike says: “Do you want to walk to the bottom of the Grand Canyon?” I look at Michael like he’s crazy and I boldly say: “Do I wanna walk to the bottom–DO YOU wanna walk to the bottom of the Grand Canyon?”

You see, at the time I was a bit haughty because there were only a few things in life that I genuinely took pride in. One was my dancing ability and the other was my rollerskating ability. And the other my ability to walk long distances. You see, before I became an actor/artist I read electric meters for the light company–I did that for 12 years. I walked all the time through rain, sleet, and snow, and sometimes I’d walk literally ALL DAY LONG.

But, more than that–I had toured with Michael and in ALL my years of being around this man, I had never ONCE observed him doing anything remotely physical. Not only that, but at that time, Mike was also a smoker. HE DIDN’T SMOKE LIKE A CHIMNEY–BUT HE SMOKED. But I never KNEW that McCarthy had ran and hiked. I never saw the man jogging before.

Now, to say Michael was a great human being is an understatement
He was compassionate, empathetic, intellectual, intelligent, wise, and funny. On this day, I discovered a few important lessons. The first was: anyone can walk down into the Grand Canyon. The second was: walking out of the Grand Canyon is a totally different story. The third discovery I made was: I didn’t really know Michael McCarthy like I thought I did. In a nutshell: Michael McCarthy got me out of that damn canyon.

See–as I was slowly coming up and out of the canyon I found myself doin’ a lot of stopping. In other words, taking a lot of unnecessary breaks. Stopping to rest after only going just a tenth of a mile. You can’t do that–you gotta keep putting one foot in front of the other. I was a walker–I knew the rules–you got to keep it movin’. Frankly, my friends, I was starting to get nervous and I really didn’t know if I was gonna make it, going up was waaaay harder than going down. And on top of that, once it got dark, you couldn’t see the trail. And a badly misjudged step and it’s a 6,000-foot drop to Splatsville.

But Mike had a great idea–he suggested we run lines to this two-man show we’d performed in Ireland at the Dublin Theatre Festival. It was called The R.I.C. Show (Revelations, Indictments & Confession) and we were directed by the great Nate Herman.

It was in the running of our lines continuously–speaking our staged dialogue–back n’ forth that ultimately took my mind off of the walking.
And soon, I fell into a rhythm. Otherwise I’d still be in the f*cking Grand Canyon right now tryin’ to get home.

Now before McCarthy even did ALL of that–before he saved my life by getting me to recite our entire show (about three times) in the course of our ascension to the top–a prior situation of epic proportion occurred as we were steadily descending into the canyon. I had with me a tiny red ghetto blaster (it belonged to Michael), and I’d Purchased a cassette tape in the Grand Canyon gift shop entitled Music To Walk and Listen To The Grand Canyon By. It was a very orchestrated music tape. It was done in a PBS-, National Geographic-style . . . You could hear the sound of a mild bamboo flute.

But, after an hour or so, well frankly, it got kinda boring. And dude, it took about three hours to get to the bottom of the Grand Canyon and I needed something a bit more lively to listen to. So, after an hour, I switched out the cassette tape and popped in a Michael Jackson cassette tape featuring the song “Don’t Stop Til You Get Enough.” I mean, who didn’t like Michael Jackson in 1993.

Way off in the noticeably far distance there was a group of Germans hikers on another trail, and (I think) one of the hikers just didn’t Like Michael Jackson (or maybe he didn’t like me). But this one hiker yells at me across this huge and vast canyon: “HEY BLACK MAN–TURN OFF THE MUSIC!”

Now, I’m not gonna say that the German hiker sounded like a racist when he yelled: “HEY BLACK MAN–TURN OFF THE MUSIC!” In all honesty, I can’t say that. The larger point is he could have left my chocolatey technicolor out of the equation and shouted something sike:
“HEY YOU WITH THE MARVELOUS HEAD OF BONE TURN OFF THE MUSIC!”

But he didn’t, he said: “HEY BLACK MAN–TURN OFF THE MUSIC!” And before I could say: “Is he talking to me?” Michael Clayton McCarthy’s whole body physically vibrated as he yelled out in a clear loud voice that rang out clear across the Bright Angel Trail in the Grand Canyon:

( ( ( ( ( ( BLOW ME !!! ) ) ) ) ) )

If you listen real hard you can probably hear those two words
bouncing throughout the walls of the canyon today. And that my friend is one of a myriad of reasons why Michael Clayton McCarthy is my forever homey dawg!!!

Wendy Mateo, actor/writer/producer

To be loved by Susan Messing is to be loved with fierce kindness, loyalty, and a side of biting wit.
We have gotten to experience not only her artistry but her friendship.

When she met and married Michael, he was all in. Everybody Susan loved, he loved with fierce loyalty too. He took care of them because SHE cared for them. The love between them would always make me choke up, it was #couplegoals for me, mixed between being so happy that she had found her soulmate. Their love was palpable and funny and charming and being around the both of them was a gift to all in their presence.

When Dominizuelan was first gaining some traction, there were a lot of people telling us what they expected of us, what they wanted to hear or see from us, what we “should do,” with our career. We had taken the time to figure out who we were on stage, but when we thought about how we would interpret that in TV, we couldn’t find our footing.

Michael was the first in this industry who told us, who DARED us to believe that simply being US, was enough. He encouraged us to write our own TV pilot, taught us how to do it, and even had us to take his class for free (sorry not sorry Charna).That class will always be a huge part of our journey and it’s because of that one gesture, that four years later we were able to write and direct our short film and are on track to developing our first feature.

