Compass Players | |
---|---|
Genre | Improvisation cabaret theatre comedy |
Date of premiere | 1955 |
Location | Chicago,Illinois, United StatesSt. Louis,Missouri, United States |
Creative team | |
Co-founder | David Shepherd |
Co-founder | Paul Sills |
The Compass Players (or Compass Theater) was animprovisationaltheatrerevue active from 1955 to 1958 inChicago andSt. Louis.[1] Founded byDavid Shepherd andPaul Sills, it is considered to be the first improvisational theater in the United States.[2]
The Compass Players, founded byDavid Shepherd andPaul Sills, was the first Improvisational Theatre in America.[2] It began July 8, 1955 as a storefront theater at 1152 E. 55th near theUniversity of Chicago campus. They presented improvised plays.[3]
Shepherd, in Mark Siska's documentaryCompass Cabaret ’55, about the birth of modern improvisation, stated his reasons for founding the Compass Players, “Theater in New York was very effete and based on three-act plays and based on verbiage and there was not much action,” he said. “I wanted to create a theater that would drag people off the street and seat them not in rows but at tables and give them something to drink, which was unheard of in [American] theater.”[4][2]
Previously, Shepherd and Sills foundedPlaywrights Theatre Club, along with Eugene Troobnick, and employed improvisational theater forms, namedTheater Games, originally created and developed by Sills' mother,Viola Spolin. These same games were employed to develop material for the Compass Players.[5]
Initially, scenes were presented only once, but some of the players grew interested in polishing material into finished pieces. For example,Mike Nichols andElaine May created many of their signature scenes in this manner.Shelley Berman also found that he could create solo routines by showing one half of telephone conversations.[6][7]
The Compass Players also opened its doors at the Crystal Palace in St. Louis, whereTheodore J. Flicker, Nichols and May, along withDel Close, codified a further set of principles to guide improvisational players.[8]
Sills would co-foundThe Second City[2] and Shepherd would return to New York City to create and produce a variety of improv forms including his Improvisation Olympics (ImprovOlympic).[9][2]
Nichols and May went on to New York, performing material largely derived from their Compass days.[2] Close was featured in Flickers' Broadway musical comedyThe Nervous Set, and afterwards developed his long-form improvisation the Harold.[10]
(Please note: the following sources were used to cite and authenticate the above list of Compass Players)