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Wikipedia

The Second City

The Second City is an improvisational comedy enterprise. It is the oldest improvisational theater troupe to be continuously based in Chicago, with training programs and live theatres in Toronto and Los Angeles. The Second City Theatre opened on December 16, 1959, and has become one of the most influential and prolific comedy theatres in the English-speaking world.[1] In February 2021, ZMC, a private equity investment firm ironically based in Manhattan, purchased the Second City.[2]

The Second City
GenreSketch comedy
Improvisation
Date of premiere1959
LocationChicago, Illinois, United States
Creative team
Co-founderPaul Sills
Co-founderBernie Sahlins
Co-founderHoward Alk
Executive producernot designated
Official website

The Second City has produced television programs in both Canada and the United States, including SCTV, Second City Presents, and Next Comedy Legend. Since its debut, The Second City has been a starting point for many comedians, award-winning actors, directors, and others in show business, including Del Close, Alan Alda, Alan Arkin, Harold Ramis, Bill Murray, Gilda Radner, John Candy, John Belushi, Dan Aykroyd, Eugene Levy, Catherine O'Hara, Chris Farley, Tim Meadows, Colin Mochrie, Ryan Stiles, Mike Myers, Nia Vardalos, Steve Carell, Jordan Peele, Tina Fey, Amy Poehler, Stephen Colbert, Cecily Strong, Aidy Bryant.[3]

History

 
Location at 1616 North Wells Street in Chicago

The Second City chose its self-mocking name from the title of a series of articles about Chicago by A. J. Liebling, published in The New Yorker in 1952,[1] and published in book form as a collection the same year.[4] In summer 1955, at The Compass bar in Hyde Park, University of Chicago students, led by David Shepherd and Paul Sills, calling themselves Compass Players, began a "commedia dell'arte", based on professional theater games taught by Viola Spolin, who was Sills's mother. They soon began performing occasional shows on the Near North Side. On December 16, 1959, The Second City's first revue show premiered at 1842 North Wells Street, with Sills' former wife and Compass Player Barbara Harris singing "Everybody’s in the Know". Admission was $1.50. Sahlins and Sills flipped burgers in the kitchen.[5]

Sahlins, Sills, and Howard Alk had founded the theater, in 1959,[5] as a place where scenes and stories were created with improvisation, using techniques that grew out of Spolin's innovative teachings, later known as Theater Games, with Sills as its director.[6] The cabaret theater comedy style of the Second City tended towards satire and commentary on social norms, and political figures and events.

In 1961, the theater sent a cast to Broadway with the musical revue, From the Second City, directed by Sills and earning Tony Award nominations for ensemble members Severn Darden and Barbara Harris.[7] The company moved a few blocks south, to 1616 North Wells, in 1967.[1] Eventually, the theater expanded to include three touring companies and a second resident company, and now fosters a company devoted to outreach and diversity.[8] The style of comedy changed over time, but the format has remained constant. Second City revues feature a mix of semi-improvised and scripted scenes, with new material developed during unscripted improv sessions after the second act, where scenes are created based on audience suggestions.

A number of popular performers began their careers with the historic troupe, then moved to television and film. In 1973, The Second City opened a theater in Toronto. By the mid-1970s, both venues became a source of cast members for Saturday Night Live and SCTV, which borrowed the writing and performing techniques pioneered by The Second City and other improv groups. In 1983, the adjoining e.t.c. theater became the second resident stage at its Old Town, Chicago location, handling overflow crowds and increasing the number of resident company members. Co-founder Bernie Sahlins owned the theater company until 1985, before selling it to Andrew Alexander and Len Stuart.[1]

Along with its theaters, training centers, and television shows, The Second City also produced improv and sketch shows for Norwegian Cruise Line through 2017. In the 2000s, Second City launched productions in regional theaters around the country; revues featured sketches written for and about each location, including Phoenix,[9] Boston,[10] Baltimore,[11] Dallas,[12] and Louisville.[13]

In October 2020, The Second City was put up for sale by Alexander and co-owner D’Arcy Stuart.[14] In January 2021, The Second City and Saturday Night Live paired up to launch a new training scholarship for diverse, upcoming talent.[15] In February 2021, ZMC, a New York City-based private equity investment firm, purchased The Second City.[2]

