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BY THE SECOND CITY | JAN 02, 2024

The Faculty Lounge with Mo & Law: Episode 6

This week in The Faculty Lounge with Mo Phillips-Spotts and Law Tarello – we bump into our first WILDCARD episode.

Hear the moments left on the cutting room floor from our first 5 episodes. Bloopers, bits, and hilarious sound bites galore! If you missed any of the previous episodes, you can catch them by clicking below.

Thanks for listening!

To listen on Simplecast, click here.

To sign up for classes, click here.

Missed an episode? No worries – click below to catch them!

Episode 1 with Damon Royster

Episode 2 with Ayaka Kinugawa

Episode 3 with Catharine Savage

Episode 4 with PHATT al

Episode 5 with Steve Han

For more Mo: Instagram.com/MoprovChi

For more Law: Instagram.com/ImprovLaw

BY THE SECOND CITY | APR 11, 2022

The Faculty Lounge with Mo & Law: Episode 5

This week in the Faculty Lounge with Mo Phillips-Spotts and Law Tarello, we bump into virtual stand-up and improv faculty Steve Han. On this episode, we talk about equity in improv, finding your community through comedy, and the importance of staying present.

Steve is a proud alum of the University of Chicago, where he graduated with a BA in Biological Sciences with a specialization in Genetics and Endocrinology. He is an actor/writer for the ViacomCBS Showcase 2022. He is also a recipient of the 2018 NBC Universal/Second City Bob Curry Fellowship, a 2018 cast member and writer of Urban Twist’s “Public Empathy No. 1”, and has also performed sketch and stand-up at venues like the Steppenwolf (We Are Asian. We Do Comedy.) and the Laugh Factory. He has appeared on networks such as FOX, Showtime, NBC, and Freeform, most recently recurring as Dante in “The Big Leap” on Fox. He is proudly represented by Paonessa Talent and Lewk Management.

To listen on simplecast, click here.

To sign up for classes, click here.

For more Steve:

Instagram: instagram.com/@yoko__homo

For more Mo: Instagram.com/MoprovChi

For more Law: Instagram.com/ImprovLaw

 

BY THE SECOND CITY | APR 04, 2022

The Faculty Lounge with Mo & Law: Episode 1

Come hang out with some of the most dedicated Comedy Faculty in the world as they share stories, teaching insights and a whole lotta laughter.

Mo Phillips-Spotts & Law Tarello are Faculty Members at the world renowned Comedic Performing Arts Training Center – The Second City. In each episode they’ll introduce you to a new colleague of theirs as they share classroom stories, teaching exercises, professional histories, career advice, and whole lotta laughs.

In this episode of The Faculty Lounge, we bump into Damon Royster, virtual faculty member based in LA. We hear about his journey from writing student, to writing faculty and writing shows for The Second City as well as his comedy influences and hot takes on Roger and Hammerstein’s Cinderella.

To listen on SimpleCast, click here.

To take a class with one of our incredible faculty members, click the link!

For more Damon:

Instagram: @daymanroyster

Twitter: @daymanroyster88

For more Mo: Instagram.com/MoprovChi

For more Law: Instagram.com/ImprovLaw

BY THE SECOND CITY | MAR 07, 2022

Comedy Legend Eugene Levy Lit Up Harold Ramis Film School

Holy Schitt, everybody.

Eugene Levy spoke to a crowd of film students and program graduates in a two-hour talk with Harold Ramis Film School chair Trevor Albert. The Second City and SCTV alumnus, in Chicago for the Schitt’s Creek Up Close & Personal tour at the Chicago Theatre, opened up about his unlikely path to comedy, cutting his teeth at The Second City, making TV magic from SCTV to the present, and the people and experiences that have shaped him along the way.

📷: Timothy M. Schmidt

President Levy

Growing up in the working class steel town of Hamilton, Ontario (“the Pittsburgh of the north”), show biz was never on Levy’s radar. He got into performing after seeing the attention his older brother’s singing quartet got and started his own group. When the trio added comedy sketches to their folk music routine, “it was kinda fun to hear some response from the audience,” he said. “I kinda liked it.”

Levy began to garner more attention around school with the comedically esoteric musings he kept squirreled away in a notebook titled “Poetry, Prose and Cons.” They made his peers laugh, prompting a call for him to run for student body president. Having found his voice on a paper, Levy marveled at the opportunity to share his words on poster-sized opportunities. One read: It’s a bird! It’s a plane! No, it’s a bird. Vote Levy!  “I actually won the election and became president of the student council,” he said, with more than *a little* residual pride. 