We will never ever forget Michael and Susan’s love, nor Michael’s kindness and thoughtfulness. They will always have a place in our story. From the tributes I have read from folks over the last few days, it seems he had the same effect on a great many people. It speaks to his beautifully authentic nature.

Today, we paid a little tribute to Michael outside of their home. With the help of my beautiful theater community, I was able to connect with Academy of Irish Music.

I couldn’t bare the thought of his spirit going off without music. If you followed his posts, you would see how much he loved music and how connected he was to his Irish ancestors, these young women played beautifully. The sun shined on my dear Susan’s face while we listened to music 6 feet apart, thought about Michael’s spirit and I whispered in the language of my own ancestors “Luz y progreso para tu espiritu.” [Light and progress for your spirit, dear Michael].

See you on the next plane.

Tara DeFrancisco, actor/comedian

I don’t know that there is a greater tale of love than the one between Susan Messing and Michael Clayton McCarthy–not only the way and path to which they fell so madly in love but in the way they loved each other every day thereafter.

As with all greats, instead of asking for comfort, he seemed to comfort those losing him through his incredible attitude and thoughtful writing and words. Last night, a few of us raised a glass to wish comfort in his journey and talked about their life together.

One time, when Susan and I were about to do a fun show together, he said casually that we were “Pil Sung.” Not knowing what it meant, I looked it up, and the tab to its definition is strangely still open on my phone. Roughly, it means “a sure thing” or “to be confident of certain victory”–a Korean tenet of Tae Kwon Do. I loved it. knowing that Michael was a black belt (a fact Susan was super hot for), I appreciated it doubly. Reading it further tonight, I was struck to see how very much this thorough, longer entry seems to truly embody HIM as a human–it’s as if the definition in term is who he was, in retrospect showing his cards on how he lived. it’s a bit of a read, but worth it, and I put this forward as my prayer for my dear friend Susan and the journey of her beloved partner traversing worlds, in all things.est in peace, dear Bobcat.

Pil Sung translates as “I am confident of certain victory.” It is not a phrase expressing violence, but rather a statement of personal dedication and challenge issued by an individual to put forth his maximum effort to the limits of his abilities towards his own personal mental growth, spiritual development, physical health, or any other goal to which he may aspire.

To fully grasp this concept, one must realize that it is an embodiment of the five tenets of TaeKwon-Do: Courtesy, Integrity, Perseverance, Self Control and Indomitable Spirit. Learned and practiced together, they make an entire way of living. And so it is with “Pil Sung.”

Courtesy–or thoughtfulness and respect for others, their needs and rights is as bread cast upon the waters. It floats out only to wash ashore to feed us one day in the future. We sow it; we reap it. The ability to pause for a moment and reflect upon the effects of a spoken word, a glance, or an action, and to graciously concede to the inner need of another is man’s source for inner strength. It is courage at its greatest.

Integrity–or the ability to live each day so as not to hide from our face in the mirror each morning, is the inner voice of conscience that guides men to defend and speak out for that unseen spirit of what is right and just.

Perseverance–is that part of stubbornness in the human spirit that makes a man continue his efforts until he either wins or is beaten. It is endurance when there appears to be nowhere to turn and nothing from which to feed. The capacity to steadily persist in a course of action directed towards a goal, in spite of difficulty, must be developed if a man is to improve society’s errors, or if a student is to master himself.

Self Control–is that function of the intellect which channels the powerful emotions of anger, hatred, love and disappointment into productive energy to create and build.

Indomitable Spirit–that aspect of human soul which goes beyond endurance into eternity. Indomitable Spirit is the silent impetus rising from within courage, that has produced genius out of failure and cities out of ashes. It is the pride and will of a people or an individual that will not allow itself to be subdued.

This difference, this ability to see beyond the present and inspire others and ourselves to heroic efforts, enables man’s fighting spirit to exceed the present into eternity.”

The cast of America Lite - COURTESY MARK BELTZMAN

Mark Beltzman, actor

This is the Second City ETC Cast in 1989 with our review America Lite, directed by Nate Herman in the black and white photo and then at the Second City 50th reunion show in 2009. Tonight we lost a member of our immediate family! Michael Clayton McCarthy HE was a GREAT MAN! I lost a brother from another mother who was such huge part of me! I will FOREVER be grateful for our journey together. Del Close, the Second City, Los Angeles, Chicago, Ireland, the Cat Laughs Festival in Kilkenny . . . TWICE! The Illinois Lotto Ball commercials with Jim Ortlieb! Cubs games! Acting in Bleacher Bums in 89 at the Organic Theater and working at Second City AT THE SAME TIME!!! We would do a Friday night show at 9 PM at the Organic and have a cab waiting for us to take us to Second City to be on Stage for the 11 PM show. On Sunday, a 3 PM matinee, a 7 PM show at the Organic Theater with a cab waiting for us to be on stage at Second City for the 9 PM show, and then the 11 PM improv set. What a whirlwind! We were LITERALLY on stage for nine hours every Sunday for three months!!! I will miss you my friend and I LOVE YOU MORE THAN WORDS! It is SO PAINFUL I will not get to say goodbye to you because of this insane pandemic we are living through! Sending much LOVE & ALOHA to Susan Messing, Sofia Mia, and The ENTIRE McCARTHY Clan, as well as, My entire Second City Family during these challenging times!!! XXXOOO

Sheri Flanders, writer/actor/comedian

I first met Michael through the Monday Night Live show at iO with then new director Patrick Newson. To date it remains one of the most fun performances and show runs I have ever participated in, all because of Michael’s kind easy manner.

