I never went to acting school, so improv was my training. Just being quick on your feet helps in everyday life.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I never did improv professionally, but that was certainly in my training as an actor. I like it.
Improv has been immensely beneficial to me as both an actor and a writer.
Doing improv really got me started in my whole career.
Improv is a very big thing for me. The thing with actors is I do not understand at all how they do what they do. I'm fascinated by it, and I have such a respect for it.
I'm an actor first and foremost, who happens to do improv. I've also done sitcoms, I've done stage.
I started doing improv in college, and I really liked it.
I took one class at Second City called Improv for Actors, and that was it, and that was only because my agent told me I had to.
There are very few actors who are truly good at improvising; that's a real skill.
I got involved with an acting school and studied for a couple years. They used to have improv exercises that you would work on and you would do improvs.
After going to theater school, and then subsequently dropping out, I would say that when I first went to Chicago and learned long-form improv, that was a far better acting workshop than any acting school I've been to.