Archive for the ‘I Miss High School’ Category

Taking a Side Step…

Wednesday, May 14th, 2008

Part of the ongoing Origins of CIC series by Founder and Executive Producer Angie McMahon.

One of the first CIC Sponsored Troupes, and basically the founding fathers of the company, was a sketch group named “I, Miss High School.” Members through the years were:

Tom McMahon (2000-2004)
Angie Farruggia (McMahon) (2000-2004)
Melissa Freidman (Sept 2000- Oct2000)
Rodney Hood (Sept 2000-Nov 2000)
Catherine Pappas (Head of Casting at ABC’s Wife Swap) (2000-2002)
Bryan Heffron (http://www.carverskateboards.com) (2000-2002)
Gus Richter (brother of Andy Richter) (2000-2002)
Lilly Alison (Second City Tour Co, Annoyance Company Member) (2000-2001)
Sampson Croupen (The Southpaw Sam McClowski Show) (2000-2002)
Marz Timms (Pimprov) (2002-2003)
Matt Sabo (2002-2003)
Jin Kim (2002-2004)
Jo-Elle Muchnick (2002-2003)

Catherine, Bryan, Gus, Lilly, Tom, Sampson, and Myself went to the 3rd Annual Del Close Marathon at the UCB Theater in NYC as a sketch group. It was our first Comedy Festival and the first time a CIC sponsored troupe would go to a festival. It was also the last year UCB invited Sketch groups to perform as part of the Del Close Marathon. We were given two spots, 8:30pm on the Main Stage (at that time the only stage) on Saturday Night, right after The Annoyance show, and 9:30am Sunday Morning.

We prepared, over prepared and would fight over whose scenes were in and whose scenes where out. Made tables and charts to make sure everyone got equal stage time. And over all didn’t sleep much in the days leading up to the show.

Highlight sketches from the show included:

-A monologue Lilly wrote (Lilly at the time was 17 years old) about meeting Horatio Sanz in the Bathroom “…so maybe they could do a line of coke together or whatever.” (Horatio had only a month or so before been asked to join the cast of SNL from the Second City stage. So he wasn’t super famous yet, and he was in attendance at the show. He heard Lilly’s monologue, or at least heard about it, and we got to hang out with him, Chris Kattan, and a couple other future SNL cast members, like Amy Poehler and Rachel Dratch).

-A monologue I wrote called “My Name is Judy” that would later be turned into my one women show “Judy In Disguise with Glasses”

AND

-A sketch Sam wrote called “The Southpaw Sam McClowski Show” that would later be turned into CIC’s first Production, as well as our First show at Frankie J’s on Broadway.

Friends and family and everyone swear they didn’t post the following comment, but this is what an online user posted about our show:

“I Miss High School stole the show the night I was there. Southpaw Sam McClowski was a bit I would have liked to see all night long.”

And thus begins the saga of Southpaw.

In the Begining

Tuesday, May 15th, 2007

From
TimeOut Chicago

”Like a strong improv scene, the Playground’s history continues to be created by everyone involved. What started as merely a place to play has become, as Barbera puts it, “a more mature theater”—the breeding ground for powerhouse ensembles (American Dream) and similar offshoot companies (Chemically Imbalanced Comedy, pH Productions). As for the future? “We’re improvisers, not people running a theater,” he says. “We have to be able to make mistakes and learn from those mistakes. Otherwise, we’re just gonna suck.”

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First of all let me say congrats to The Playground for 10 great years.

Second with all due respect to Steve Heisler of TimeOut please let me explain why we are not an offshoot of the Playground.

——————————–

Here is how the whole thing started. I (Angie) had graduated from Second City’s Conservatory Program where I met my (now husband) boyfriend Tom. I was performing in Tony and Tina’s Wedding with Catherine Pappas, and I was taking an improv class at the Annoyance (my second time through Annoyance, I was having a hard time finding my next step in Improv but could not afford to join another year long program). After the second day of class one of the fellas in class (Rodney) made an announcement. His friend who owned a bar was looking for some entertainment on Saturday nights. Would anyone want to help him our in putting up some kind of an improv show.

I said sure, I’ll meet you at the bar and take a look. We met, and two weeks later we had our first show. Cat and I were coming straight from T N T’s and Tom was working the door. Rodney was the host (also he is the guy that named the show Chemically Imbalanced Comedy). The first three groups were Bare, Sirens, and LFO. Strangely enough Myself, Rodney, and Catherine had never even heard of the Playground until 3 or so shows in when one of the members came to our show to flyer our audience.

It all worked out in the wash in the end. But I can not honestly say we started because of the Playground the way they claim they started because of IO. We started more out of boredom and a need to find a place for ourselves. Being that CIC is 7 years old and starting our 8th season in September it was not like a the Playground had been around for years and years before us.

It wasn’t until after Rodney left (only 4 months after the start of all of this) that Cat, Tom, and I started to organize a bit more and figure out where to go with all of this. Catherine and I both wanted to act more and we both also liked improv. I Miss High School was feeling more and more like a family and Lori had wanted to help us more in finding our direction.

That is when we started to become more of the company we are today.

Fools Gold

Thursday, March 29th, 2007

Time Out Chicago / Issue 109: March 29–April 4, 2007
Chicago jokers know their way around a good prank.
By Steve Heisler

What better time for a practical joke than April Fool’s Day (Sunday 1); and what better people to learn from than our city’s own comedians? Follow these shining examples of real pranks, but heed the comics’ warnings to avert a backfire.

The fake celebrity

Target Unsuspecting theatergoers

Comic Angie McMahon, who runs the Saturday Night Showcase at the Cornservatory Saturday 31

Story Our improv group had entered the cage match at I.O., and the rules stated that each team was allowed a secret weapon to get more votes. One of our member’s father looked exactly like Francis Ford Coppola, so we told the theater he was coming. When Mr. Fake Coppola arrived (they had sent a limo for him), the place went nuts—like Elvis just walked through the door. One girl even started crying when he kissed her hand. In the middle of our show, he got up and gave a speech about how hard it was to laugh in the world after 9/11. We still lost by eight votes, but the next day’s Sun-Times Out and About section printed that Mr. Coppola was at I.O.

Warning Celebrity impersonators are sometimes too convincing. Keep that in mind when you hire a Naomi Campbell look-alike.

For the Whole Article visit http://www.timeoutchicago.com
The Over and Out Section


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