SCTV

Second City Television, or SCTV, was a Canadian television sketch comedy show offshoot from the Toronto troupe of the Second City and ran from 1976 to 1984. Dr. Charles A. "Chuck" Allard (1919–1991), father of Vancouver attorney Peter Allard, formed a partnership in 1981 that acquired the fledgling series, which he then moved from Toronto to Edmonton (where he practiced medicine and had co-founded the Edmonton Oilers as a silent partner with "Wild Bill" Hunter).[16][17]

The basic premise of SCTV was based on a television station (later a network) in the fictional city of Melonville. Rather than broadcast the usual TV rerun fare, the business, run by the greedy Guy Caballero (Joe Flaherty) sitting in a wheelchair only "for respect," operates a bizarre and humorously incompetent range of cheap local programming. The range included soap opera "The Days of the Week"; game shows, such as "Shoot at the Stars", in which celebrities literally are shot at in similar fashion to targets in a shooting gallery; and movie parodies, such as "Play it Again, Bob" in which Woody Allen (as played by Rick Moranis) attempts to entice Bob Hope (as played by Dave Thomas) to star in his next film. In-house media melodrama was frequently satirized, including by John Candy, as the vain, bloated variety star character, Johnny La Rue; Thomas's acerbic critic, Bill Needle; Andrea Martin's flamboyant, leopard-skin clad station manager, Mrs. Edith Prickley; Catherine O'Hara's alcoholic, narcissistic, former leading-lady, Lola Heatherton; and Flaherty's effusive talk show host, Sammy Maudlin. Martin Short also originated his dorky Ed Grimley character here, which he later brought to Saturday Night Live.

Executive producers

Andrew Alexander

 
Andrew Alexander and Len Stuart

In 1974, Andrew Alexander took the reins of The Second City Toronto, which had opened in 1972, then formed a partnership with Len Stuart, in 1976, starting The Second City Entertainment Company.[18] Its inaugural television production was SCTV that year. Alexander co-developed and executive produced over 185 half-hour shows for the series.[19]

In 1985, Alexander and Stuart acquired Chicago's Second City.[20] He later founded SCTV, thereby expanding The Second City TV & Film Division.[21] He has produced or executive-produced hundreds of Second City revues in Canada and the United States.[22]

On June 6, 2020, during on-going global Black Lives Matter protests, various Second City comedians signed an open letter stating that "erasure, racial discrimination, manipulation, pay inequity, tokenism, monetization of Black culture, and trauma-inducing experiences of Black artists at The Second City will no longer be tolerated".[15] prompting Alexander to apologize and resign, pledging that "The next person to fill the Executive Producer position will be a member of the BIPOC community". Interim executive producer Anthony LeBlanc was appointed to replace him.[23]

Jon Carr

On November 25, 2020, The Second City announced that former Dad's Garage Theatre Company artistic director Jon Carr had been hired as executive producer.[24] He stepped down in early 2022, and a successor has yet to be named.[25]

Awards

As of 2014, the Second City has been awarded thirty-seven Equity Joseph Jefferson Awards, which have recognized them for Best Revue five times, the first being Paradigm Lost (1997). The revue's director, Mick Napier, is one of several directors recognized by the Jeffs, a list that includes founder Bernard Sahlins (for 1983's Exit, Pursued by a Bear) and improv guru Del Close (1981's Miro, Miro on the Wall). Sixteen alumni have received Jeff Awards for their performances in Second City revues, including David Pasquesi (The Gods Must Be Lazy, 1989), Scott Adsit (Paradigm Lost, 1997), Jackie Hoffman (Disgruntled Employee Picnic, 1993), Shelley Long (Wellsapoppin, 1977), and Nia Vardalos (Whitewater for Chocolate, 1994), with Rachel Dratch and Keegan-Michael Key each being honored twice.[26]

In 2009, as the company was celebrating its 50th year, the Second City was awarded an honorary Jeff for the milestone, as well as three awards for the e.t.c.' s 33rd revue Studs Terkel's Not Working, recognizing director Matt Hovde and actress Amanda Blake Davis and naming it Best Revue.[27] In 2011, the e.t.c.'s 35th revue Sky's the Limit (Weather Permitting) won the Jeff for Best New Work (Musical or Revue), as well Best Revue and Best Actor, for ensemble member Tim Baltz.[28] The following year, the e.t.c.'s 36th revue We're All In This Room Together won for Best Revue and Best Director of a Revue - Ryan Bernier, while ensemble member Edgar Blackman took home the Jeff for Best Actor/Actress in a Revue for his work in Who Do We Think We Are? on the Second City mainstage.[29] In 2013, the Jeff Awards awarded Best Production: Revue to a Second City show not housed at the venue on Wells Street, The Second City Guide to Opera, a collaboration with the Lyric Opera of Chicago that had been initiated by soprano and Lyric creative consultant Renée Fleming, with Best Director: Revue going to Billy Bungeroth.[30]