I remember that the day of the show I was struggling with my allergies badly at that point and hadn’t found a good solution. A fit of uncontrollable coughing so I made the mistake of taking a Benadryl. It stopped the coughing. But it caused a panic attack that caused me to completely blank on my monologue during the show run a few hours before showtime. I had that piece memorized cold and I couldn’t even remember one word, not even the gist of it to improvise it. It was the first and only time in my acting career I had ever completely blanked onstage and I was freaked out. I was scared. And the cast was scared.

Michael was so thoughtful and gracious and he simply trusted me. Another less great theater maker would have exacerbated the situation and turned it into a lifelong fear, but he just trusted me. And I calmed myself and I came out and ran it during the rehearsal and killed the monologue during the show. And I never blanked on a monologue again.

And to my surprise, he was not only still kind and friendly to me, but he invited me back. We all know top tier theater folks that would be all too willing to blacklist someone after that kind of experience. Michael showed me a quiet grace that I am so grateful to have been blessed with, and this community and this world is so much less for the loss of such a wonderful man.

Patrick Newson, actor/comedian/director

Michael McCarthy taught me many things. Sketches should be no longer than five pages. When you exit the stage, exit left. But most importantly the way to succeed in writing comedy is get over yourself. He said that in the long run the show is what’s important. Rather than let me be understood, let’s get the job done. In the end Michael gave me a formula to be successful in this business. Most importantly the audience deserves respect. Whenever we would do a curtain call, he would take the time to block it out. He would express its importance. The last step of our work is putting in front of the audience. At the end of the day we need them as much as they need us. So, they deserve that moment of our attention.

Michelle Marie

During the years I spent as a regular performer in Monday Night Live and POV, I saw many, many displays of Michael’s wit, his intelligence, his humor, his kindness and generosity, his masterful skill in softening the blow of a piece of constructive criticism, the jokes he made at his own expense, and his steadfast conviction that he could make a difference in the world from the stages of a comedy theatre (he was right). All of these memories are outshined by one singular moment.

Near the beginning of a read thru for the latest POV script, Michael paused to tell us that the night before, his stepdaughter Sofia had asked him if he would call her his daughter, and he couldn’t get through saying the words before there were tears in his eyes. In an instant, we were all fighting back tears, too. We had listened to him talk about Sophia during many read thrus and rehearsals, hearing the trials of trying to win over his teenage stepdaughter, always told with love. It was so deeply, heart-wrenchingly beautiful to see in that moment just how much that request meant to him.

This was the greatest part of Michael–his unending love for Susan and Sofia. He felt like the luckiest person on the planet to be with them, and you could see that every single time he spoke about them (which was often). He loved to talk about Susan’s brilliance onstage, her strength as a person, the fact that he thought she was way out of his league, and how grateful he was every day that she chose to be with him.

Jill Talley, Mark Beltzman, Ron West, Ruth Rudnick, and Michael McCarthy in 1990's Ameri-Go-Round. - COURTESY THE SECOND CITY

Preston O’ffill, actor/comedian/director

Michael was an incredible mentor to me during POV, a show that ran at iO for 18 months. I know everyone says this but the team that he created was more than just that, he made a family. That was five years ago and we still are all best friends. If he was here today I’m sure he would hate everyone talking all about him all over, BUT also I have a feeling he wouldn’t mind all the hearts and minds he’s impacted. You are the smartest person I’ve met and you will forever influence my art.

Doug Stevenson, actor

I knew Michael back in the day. I started hanging around the old Chicago Comedy Showcase in that old church on Diversey in about 1980. He was with his group Let’s Have Lunch. Only just met him and soon he was off to SNL to be a writer. I ended up working with a few of his cast mates from that era: Jan Voigts, Tim O’Malley, and Melodie Ranstrom. I also got to know his Ohio college buddy Kevin Burrows who made the trek to Chicago and Second City with him. He began at Second City as their first intern.

I would see him now and again over the years, mostly when our mutual friends were involved. In 2014, I was coming out of a bad patch of unwelcome change, including a protracted stint in the hospital. I needed to get back on stage–to get out and for some much needed “therapy.” I asked Michael if I could be an actor in his staged readings for his sitcom and spec script classes at iO and he welcomed me. I was generally 20+ years older than most of my peers. But I did it, had fun, and often read a variety of interesting characters in one reading–like a sinister mad scientist, a yokel southern governor, and an effete elitist. I made him laugh. He was always complimentary. Once, I read Richard Lewis for a Curb Your Enthusiasm spec script and practiced a little by watching Richard Lewis videos. Michael heaped praise on me at the conclusion, saying that my impression was “uncanny.” He gave me my legs back!

I have been in touch with him and Susan over these last two years. Late last summer I did his mile walk up Lincoln Avenue as part of his support entourage. But things took a bad turn in early February when the drug he was on stopped working. His last post was heartbreaking, as he lamented his difficulty typing through his pain and neuropathy. It was one sentence long. His posts, throughout this ordeal had been priceless. Sad. He was a smart, gracious, good soul who’s kindness restored me.

