Current:Home > reviewsThe Second City, named for its Chicago location, opens an outpost in New York -消息
The Second City, named for its Chicago location, opens an outpost in New York
View
Date:2025-04-16 06:45:19
The sketch comedy and improv group, The Second City, is famously named for its location: Chicago. And while some of its illustrious graduates, like Stephen Colbert and Tina Fey, have become famous New Yorkers, there's never been an outpost in the First City, until now.
A new facility has been built in the Second Borough – Brooklyn. The trendy neighborhood of Williamsburg to be exact. On the site of an old record shop and club, the company has built a 200-seat mainstage, a 60-seat second stage, several classrooms, where improv and comedy writing are taught, and a restaurant.
It's not The Second City's first foray outside Chicago: There's been an outpost in Toronto since 1973, which spawned the successful television series SCTV, and other companies have been in Hollywood and Detroit. In addition, there's a touring company that crisscrosses the United States.
"We know that there is a really great comedy scene in New York," said The Second City's CEO, Ed Wells, "and a demand for comedy-based entertainment, but there is no one doing what we do."
With the closing of several clubs in New York during the pandemic, he felt there was an opportunity. "I mean, New York is the home of Saturday Night Live, right?," Wells explained. "Saturday Night Live and The Second City have had a relationship since Saturday Night Live started. ... Its very first cast was filled with Second City alumni from, you know, John Belushi to Dan Aykroyd to Gilda Radner."
Other grads include Nia Vardalos, the writer and director of My Big Fat Greek Wedding, who spent four and a half years with the company in Toronto and Chicago. "It absolutely formed who I am," she said. "You enter an institution that is formidable, and yet filled with irreverence; where you will be rewarded for being a person who doesn't follow the rules. And yet you're getting a paycheck, and you are part of a union."
It's such a good gig, that when Second City opened up the call for auditions in New York, within three days, 1,000 people responded, and they had to cut it off. The New York revue is a mix of improv, new material and some classic sketches from Chicago.
Drew Riley, a graduate of The Second City Conservatory in Chicago is one of the six people who are opening the new mainstage. And the first number – which the company developed over half a year, features something every New York has an opinion about: the subway. "We would ask, you know, 'what's something about New York that you love? What's something about New York that you hate?,'" he recalled, laughing. "And the answer to both those questions with us was the same. And it was the train ... we wanted to honor that."
Jacklyn Uweh, who trained with The Second City in Hollywood, and is part of the first ensemble in New York, said that one of her favorite sketches is a classic free association piece for two actors playing spies that was created by Second City alum Stephen Colbert. The first part of the sketch is written but at a certain point it becomes improv, with input from the audience. "It is the hardest sketch I've ever rehearsed!" Uweh says. (The night I attended, the improv part went on for two and a half minutes, to peals of laughter from the audience.)
One of the most important partners in the show is not onstage. It's Kayla Freeman, the stage manager, who sits on a perch above the stage. With a background in comedy and improv, as well as technical theater, she looks and listens intently while the actors make up their material on the spot, to determine when to call a blackout to end the sketch. "A lot of the time, what I'm looking out for is a big audience laugh or watching the internal games that they're playing and figuring out when that game has resolved itself," Freeman explained. Basically, she said she and the actors "ride the waves together."
Cast member Drew Riley said part of the exhilaration of doing improv is the possibility of falling flat on your face. "It's the reason you go to the circus to watch the acrobats. Right? Because you think maybe they might fall," he said laughing. "But you're thrilled when they don't. You're thrilled when they land the triple somersault. It is a theatrical experience unlike anything else."
The doors of The Second City New York have only just opened but the company hopes they stick the landing for years to come.
veryGood! (48117)
Related
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- James Crumbley, father of Michigan school shooter, fights to keep son's diary, texts out of trial
- Ex-Alabama police officer to be released from prison after plea deal
- Rescuers battle to save a baby elephant trapped in a well
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- 'Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth' review: Savor the story, skim the open world
- Normani (finally) announces long-awaited debut solo album 'Dopamine'
- Kentucky's second-half defensive collapse costly in one-point road loss to LSU
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- National Margarita Day deals: Get discounts and specials on the tequila-based cocktail
Ranking
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- Meet the 'Beatlemania boomers.' They face a looming retirement crisis
- ‘Little dark secret': DEA agent on trial accused of taking $250K in bribes from Mafia
- Supreme Court seems skeptical of EPA's good neighbor rule on air pollution
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Can Jennifer Lopez's 'This Is Me... Now' say anything new?
- Families of Gabby Petito, Brian Laundrie reach settlement in emotional distress suit
- One Year Later, Pennsylvanians Living Near the East Palestine Train Derailment Site Say They’re Still Sick
Recommendation
Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
Supreme Court seems skeptical of EPA's good neighbor rule on air pollution
In 'To Kill a Tiger,' a father stands by his assaulted daughter. Oscar, stand by them.
Motocross star Jayden 'Jayo' Archer, the first to land triple backflip, dies practicing trick
A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
Find out who's calling, use AI and more with 15 smart tech tips
'Boy Meets World' stars stood by convicted child molester. It's not uncommon, experts say.
5 charred bodies found in remote Mexico town after reported clash between criminals