Toronto's Second City mainstage troupe has won ten Canadian Comedy Awards: Best Improv Troupe (2001), Best Sketch Troupe (2001, 2006 and 2009), and Best Comedic Play winners Family Circus Maximus (2002), Psychedelicatessen (2003), Facebook of Revelations, Barack to the Future (2009), 0% Down, 100% Screwed (2010) and Something Wicked Awesome This Way Comes (2011).

On film

Touring Company

Created in 1967 as a way to increase the talent pool, the initial Touring Company, featuring Ramis, Doyle-Murray and Flaherty, was tested on the road for two years before taking the stage as The Next Generation after the mainstage ensemble was sent to perform in New York. The Touring Company continued to perform greatest hit shows on the road, and in 1982, with the assistance of producer Joyce Sloane (and without Sahlins's knowledge) they staged an original revue in what would become the theater's second stage, the Second City e.t.c.[34]

Fiftieth anniversary

In December 2009, the theater celebrated its fiftieth anniversary with a weekend of panels and performance which featured many prominent alumni, including an SCTV reunion show starring Joe Flaherty, Eugene Levy, Andrea Martin, Catherine O'Hara, Harold Ramis, Martin Short, and Dave Thomas.[35] Other notable alumni returning to participate included Steve Carell, Stephen Colbert, Jeff Garlin, Jack McBrayer, James Belushi, Dan Castellaneta, Amy Sedaris, Ian Gomez, Richard Kind, Robert Klein, Fred Willard, David Rasche, Betty Thomas, and George Wendt,[36] as well as original cast member Mina Kolb, Compass Player Shelley Berman, and co-founder Bernard Sahlins, along with Playwrights Theater Club co-founder Sheldon Patinkin;[37] he later served as assistant director to Paul Sills, then succeeded him as artistic director, spending over five decades as an artistic mentor of the troupe while chairman of the theater department at Columbia College Chicago for three decades.[38]

Alumni

Training Center and Harold Ramis Film School

The Second City Training Center was founded in the mid-1980s to facilitate the growing demand for workshops and instruction from the world-famous Second City theatre. Training Centers are located in Chicago, Toronto and Los Angeles. The Training Centers have grown substantially since the Second City Conservatory was established in the mid-1980s under the tutelage of longtime Chicago improv instructors and mentors Martin de Maat and Sheldon Patinkin. The Chicago Training Center has over 5,000 students in several disciplines, including improvisation and comedy writing. Former Training Center students include Steve Carell, Tina Fey, Amy Poehler, Mike Myers, Chris Farley, Tim Meadows, Bonnie Hunt, Stephen Colbert, Halle Berry, Sean Hayes, Amy Sedaris, Jon Favreau, Hinton Battle, Jack McBrayer, Dave Foley, and Kevin McDonald. Classes are taught by working professionals, many of whom are existing or former Second City performers. In 2007, the Comedy Studies program was created, as a collaboration with Chicago's Columbia College, which provides students with an immersion in "all aspects of the study of comedy and improvisation".[39] In 2016, the Training Center expanded to include the Harold Ramis Film School, dedicated to comedy in filmmaking.[40] The Second City Training Centers operate under the leadership of Kerry Sheehan, President, The Second City Training Centers and Education Programs.

The Second City Detroit

The Second City Detroit was a comedy theatre and training center located in the Detroit suburb Novi, Michigan. It was the Second City's third mainstage theatre in North America following the Second City Chicago and Toronto.[41] Originally established in September 1993 in downtown Detroit, Michigan,[41] the theatre relocated to a strip mall in Novi in 2005, where it remained until it was disbanded in 2009. The original downtown Detroit theater, within the Hockeytown Cafe complex, was renamed the City Theater (Detroit), and the Novi location became the Andiamo Novi Theatre.