Rob Putnam

I knew Michael through a spec-writing course I took with him at iO. He was a great person to learn from for many reasons, not the least of which was he’d actually written on shows; he knew what he was talking about. One night after class a few of us went to see him perform improv with his wife, the inimitable and amazing woman Susan Messing. We spoke with him both before and after the show. He seemed genuinely pleased that we came. He had a great heart and a shining, kind nature.

Matt Hovde, former artistic director of the Second City

He was so strong–as a comedian, as a teacher, as an advocate for using comedy to uplift or tear down as needed. My last conversation with him was about one of his DePaul classes. He was no longer able to attend in person but he was still preparing lesson plans, following up with subs, etc. He just cared so much about his students.

Sommer Austin, actor

I realize that I owe much of who I am today to Michael–his teachings, his kindness, and his modeling of an artistic life. I saved all of my notes from his Comedy Writing program at iO that I took in 2007–I managed to hang onto this big stack of papers throughout all of these years and several moves, I just felt very strongly that I had to, they are priceless doctrine to me.

Michael was such a generous and supportive teacher, he never made me feel condescended to as a student, or that I wasn’t funny, or that my comedy was “bad” ever–and looking back on my comedy writing packet and homework that I turned in, a lot of the stuff I wrote was undoubtedly rough. But Michael was giving us creative space to play, to experiment, to come into our own sense of humor and point of view.

I think one of the most important concepts that Michael instilled in us was that we needed to have a sense of “righteous indignation,” that we must cultivate and never lose this fire within, and Michael modeled that it was possible to be righteously indignant and not succumb to bitterness, that there is a space within us that can hold both this outrage as well as curiosity, love, and gratitude for this precious thing called life. And I, in turn, am eternally grateful to him.

Blayr Austin, actor

Michael made everyone in my screenwriting class feel valuable and that our scripts had potential. I remember him offering extra support to students in need after class. His wry wit about his experience in show business always made us laugh. His kindness will be missed so much.

Justin Parlette

I was late to the Michael McCarthy party. I was his student the term he was diagnosed, and while I only had him as my teacher for a few weeks, he persuaded me that getting up early and writing before my brain was beaten down by the day was a great idea, so for the last two years I’ve been up at 6 AM reading newspapers and writing jokes. Not sure if I should thank him or curse him for doing that to me, but I can not deny he changed my life. I’d like to think it was for the better, but I’m writing this at three in the afternoon. 6 AM me might be less generous.

Shaun Clayton

It’s rare to meet a person twice. I first met Michael Clayton McCarthy in 2005 when I was living in Los Angeles trying to be a comedy writer. Naturally, I wanted to take a class, and Michael McCarthy was the one teaching the scriptwriting class at iO West. He was kind, knew what the hell he was talking about, and was grounded in reality, which was rare for people in Los Angeles. Shortly after the class finished with our live readings, I had to move back to Tucson. Like many people who move to LA, i had completely run out of money, food, and shelter. Michael was kind enough to mail me his notes and talk to me over the phone about my script and about me and how I was doing, despite the distance.

Jump ahead to 2015. I’m living in Chicago with a new start on life, and decide to get back into writing scripts. I look up the classes on scriptwriting at iO and there’s Michael McCarthy teaching the same class again, except now in Chicago. I take his class and he was the same person, just as kind, just as sharp, just as generous. I didn’t have to leave the city immediately after the class so I was fortunate enough to continue to work with him, writing for his POV stage show, attending his Comedy Salon, taking him up on his offer to see Emo Philips perform for free, visiting his house for barbecues and discussions about writing, following him on his cancer walk, and enough stories to fill several posts. I got to experience so much of this really awesome person.

Michael was a very talented writer who absolutely gave a shit about his craft. He also had an impressive list of credits, from Sesame Street to SNL. More important than that, though, was that he was kind. He cared about other people. He wanted other people with a passion for comedy writing and performing to succeed, and would do what he could to help that along.
He had the best qualities of a human being and a good friend. I will miss him incredibly.

Dan Dore, actor/writer/director

Michael has started the writing program at iO (formerly Improv Olympic). He left and Nate Hermann was his replacement. Michael moved back in 2012 and resumed his post. So, I went through the Pilot Presentation class with him.

We went over good and bad pilots. Cheers is one of the best. We watched a bad/poor one called Eureka. It was all over the place. When I write anything to this day, I know not to do too much, like that Eureka show.

He would put up a one-day workshop on how to find an agent, a couple of times in the following years. He’d try to give everyone insight to succeed.

Then, my best, most influential time with him, he created a show called POV (then PiOV because it was at iO.) A friend of mine told me about the chance to be a writer on it. Anyone could submit. (I qualified as an “anyone.” I was still chasing comedy–I still am.)

So, you could write jokes and/or sketches. You were then invited to the read-throughs, the performance, and the meeting after the show. People could pitch what they wanted to write for next week. And the person running it all was Michael McCarthy. He created this world and opportunity for us. So it was my first chance to be inside some kind of writer’s room.

(Side note: I did ask at one point, who’s directing the show. And he said, almost befuddled: “Me!” So that’s when I found out he was directing and producing or that’s what his responsibility was as a director, running the writer’s room.)

Michael worked on SNL in the 80’s. We all knew that. We’d submit sketches and he would pick them. This would be the same for jokes, but with the sketches, he’d write them on the white board. So, you’d see him in real time pick your sketch. He’d start to write on the board, and suddenly he’d be writing your name. (If you couldn’t make the meeting, he’d send out the script to everyone who made the show. So then you’d scan to see what sketch he picked.)

