IMPROV DEATH MATCH at the Aces and Eights
β β β β
“The comradery both on and off stage is so wholesome that despite there officially being a winner at the end of the night, it doesnβt really make much odds”
Death Match by name perhaps, but this is one of the nicest comedy nights Iβve ever witnessed.
βYouβre not to worry, we wonβt pick on anyoneβ, our compere reassures us as he encourages folk to the front row. This is pretty much the atmosphere throughout the hour-long: no audience participation excepting, of course, the traditional shouting out of subjects for the troupe to improvise, and a general sense that weβre all just lovely people having a lovely time.
The evening consists of gently jostling improv games in which the two teams- red and blue- take turns to win the crowd over, after which weβre to shout βredβ or βblueβ to determine a winner. These include a βJust a minuteβ style storytelling, a classic tap-in scene game, and several on-the-spot song performances that are impressively catchy- βFive Green Fingers (and a thumb)β is a genuine banger, and I believe the red team was robbed of their victory on that one.
Improv is always necessarily a fairly safe space, given that it requires the performers to be so completely uninhibited and ready to look like idiots at any given moment. But this feels particularly well meaning.
Without microphones the performers are required to project over the Friday night crowd, making it feel more like a Christmas family gathering than a hardy competition: Everyone yelling out stupid suggestions, shushing each other when someoneβs on stage, and the improvisers themselves often shouting encouragement to their opposing team, βThat was really good, thatβ. The comradery both on and off stage is so wholesome that despite there officially being a winner at the end of the night, it doesnβt really make much odds.
After seven years on the go, this is, so weβre told, the longest running Camden Fringe show, and I see no reason why it shouldnβt enjoy an eighth.
IMPROV DEATH MATCH at the Aces and Eights
Reviewed on 18th August 2023
by Miriam Sallon
More Camden Fringe 2023 Reviews:
Invasion! An Alien Musical | β β | Camden People’s Theatre | July 2023
This Girl: The Cynthia Lennon Story | β β | Upstairs at the Gatehouse | July 2023
Glad To Be Dead? | β β | Hen & Chickens Theatre | July 2023
Maybe I Do? | β β β β | Hen & Chickens Theatre | July 2023
Flamenco: Origenes | β β β β | Etcetera Theatre | August 2023
All That Glitters | β β Β½ | Rosemary Branch Theatre | August 2023
Dead Souls | β β Β½ | Etcetera Theatre | August 2023
Kate-Lois Elliott: Gentrif*cked | β β β | Museum of Comedy | August 2023
Improv The Dead | β β β β | Hen & Chickens Theatre | August 2023
Avocado Presents | β β β | Hen & Chickens Theatre | August 2023
Sarah Roberts : Do You Know Who I Am? | β β β β | The Bill Murray | August 2023
End Of The World Fm | β β β | Cockpit Theatre | August 2023
Ashley Barnhill: Texas Titanium | β β β β | Museum of Comedy | August 2023
The Vagina Monologues | β β β | Canal CafΓ© Theatre | August 2023
Not Like Other Girls | β β β β | The Queer Comedy Club | August 2023
Improv Death Match
Improv Death Match
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