The Parents School

In the early years of the Second City and Game Theater, several parents and Lincoln Park community members—including Carol and Paul Sills and Mona and Dennis Cunningham—started a progressive school for their children, based on Viola Spolin's Theater Games techniques and philosophy with her son Paul Sills' refinements. Early on it was called "Playroom School," after Spolin's "Educational Playroom," a progressive school project during the 1930's on Sheridan Road which Paul Sills had attended.[42] Theater Games were gaining recognition and are now incorporated in drama therapy, play therapy, and are used as an educational tool. Early Second City and Game Theater members, as well as some Old Town and Lincoln Park community members, were closely involved, including the Sillses and Cunninghams, Viola Spolin, Joyce and Byrne Piven, John Schultz, Mel Spiegel, and Beverly Gold. The highly progressive curriculum included daily theater games, and some students went on to careers in entertainment. Briefly at the Game Theater site at 1935 N. Sedgwick, the school moved to several locations in Lincoln Park before it closed in the mid-1970s.[43]

Audio recordings

  • Comedy from The Second City (Mercury, 1961)
  • From The Second City (Mercury, 1962)
  • The Sound of My Own Voice and Other Noises: Severn Darden at The Second City (Mercury, 1961)
  • The Second City Writhes Again! (Mercury, 1969)
  • The Cosa Nostra Story (Mercury/Smash)
  • The Second City Survival Kit (Spirit, 1982)
  • Archival audio was released as part of Sheldon Patinkin's book, The Second City: Backstage at the World's Greatest Comedy Theater (2000)