It was such an honor if he picked it. He was on SNL. Someone who was in the thick of the comedy world was choosing my sketch!

I’m not bragging, and is it a brag, but one show he pick three of my sketches in a row–in one show. Another writer looked at me, and gave me the look–as if to say, impressive. That was a good feeling. It was Michael McCarthy choosing that many sketches. He had faith in me, and shared the same humor.

I’d pick up on Michael’s humor too. It was more real, with that political tinge. (He was in Ireland, so maybe that Irish/British, subtle humor was in there.) I shared his vision. His humor. Or, it was the Chicago humor. Whatever it was, I picked up on it.

Oh, and editing. People would hand in long sketches, myself included. And he’d say make it no longer than three pages. Get to it quicker. (Another Michael quote here, he said to us all: “Edit MotherF***er”. He said it in a supportive way.)

I’d hand in so much material, or just participated so much, he then asked me to direct. Now that was an honor. He was letting me direct. The same guy who I asked months ago, “Who’s directing?”

He let me be an actor in it too. Even once was an honor there. He let me do every position there, without me even asking for him. He put his faith in me. I got to be his utility man. He gave the same opportunities to others too. It was such a supportive environment. He created that.
This happened for me all of 2016 and 2017. In 2017, he invited the writers and cast to his house, for Memorial Day. That was such a nice time. Now I was invited into his home. You make mental notes along the way. How is this person’s style? How’s he running things? How is he as a person? More and more, you’d see someone you respect, in so many aspects. Going there was one of the biggest highlights for me that year. It was a comedy-thing, but it was a personal-thing too.

During my last couple years in Chicago, Michael created “The Salon.” It was every Sunday at the Annoyance, on Belmont. They let us hang out in the bar area before shows started. Michael was continuing and strengthening the comedy community. He was giving everyone a chance to take ownership of their work, their output, their effort into their writing. It was Michael creating his support.

I always looked at it as someone who from here, went elsewhere and succeeded (LA/NY/Ireland), and wanted to go to the place he liked most, Chicago. He was back, and strengthening his ties. the community, the comedy. He was teaching at DePaul, he was married, he gushed of his wife and (step)daughter. I could see he put in all the work in life, and was just reaping the rewards in his maturing years. That was another great influence, or inspiration, for me.

He told me how he asked out Susan Messing, his wife too. He said he told her to quit “farting around.” I was unsure of this romantic wording, but it worked. I then think to myself, is this how I’m supposed to ask out my future wife? Would I ever choose those words? It worked for him. If something is a success, you have to consider it.

I moved to California in 2018. I went to see a show called Top Story Weekly in North Hollywood. I was told we could submit to that show too, like POV, so I did. I got a joke in on my first submission. I talked to the showrunner, Philip. It turns out Michael McCarthy stated this show! He did it before returning to Chicago. So, now I had this connection with Michael in a different state, and with a different group of people.

I’d keep up on Michael’s health updates over Facebook too, over the past couple of years. He’d share what he was going through. It was inspiring to see that too. I’d see all the updates while I was studying at the Second City in Hollywood. I’d see Michael’s picture on the wall there too.

This year–just this past month, I finally got up the nerve and submitted my own show. I’d put up a weekly, current events show called This Month, This Month (like Last Week, Tonight–in the name). I knew I could do it, because I saw Michael’s process. I saw how he ran things. If I was going to do this–it was because of him. We had the go-ahead, and the first show was set for April 6th. It was the day before I’d head home for the Easter/Dyngus Day break. (Dyngus Day is a thing in Buffalo, NY.)

Well, the show got canceled due to the coronavirus. (I moved the flight too. No Dyngus Day.) When we were preparing for the show, I told everyone, it was because of a guy named Michael McCarthy. So, I thought of him the whole time. There’s no show yet, but we’ll get to reschedule. All of live comedy is being put on hold. We’ll have to wait for a chance to get back out there again. And we’ll get to do it, because of, and in honor of Michael McCarthy.

Thank you, Michael.

Lisa Linke, actor

Michael was one of my writing instructors, and I had the pleasure of working on a weekly live news show with him briefly at iO in Chicago many years ago. He was brilliant, hilarious, passionate about justice, wry and compassionate. It’s such a deep loss to the world that he’s gone.

He had the uncanny ability to give you a tangible framework to accomplish something that seemed insurmountable (writing your first spec script!), and encouraged you fiercely along the way. Often you find artists/teachers who are unwilling to share all of their knowledge. Michael was the antithesis of this–he shared everything he knew freely, even getting his colleagues and connections to help beginning writers understand the terrain of a career in this field.

In no small way, he helped shape the writer and writing teacher that I became–I think of what he taught me any time I approach a script, whether it is my own, or someone else’s. In that sense, his craft will live on forever, though I’d much prefer if he did. v

Michael McCarthy onstage with his wife, Susan Messing. - JERRY A. SCHULMAN

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Remembering Michael McCarthySheri Flanderson April 29, 2020 at 2:15 pm Read More »

Improvising at a distanceKerry Reidon April 29, 2020 at 4:10 pm

When the Upright Citizens Brigade announced that it was closing its training center and theater in Manhattan last week, it illustrated the challenges of keeping improv and sketch alive during a pandemic shutdown. But for several institutions and individual instructors, Zooming over to the online world has opened up some new possibilities and also allowed them to keep an income stream coming in as their stages remain dark.