Coffee boy done good

At university, Levy spent more time with the drama and film clubs–where he met fellow student Ivan Reitman–than he did in class. He quit school, much to his parents’ chagrin (“It wasn’t pretty…their disappointment was palpable”) and asked Reitman, now at work on his first film, for a job. There was one position left: coffee boy.

“That was my first job for $60 a week as coffee boy on Ivan Reitman’s first film…if that job had not been available, I probably would never have left Hamilton,” he said.

Reitman offered him an acting role in his next project, and Levy jumped at the chance–not because he’d been bitten by the acting bug, but because when the director called “that’s a wrap,” actors got to go directly to their cars and drive home. At this point in his life, the possibility of forging a career in entertainment still hadn’t entered his mind (“I never knew that this is what I wanted to do”) but not having to stick around to break down equipment ever again definitely had.

From ‘Godspell’ to Second City

When the New York production of Godspell came to Toronto, Levy auditioned, as did his friends and colleagues Martin Short, Andrea Martin, and the “just so lovable” Gilda Radner, who sang “Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah” at her audition. This was a huge break for Levy, as the one-year contract meant getting a check every week for the first time in his fledgling career. After taking over the lead role when many of the cast members defected to the new Second City outpost in Toronto, Levy decided to head to the Old Firehall himself to see what this Second City thing was all about.

Working at The Second City was “the most amazing, exciting thing in the world,” he said. Intoxicated by the proximity of the audience and petrified by the improv, “I was learning as I was going,” he admitted. “Second City was the best school of comedy for me.”

And the best teacher? “I think if I learned anything from anybody at Second City, it was Brian [Doyle-] Murray. In all his scenes, he’d just sit in a chair and drink a coffee.”

The dawn of ‘SCTV’

In 1975, Saturday Night Live (then called NBC’s Saturday Night) scooped up Radner, Levy’s pal Dan Aykroyd and Second City’s Chicago barn burner, John Belushi, for the freshman cast.  Levy and his fellow castmates watched the show’s premiere from backstage at Second City’s short-lived Pasadena theater on a little black and white TV.

Shortly after SNL’s debut, Second City co-founder Bernie Sahlins decided he needed a way to get ahead of the hot new show poaching his talent, and the idea for SCTV was born. “It turned from a satirical show into a character-driven show that had satire in it,” Levy said. “The first year was a learning experience.” Their creative North Star, Harold Ramis, helped lead them into the great comedic unknown. “Harold was head writer, and all we wanted to do was please Harold,” he explained. The cast’s only goal was to “write something that [Harold] would love and laugh at.”

“He was just so positive about everything and exemplified the yes and philosophy of comedy,” Levy continued. “He was the gauge as to whether something was good…Harold was the arbiter of what worked and what didn’t work.” And what sometimes worked was something uncouth. “For somebody so smart, he could write the cheapest punchline.”

📷: Timothy M. Schmidt

‘Waiting’ for funny

Levy also talked about his experiences with Christopher Guest on their improvised films like Best in Show, A Mighty Wind, and Waiting for Guffman, their first creative pairing, which they hashed out the characters and plot line for in a cabin over the course of two weeks. He explained how detailed the outlines for those films were, because “You can’t have an improvisational free-for-all” in a movie. He stressed the importance of understanding that while you may be interested in telling a story in a funny way, the most essential thing you’re doing is telling a story (and noted the necessity of there being a place like the Harold Ramis Film School to teach budding filmmakers just that).

Levy defines a critical aspect of writing great comedy to be creating grounded characters, like those brought to life by Catherine O’Hara, who exhibits “a chameleon-like quality when she gets into a character,” Levy said about his longtime collaborator and Schitt’s Creek co-star. “She brings so much to whatever she takes on…we approach our work as actors, not as funny people. We don’t consider ourselves funny people in real life.” Agree to disagree.

Keeping it in the family

The prolific actor and writer co-created Schitt’s Creek with his son Daniel, who also stars in the PopTV show–as does his daughter, Sarah. What’s it like for Levy to work side by side with his offspring? “Oh my god, my son is doing a scene with Catherine O’Hara–and holding his own,” Levy said. “That’s the most surreal for me.”

The conversation ended with a visibly emotional Levy saying, “Talking to the students of the Harold Ramis Film School is one of the honors of my life.”

Again, let’s agree to disagree. The honor was all ours.