Other influences

In 1971, The Players Workshop was Chicago's only official school of Improvisation for over a decade. Although it was never officially a part of The Second City cabaret theater, The Players Workshop was often referred to as Players Workshop Of The Second City, due to the school's close affiliation with the famous sketch comedy stage.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Christiansen, Richard (2004). "Second City Theatre". In Grossman, James R.; Keating, Ann Durkin; Reiff, Janice L. (eds.). The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago. Chicago Historical Society. p. 744. ISBN 0-226-31015-9. Retrieved March 7, 2008.
  2. ^ a b Chris Jones (February 18, 2021). "Column: On Second City, private equity and the sad lack of a Chicago comedy savior". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved February 21, 2021.
  3. ^ "Leadership". The Second City.
  4. ^ Liebling, A.J. (1952). Chicago: The Second City (First ed.). New York: Alfred A. Knopf. Retrieved May 22, 2022.
  5. ^ a b "History", The Second City, secondcity.com. Retrieved February 2, 2019.
  6. ^ Robertson, Campbell (June 4, 2008). "Paul Sills, a Guru of Improv Theater, Dies at 80". The New York Times. Retrieved September 3, 2010.
  7. ^ "From the Second City – Broadway Musical – Original". IBDB.
  8. ^ Rocket, Darcel (November 6, 2020). "How Second City's diversity promises are being executed". Chicago Tribune.
  9. ^ Robrt L. Pela (May 13, 2010). "The Second City Does Arizona, Or Close But No Saguaro Proves There's Plenty of AZ to Poke Fun at Outside of SB 1070". Phoenix New Times.
  10. ^ Anderman, Joan (April 19, 2010). "From Chicago, joke's on Hub". The Boston Globe.
  11. ^ Smith, Tim (January 6, 2011). "Charm City gets Second City treatment". Baltimore Sun.
  12. ^ "The Second City Does Dallas: outsiders making astute observations". Star-Telegram. September 14, 2012.
  13. ^ Keane, Erin (January 2, 2011). "Second City seeks coup with Ville!". The Courier-Journal.
  14. ^ "Second City comedy theater for sale, 2nd time in 60 years". ABC News. October 6, 2020.
  15. ^ a b Blair, Elizabeth (January 15, 2021). "'SNL' And 'Second City' Announce Scholarships For Diverse, Emerging Comic Talent". NPR.
  16. ^ Riess, Steven A.Sports in America from Colonial Times to the Twenty-First Century: An Encyclopedia, Routledge, USA, 2015, page 675. Retrieved October 10, 2018.
  17. ^ Lampard, Dr. J. Robert "Dr. Charles Alexander Allard", Profiles and Perspectives from Alberta’s Medical History, Alberta Medical Foundation, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, 2008. Retrieved May 12, 2018.
  18. ^ "Second City CEO Andrew Alexander remembers co-owner Len Stuart". Chicago Reader. February 29, 2016. Retrieved March 18, 2020.
  19. ^ "Second City's Andrew Alexander Honored by Phi Kappa Betta". Broadway World. Retrieved March 18, 2020.
  20. ^ "ON THE LAUGH TRACK". Chicago Tribune. December 12, 1999.
  21. ^ Best, John (June 7, 2020). "SCTV Founder Andrew Alexander To Exit Second City After Accusations Of Institutionalized Racism". The Bay Observer.
  22. ^ Jones, Chris (June 5, 2020). "Second City owner Andrew Alexander to exit after accusations of institutionalized racism leveled at theater". Chicago Tribune.
  23. ^ "A Letter from Andrew Alexander", The Second City, June 5, 2020. Retrieved September 11, 2021.
  24. ^ "Lara Smith leaving role at head of Dad’s Garage Theatre", by Bo Emerson, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, March 10, 2021. Retrieved March 15, 2021.
  25. ^ "Jon Carr leaves Second City after 14 Months as Executive Producer", by Darel Jevens, Chicago Sun-Times, February 23, 2022. Retrieved September 8, 2022.
  26. ^ "Jeff Awards List of Nominees and Recipients".
  27. ^ . Time Out Chicago. 2009. Archived from the original on March 16, 2010. Retrieved September 3, 2010.
  28. ^ . Playbill.com. 2011. Archived from the original on November 10, 2011. Retrieved November 8, 2011.
  29. ^ "'Iceman Cometh,' 'Follies' big Jeff Award winners". Chicago Tribune. 2012.
  30. ^ "'Lyric Opera of Chicago & The Second City Take Home Two Jeff Awards for THE SECOND CITY GUIDE TO THE OPERA". Broadway World. 2013.
  31. ^ Doll, Susan. "Turner Class Movies Film Article: Goldstein". TCM.com.
  32. ^ Murray, Noel (January 25, 2006). "Goldstein/DVD". A.V. Club.
  33. ^ "Inside the Improv Process at Second City". The Chicago Sun Times.
  34. ^ Thomas, Mike (2009). The Second City Unscripted. Villard Books. pp. 34, 41, 146–150. ISBN 978-0-345-51422-6.
  35. ^ . Time Out NY. Archived from the original on August 25, 2010. Retrieved September 3, 2010.
  36. ^ "What's in a Ticket". Broadway World. Retrieved September 3, 2010.
  37. ^ Long Form Improvisation and American Comedy: The Harold by Matt Fotis, Palgrave MacMillan, 2014, page 33. Retrieved September 11, 2021;
  38. ^ "Sheldon Patinkin" The Second City. Retrieved September 11, 2021.
  39. ^ Winchell, Stephen. "Inside the Second City's Comedy Studies Program". Splitsider.
  40. ^ Jones, Chris (February 9, 2016). "Second City to open Harold Ramis Film School, a first for comedy moviemaking". Chicago Tribune.
  41. ^ a b "Comedy Shows in Chicago, Toronto & Hollywood". The Second City.
  42. ^ Sills, Aretha; Sills, Carol. "Viola Spolin: Biography". Viola Spolin Official Website. The Viola Spolin Estate. Retrieved May 31, 2023.
  43. ^ . Archived from the original on April 19, 2014. Retrieved April 18, 2014.

External links

  • Official website  
  • The Second City Toronto
  • Audio interview with Anne Libera, author of The Second City Almanac of Improvisation, on The Sound of Young America
  • "StensonsNewDigs" blog review of the "Benefit of Laughter" show and SCTV reunion and after-party