It seems counterintuitive, for sure. As Jack Helbig notes in his Reader article this week on UCB’s closing, “most of the games created by Viola Spolin that birthed modern improvisational theater are intended for intensely social situations where people are on stage, together, interacting at much closer range than six feet.”

But after speaking to a few improv and storytelling instructors and sitting in on a drop-in improv class offered through Second City, I can see that there are some advantages–or at least not completely insurmountable disadvantages–to the online forum.

Jimmy Carrane, who has been teaching improv and performing solo shows in Chicago for decades, made the leap online initially with great reluctance. “I am a very resistant person and very kind of old school,” he says. Or, as he wrote on his blog, “I would rather walk around filled with gloom and doom than take action. (Side note: I don’t like change. And there’s enough change going on in the world that I could not accept another one).”

Yet only a couple weeks into the process of teaching online, Carrane says he can already see the benefits. “My method of improv is the art of slow comedy,” he says. “So it’s really about slowing down. You don’t have to do crazy scenes. It’s more relationship based.” One of the games that Carrane has been teaching for years, which he calls “Documentary,” even starts out with two people addressing an invisible camera and introducing themselves and then improvising a story about how they met. “When you use stuff like that online, it really works because–well, it’s improv, right? You use what you’ve got, so you’re embracing what is already there.”

Abby Wagner, vice president of the Second City Training Center, notes that they had been offering online classes for nearly a decade, but they had primarily focused on writing. “A lot of sketch writing, writing screenplays, writing satire.” But the company shifted to offering nearly all of their live in-person classes, including improv and musical improvisation, in the online realm.

One thing that has changed is the running time for several of the courses. “Usually our classes last for eight weeks and go on for three hours,” notes Wagner. “To be more accessible to people who are maybe uncertain about when they’re going back to work or who don’t live here, we’ve added a ton of 90-minute drop-in classes, or four-week classes.”

I was a fly on the wall for the Second City drop-in class I attended. (The dozen students and the instructor, Jonny Nelson, knew I was listening in, but I was on mute and off camera the entire time.) The classes use Google Meet, which provides live captioning, thus making it easier to follow along.

Most of the students were from out of state, including participants from Hawaii, California, New York, Florida, Ohio, and Pennsylvania, as well as a few from the Chicago suburbs. After a quick tutorial on the functions of Google Meet and explaining that the chat bar would be used for providing improv suggestions, Nelson told his students “If anything feels silly or awkward or weird, you’re doing it right. This work is entirely about ensemble.” He also cautioned them about avoiding “mean-spirited” choices in character.

Over 90 minutes, the students played three different improv games that focused on listening skills and the basic building blocks of “yes, and”–whispering back a line that the person before them had said and figuring out how to be specific with details of where they were in their online improvised world. “Specificity is your friend,” Nelson reminded them. “Once you’ve narrowed down where you are, it actually gives you a lot more room to play.”

Given that few of them had any training in improv at the start, it went surprisingly well, and I found myself wondering how much of that was enhanced by the fact that the technology required them to focus closely on each other onscreen to keep the thread going.

“Don’t plan on what you’re saying next,” cautioned Nelson. “As humans, our brains want to plan and plan. Slow it down, listen, and absorb.” In a time of uncertainty and social distancing, learning to be here now and just stay in the moment seems especially useful.

Wagner notes that Second City is now reaching students who not only are geographically removed from a Second City training outpost, but may have other barriers. “We just sent out student surveys and I was reading some that said ‘Oh, I never would have had the guts to go to a stand-up class, but I loved trying this online. It felt safe.'”

Dave Maher has been through some stuff, including a weeks-long diabetic coma nearly six years ago that formed the basis for his solo, Dave Maher Coma Show. So surviving a quarantine maybe doesn’t seem that bad by comparison, though he notes with a laugh, “I was unconscious for the coma.” Now he’s offering online versions of classes he’s taught at the Annoyance for a few years. “For me, my stuff translates pretty well to online,” he says. “There’s not a huge in-the-moment performative element.”

Maher currently teaches storytelling and offers a how-to class on producing your own solo work via Zoom for the Annoyance. “I also teach a class called Unblocking the Artist Within which is kind of my version of The Artist’s Way,” he says. “It’s for people who are struggling to be creative, and just giving them the tools to do that.”

Maher says he and the rest of the Annoyance teaching team focused on “actually providing value to people and not just using [the classes] as a money grab. People also seem to want bite-size things, so how can we shorten classes, and how can we offer them for cheap?” As a touring solo performer, in practical terms, the classes also “serve the purpose of getting my name out there and letting people know I do more than just teach classes.” But even after the shutdown, Maher says, “My plan is to keep this stuff going as at least a supplement to the in-person stuff.”

Meantime, he says he’s trying to adapt the material to the current reality. “A big part of the being creative and unblocking class is talking about how you spend your time, being accountable, and stuff like that. So being able to mention ‘Hey, I know time passes really weirdly right now, so what are the unique properties of our days and how can we engage with them?’ seems useful. I don’t have any answers for that, but staying open to it is at least something I’m mindful of.”

For Carrane, the online technology itself stretches the mindfulness muscles. “I had something really interesting happen which I thought was great in a recent class. They were doing a scene and all of a sudden, one of the actors had their screen freeze up. The other actor in the scene assumed, because she wasn’t responding to her, that her scene partner was angry with her. So she addressed that and was affected by that. And I thought ‘Wow, that’s really good listening.'”