Written by: Liz Kozak

Photos by: Timothy M. Schmidt

BY THE SECOND CITY | FEB 25, 2019

HRFS Grad Alyssa Wilden Lands Job On New Hulu Series ‘PEN15’

Congratulations to recent Harold Ramis Film School graduate Alyssa Wilden, who just landed a job under HRFS Advisory Board member Debbie Liebling on Hulu’s new original series, ‘PEN15.’

Wilden will serve as Office Production Assistant on the 10-episode project, which was co-created by and stars Maya Erskine and Anna Konkle.

According to The Hollywood Reporter:

The project hails from the Lonely Island team of Andy Samberg, Akiva Schaffer and Jorma Taccone, who will also executive produce alongside Party Over Here’s Becky Sloviter and Odenkirk Provissiero Entertainment’s Marc Provissiero and Brooke Pobjoy. Debbie Liebling and Gabe Liedman will also exec produce. 

Well done, Alyssa!

(And about that title? Yup, it’s what it looks like…🍆)

BY THE SECOND CITY | MAY 18, 2018

Improv Nation’ Reveals How An American Art Form Was Created

Bestselling author Sam Wasson’s new book Improv Nation: How We Made a Great American Art hits the shelves this week, providing the most comprehensive history ever written of how The Second City and its predecessor, the Compass Players, helped give rise to a uniquely American art form and ignite a comedy revolution.

Here’s what the critics are saying:

“The ascent of improv, which has become arguably more influential than stand-up, is one of the most important stories in popular culture, and in ‘Improv Nation’ Sam Wasson may be the first author to explain its entire history in comprehensive detail.”—New York Times

“Wasson makes a thoroughly entertaining case that improvisational comedy has ‘replaced jazz as America’s most popular art’ and represents the best of democracy”—Publishers Weekly

“A refreshing look at the ways in which comedians, artists, writers, and actors started getting involved in improvisation .  . . an entertaining book, recommended for aspiring comedians who want to historicize their practice.”—Kirkus

“In case you’re wondering, yes, the book is funny. In places, very funny. A remarkable story, magnificently told.”Booklist

Improv Nation is available everywhere December 5th.

Learn more about our history by exploring the Second City timeline.

BY THE SECOND CITY | DEC 04, 2017

Check Out These 8 Genius Library Card Hacks

Just because you gave up on your childhood dream of becoming a professional librarian doesn’t mean you can’t celebrate National Library Week. Got a library card? Then let’s party– right along with our laminated little tickets to fun.
8. Library cards don’t just have to be pocket-sized symbols of social isolation and loneliness. They can also serve as wallet-sized cutlery. Use your card as a plastic knife and say good-bye to cutting cold fried chicken with a twig.
7. Why settle for a squiggly line when there’s a card that can help you do the job right there in your Wrangler butt pocket, MacGyver? Your library card can be a ruler when you need to organize your place values in a pinch.
6. Short a drum set at your desk? No problem. You’ve got a library card. With a pencil and a library card, you’ll be the office John Bonham. Related hack: Staplers and trash cans make for great cymbals!
5. You’re re-reading War and Peace. It’s long. You need a bookmark. Why not use that library card to mark your spot? As an added bonus, with the card so busy holding your place, you’ll resist that aching urge to borrow more classic, lengthy novels.
4. If you left your keys inside your house–or don’t actually own a particular house–a library card is a sure-fire way to enter a locked door. I know what you’re thinking– “No! You mean credit cards! Library cards can’t do that!” Says the person who’s never tried.
3. You forgot a hat and sunscreen? Fear not. You’ve got a library card. Make it a visor and shade yourself with it.
2. It’s a talking piece at parties. “Look, everyone! I’ve got a library card!” Hold it up proud! Say it loud! Conversation started. Like this one:

“Hey, man! You read!?”

“Yep.”

“Do you like looking through old National Geographics for boobs?”

“Yep.”

“Do you not pay for internet and use it at the library for free, but tell others that you’re only there because your internet is down?”

“Yep.”

“Awesome! Me, too!”

1. Read stuff. That’s right. Library cards aren’t *just* for organizing drugs into neat little lines. You can actually borrow books with them. I know what you’re thinking–“You mean credit cards?” No! This is the biggest library card hack of all. You can actually read books without buying them. You don’t even need a credit card. Take that, Kindle.
_______________________________________________________
Wes Armstrong is a Canadian teacher and writer based in Osaka, Japan. Follow him on Twitter @mrstoneycreek.

BY THE SECOND CITY | APR 11, 2016

Meet TLC’s Newest Family

BY THE SECOND CITY | JUN 10, 2015

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