second, city, other, uses, disambiguation, improvisational, comedy, enterprise, oldest, improvisational, theater, troupe, continuously, based, chicago, with, training, programs, live, theatres, toronto, angeles, theatre, opened, december, 1959, become, most, i. For other uses see The Second City disambiguation The Second City is an improvisational comedy enterprise It is the oldest improvisational theater troupe to be continuously based in Chicago with training programs and live theatres in Toronto and Los Angeles The Second City Theatre opened on December 16 1959 and has become one of the most influential and prolific comedy theatres in the English speaking world 1 In February 2021 ZMC a private equity investment firm ironically based in Manhattan purchased the Second City 2 The Second CityGenreSketch comedyImprovisationDate of premiere1959LocationChicago Illinois United StatesCreative teamCo founderPaul SillsCo founderBernie SahlinsCo founderHoward AlkExecutive producernot designatedOfficial websiteThe Second City has produced television programs in both Canada and the United States including SCTV Second City Presents and Next Comedy Legend Since its debut The Second City has been a starting point for many comedians award winning actors directors and others in show business including Del Close Alan Alda Alan Arkin Harold Ramis Bill Murray Gilda Radner John Candy John Belushi Dan Aykroyd Eugene Levy Catherine O Hara Chris Farley Tim Meadows Colin Mochrie Ryan Stiles Mike Myers Nia Vardalos Steve Carell Jordan Peele Tina Fey Amy Poehler Stephen Colbert Cecily Strong Aidy Bryant 3 Contents 1 History 2 SCTV 3 Executive producers 3 1 Andrew Alexander 3 2 Jon Carr 4 Awards 5 On film 6 Touring Company 7 Fiftieth anniversary 8 Alumni 9 Training Center and Harold Ramis Film School 10 The Second City Detroit 11 The Parents School 12 Audio recordings 13 Other influences 14 See also 15 References 16 External linksHistory Edit Location at 1616 North Wells Street in Chicago The Second City chose its self mocking name from the title of a series of articles about Chicago by A J Liebling published in The New Yorker in 1952 1 and published in book form as a collection the same year 4 In summer 1955 at The Compass bar in Hyde Park University of Chicago students led by David Shepherd and Paul Sills calling themselves Compass Players began a commedia dell arte based on professional theater games taught by Viola Spolin who was Sills s mother They soon began performing occasional shows on the Near North Side On December 16 1959 The Second City s first revue show premiered at 1842 North Wells Street with Sills former wife and Compass Player Barbara Harris singing Everybody s in the Know Admission was 1 50 Sahlins and Sills flipped burgers in the kitchen 5 Sahlins Sills and Howard Alk had founded the theater in 1959 5 as a place where scenes and stories were created with improvisation using techniques that grew out of Spolin s innovative teachings later known as Theater Games with Sills as its director 6 The cabaret theater comedy style of the Second City tended towards satire and commentary on social norms and political figures and events In 1961 the theater sent a cast to Broadway with the musical revue From the Second City directed by Sills and earning Tony Award nominations for ensemble members Severn Darden and Barbara Harris 7 The company moved a few blocks south to 1616 North Wells in 1967 1 Eventually the theater expanded to include three touring companies and a second resident company and now fosters a company devoted to outreach and diversity 8 The style of comedy changed over time but the format has remained constant Second City revues feature a mix of semi improvised and scripted scenes with new material developed during unscripted improv sessions after the second act where scenes are created based on audience suggestions A number of popular performers began their careers with the historic troupe then moved to television and film In 1973 The Second City opened a theater in Toronto By the mid 1970s both venues became a source of cast members for Saturday Night Live and SCTV which borrowed the writing and performing techniques pioneered by The Second City and other improv groups In 1983 the adjoining e t c theater became the second resident stage at its Old Town Chicago location handling overflow crowds and increasing the number of resident company members Co founder Bernie Sahlins owned the theater company until 1985 before selling it to Andrew Alexander and Len Stuart 1 Along with its theaters training centers and television shows The Second City also produced improv and sketch shows for Norwegian Cruise Line through 2017 In the 2000s Second City launched productions in regional theaters around the country revues featured sketches written for and about each location including Phoenix 9 Boston 10 Baltimore 11 Dallas 12 and Louisville 13 In October 2020 The Second City was put up for sale by Alexander and co owner D Arcy Stuart 14 In January 2021 The Second City and Saturday Night Live paired up to launch a new training scholarship for diverse upcoming talent 15 In February 2021 ZMC a New York City based private equity investment firm purchased The Second City 2 SCTV EditMain article Second City Television Second City Television or SCTV was a Canadian television