Wagner says, “Even when we go back and have these live classes, we’re pretty much planning on still having the ability to do this. If you can’t come or the weather is bad, you turn on the webcam and you can be in the room.”

For Carrane, the online experience to which he was so initially resistant has proven to be a welcome extension of the community he’s always sought in the improv world. As he wrote on his blog, “Maybe that is one of the gifts we will get from this whole pandemic situation–new priorities of what is really important. But, just like predicting when the virus will end, it’s too early to tell.” v

Jimmy Carrane

Carrane offers six-week online improv courses, as well as storytelling coaching. Jimmycarrane.com

The Second City

Online courses for adults, teens, and kids in improv, writing, stand-up, film, and more. Secondcity.com

The Annoyance

In addition to Maher’s classes, the Annoyance offers online courses in puppetry, props, voiceover, and stand-up, as well as a class on writing for late night with Peter Grosz, a writer for, well, Late Night with Seth Meyers. Theannoyance.com

iO

Classes on satire, improvised monologues, and creating personal narrative are on the iO online menu, as well as two specialized online writing classes–one focused on building a packet of sketches for Saturday Night Live, the other on creating a portfolio for talk shows. Ioimprov.com

ComedySportz Chicago

While in quarantine, the improv games troupe offers online training for businesses on team building, communication, and brainstorming. cszchicago.com

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Improvising at a distanceKerry Reidon April 29, 2020 at 4:10 pm Read More »

My favorite thingsSalem Collo-Julinon April 29, 2020 at 7:30 pm

Stay-home edicts and orders preventing Illinois residents from public congregation have only been in place for about a month as I write this, but people are already feeling the effects of living like Emily Dickinson (albeit with access to a 24/7 news cycle and grocery delivery). Dickinson is perhaps one of our most famous American homebodies, but even the confines of her father’s house in late-19th-century Massachusetts was inspiration enough for her to come up with worldly and lascivious lines like “Rowing in Eden — / Ah, the sea / Might I moor — Tonight — / In thee!” (from her poem number 249, aka “Wild Nights — Wild Nights!”).

While most of us are, rightfully, just dealing with the juggle of the new, some can see our stay-home efforts as an opportunity for taking stock. Some of us are fortunate to have people and pets living with us with whom we’re excited to spend more time, but most of us privileged enough to have shelter can point to at least one thing that makes our home a good place to be.

I asked a group of notable Chicagoans to share some of their favorite items in their house and tell us about the things that have made this time a little easier. They all provided their own photos, and some had reflections about the experience of being in the world during this troubling time.

JERRY BOYLE

JERRY BOYLE
Attorney and National Lawyers Guild Chicago legal observer
Object: a painting by Jerry’s goddaughter, Zoharia Lev Drizin

Jerry shared a painting that his goddaughter Zoharia (now in college) gave him when she was in second grade. “Zoharia is the first daughter of my former roommates, and I was her Ba’al HaBeracha–I gave the blessing at her naming ceremony. Christians know these traditions as godfather and baptism, and we often use godfather/daughter so other people get the relationship. She’s a freshman . . . majoring in environmental studies, and I got to cover her as a legal observer at an environmental protest last year. I’m so proud of her. I love her to death, and seeing her painting every morning when I get out of the shower reminds me of her and her two sisters (who also have names beginning with Z–we call them the three Zs), and reminds me that children are our greatest blessing. And they are Gen Z, and awesome, and our future, and we owe it to them to leave them a world that is as much a blessing to them as they have been to us. It’s a good way to start the day, at least for a guy who grew up in a big Irish family, in neighborhoods full of big Irish families, and especially when I’m quarantined at home alone. Children are a precious gift, even if they aren’t ours, and even if we can’t see them in person.”

DWAYNE KENNEDY

DWAYNE KENNEDY
Emmy-winning producer, comedian, and south side native
Objects: remote control, television

Dwayne sent us a photo of his remote control and television, familiar items for most of us these days. “Let’s just go with the picture of the TV. It’s the closest I ever want to be to visiting anybody or anybody visiting me . . . and that was even before the pandemic!”

SALOME CHASNOFF

SALOME CHASNOFF
Filmmaker and arts educator, founder of Beyondmedia and member of the PO Box Collective
Objects: Salome’s bed, a mannequin in Salome’s house

“Instead of jumping out of bed every morning to get to work as I’ve done most of my life, I’ve been hanging in bed for hours, reading, like I have all the time in the world. My memory foam pillow has made this delicious behavior extra special. I just finished On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous [a novel by Ocean Vuong] and I’m starting The Shape of the Ruins [by Juan Gabriel Vasquez]. We’ve had the mannequin around forever. Our daughter used her in photo shoots in high school. I put her in the window to help me participate in a local quarantine project, #neighbors4abolition–a way to vocalize our protest against people being held in prisons and jails that are quickly turning into death camps. I change her outfit when the spirit moves me.”

SHARLENE KING

SHARLENE KING
User-experience designer and information architect
Objects: dinosaur costume, cat castle, resistance band platform

Sharlene shared a few items built around the inspirational theme of making this time work for you: “I’m really digging the cat castle I built out of old cardboard boxes. All I used to build it was wood glue. I used a large bowl and some pots to cut the different holes out. All the wood I’ve scrounged and the tools I’ve accumulated over time since I was a student at SAIC 20 years ago means I’ve been building wood things during this time. One of my favorite projects is this resistance band platform that lets me do squats, deadlifts, and shoulder presses again. I’m doing a lot of Zoom calls these days and the costume is sure to bring a smile to someone’s face. I’ve also been able to help out friends with kids by reading them books or talking about dinosaurs. It is impossible not to be adorable if you dance in the costume.”

RICH KOZ

RICH KOZ (aka SVENGOOLIE)
Television host and creature of the night
Object: art by Tom Richmond for Mad Magazine (published in 2018)

“This is the original Tom Richmond art for the Svengoolie Mad Magazine satire that was presented to me as a birthday gift by the guys of my TV crew. It makes me feel happy. It was an honor to be spoofed in Mad, and it reminds me of the great people I work with that I look forward to being back with again–hopefully soon!”

DAN SINKER

DAN SINKER
Author, publisher, founder of Punk Planet, and cohost of the Says Who podcast
Object: Dan’s Singer Heavy Duty sewing machine

Dan has been making masks with his Singer. “It started with just making masks for my family using scrap fabric around our house and then I kept unearthing boxes of fabric that my wife Janice and I had collected over the years. We’ve sent over 150 masks out now to people we know, people we don’t, frontline nurses, an entire preschool class. It’s become my morning ritual now to get up and cut and sew masks before school and work starts. I’m always making things–though mostly online–so this is the perfect mindless busy work for me right now. And, it helps people. I know how to sew (thanks 1980s public school home economics) and usually make the kids’ halloween costumes–bought this machine a few years ago after the ancient one we had finally broke–but that’s the totality of it. When I just wanted to make masks for us, I had to look up the sewing machine manual online to remember how to thread the bobbin once the one that was in there ran out. But now this machine sits on our dining room table, moved to the floor for meals, and then back up for another round of stitching.”

KAINA

KAINA Musician, whose 2019 album Next to the Sun made the Reader‘s Best Chicago Albums of the 2010s list
Objects: plants, a Nintendo Switch

“It’s been really nice waking up to a whole bunch of plants in my room. They’re still living, and tending to them and paying attention to their habits has been a nice way of staying in touch with life as it moves. I got a lot of these from the local store Plant Shop Chicago, which is one of my favorite businesses to support–I picked up a few during quarantine since they’re offering pickup and drop-off. Some of these are cuttings from friends so it’s nice to have that reminder of socialization too!”

Kaina also sent a photo of the Nintendo Switch, a gadget that a lot of people have discovered as a great distraction. “My best friends Paige and Sen gifted this console to me for my birthday two years ago and it’s really felt like a blessing. Animal Crossing recently came out and it’s such a peaceful and cute game so it’s allowed me to calm down my everything-is-burning feelings. I use it a lot to pass time during drives on tour so it’s nice to tap into that zoning-out feeling while things are bad.”

JOHN CUSACK

JOHN CUSACK
Former Evanstonian, actor, activist
Object: white crystal

Mr. Cusack graciously sent me this image, which includes a white crystal that seems to have a prominent place in his home. While he wasn’t available to chat about his object, white crystals are well known in the spiritual community as a clearing stone that attracts good light and energy and invites peace into a home. Even Emily Dickinson could get into this: as she wrote in poem number 1510, “How happy is the little Stone / That rambles in the Road alone, / And doesn’t care about Careers / And Exigencies never fears.” v

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Riding out the sadness on the (fantasy) gig poster of the weekSalem Collo-Julinon April 29, 2020 at 11:00 am

cocorosie_flood.jpg

This week’s fantasy gig poster arises from the disappointments that many concertgoers are facing. Illustrator and designer Heather Anderson made this image in response to a show that was canceled out from under her.

Heather says, “My boyfriend bought us tickets to our first-ever CocoRosie concert in April. We’ve loved them for years, so we knew our first show would be moving and beautiful.” Unfortunately, that Metro concert was canceled, but Heather turned her loss into our gain: a fantasy gig poster advertising an imaginary CocoRosie show at the Empty Bottle in September 2020. It wouldn’t be the band’s first time at the Bottle, if it happened: Reader critic Peter Margasak wrote about CocoRosie when they opened for 90 Day Men there in 2004.

“We are appreciating and feeling every moment fully,” Heather says. That’s not just a good way to approach a concert but also a helpful daily meditation. In that spirit, Heather invites us to check out local nonprofit Housing Opportunities & Maintenance for the Elderly (H.O.M.E.), which provides valuable services to Chicago’s senior citizens, including home repair and free rides to the grocery store. Many seniors who benefit from H.O.M.E.’s programs are low income, and monetary donations are especially welcome now.



The Reader continues to accept submissions of fantasy gig posters to be featured in this column. To participate, please e-mail [email protected] with your name, contact information, and your original design or drawing (you can attach a JPG or PNG file or provide a download link). We won’t be able to publish every submission, but we’ll feature as many as possible while the pandemic continues. Your submission can also include a nonprofit, fundraiser, or action campaign that you’d like to bring to the attention of our readers.

Not everybody can make a fantasy gig poster, of course, but anybody with a few bucks to spare can support the out-of-work staffers at Chicago’s music venues–here’s our list of fundraisers. And don’t forget record stores! The Reader has also published a list of local stores that will let you shop remotely.


ARTIST: Heather Anderson
FANTASY GIG: CocoRosie at the Empty Bottle on Sat 9/12
ARTIST INFO: thisnewforest.com
NPO TO KNOW: H.O.M.E.

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Riding out the sadness on the (fantasy) gig poster of the weekSalem Collo-Julinon April 29, 2020 at 11:00 am Read More »