sketch comedy show offshoot from the Toronto troupe of the Second City and ran from 1976 to 1984 Dr Charles A Chuck Allard 1919 1991 father of Vancouver attorney Peter Allard formed a partnership in 1981 that acquired the fledgling series which he then moved from Toronto to Edmonton where he practiced medicine and had co founded the Edmonton Oilers as a silent partner with Wild Bill Hunter 16 17 The basic premise of SCTV was based on a television station later a network in the fictional city of Melonville Rather than broadcast the usual TV rerun fare the business run by the greedy Guy Caballero Joe Flaherty sitting in a wheelchair only for respect operates a bizarre and humorously incompetent range of cheap local programming The range included soap opera The Days of the Week game shows such as Shoot at the Stars in which celebrities literally are shot at in similar fashion to targets in a shooting gallery and movie parodies such as Play it Again Bob in which Woody Allen as played by Rick Moranis attempts to entice Bob Hope as played by Dave Thomas to star in his next film In house media melodrama was frequently satirized including by John Candy as the vain bloated variety star character Johnny La Rue Thomas s acerbic critic Bill Needle Andrea Martin s flamboyant leopard skin clad station manager Mrs Edith Prickley Catherine O Hara s alcoholic narcissistic former leading lady Lola Heatherton and Flaherty s effusive talk show host Sammy Maudlin Martin Short also originated his dorky Ed Grimley character here which he later brought to Saturday Night Live Executive producers EditAndrew Alexander Edit Main article Andrew Alexander producer Andrew Alexander and Len Stuart In 1974 Andrew Alexander took the reins of The Second City Toronto which had opened in 1972 then formed a partnership with Len Stuart in 1976 starting The Second City Entertainment Company 18 Its inaugural television production was SCTV that year Alexander co developed and executive produced over 185 half hour shows for the series 19 In 1985 Alexander and Stuart acquired Chicago s Second City 20 He later founded SCTV thereby expanding The Second City TV amp Film Division 21 He has produced or executive produced hundreds of Second City revues in Canada and the United States 22 On June 6 2020 during on going global Black Lives Matter protests various Second City comedians signed an open letter stating that erasure racial discrimination manipulation pay inequity tokenism monetization of Black culture and trauma inducing experiences of Black artists at The Second City will no longer be tolerated 15 prompting Alexander to apologize and resign pledging that The next person to fill the Executive Producer position will be a member of the BIPOC community Interim executive producer Anthony LeBlanc was appointed to replace him 23 Jon Carr Edit On November 25 2020 The Second City announced that former Dad s Garage Theatre Company artistic director Jon Carr had been hired as executive producer 24 He stepped down in early 2022 and a successor has yet to be named 25 Awards EditAs of 2014 update the Second City has been awarded thirty seven Equity Joseph Jefferson Awards which have recognized them for Best Revue five times the first being Paradigm Lost 1997 The revue s director Mick Napier is one of several directors recognized by the Jeffs a list that includes founder Bernard Sahlins for 1983 s Exit Pursued by a Bear and improv guru Del Close 1981 s Miro Miro on the Wall Sixteen alumni have received Jeff Awards for their performances in Second City revues including David Pasquesi The Gods Must Be Lazy 1989 Scott Adsit Paradigm Lost 1997 Jackie Hoffman Disgruntled Employee Picnic 1993 Shelley Long Wellsapoppin 1977 and Nia Vardalos Whitewater for Chocolate 1994 with Rachel Dratch and Keegan Michael Key each being honored twice 26 In 2009 as the company was celebrating its 50th year the Second City was awarded an honorary Jeff for the milestone as well as three awards for the e t c s 33rd revue Studs Terkel s Not Working recognizing director Matt Hovde and actress Amanda Blake Davis and naming it Best Revue 27 In 2011 the e t c s 35th revue Sky s the Limit Weather Permitting won the Jeff for Best New Work Musical or Revue as well Best Revue and Best Actor for ensemble member Tim Baltz 28 The following year the e t c s 36th revue We re All In This Room Together won for Best Revue and Best Director of a Revue Ryan Bernier while ensemble member Edgar Blackman took home the Jeff for Best Actor Actress in a Revue for his work in Who Do We Think We Are on the Second City mainstage 29 In 2013 the Jeff Awards awarded Best Production Revue to a Second City show not housed at the venue on Wells Street The Second City Guide to Opera a collaboration with the Lyric Opera of Chicago that had been initiated by soprano and Lyric creative consultant Renee Fleming with Best Director Revue going to Billy Bungeroth 30 Toronto s Second City mainstage troupe has won ten Canadian Comedy Awards Best Improv Troupe 2001 Best Sketch Troupe 2001 2006 and 2009 and Best Comedic Play winners Family Circus Maximus 2002 Psychedelicatessen 2003 Facebook of Revelations Barack to the Future 2009 0 Down 100 Screwed 2010 and Something Wicked Awesome This Way Comes 2011 On film EditGoldstein 1964 The directing debut of Philip Kaufman The Right Stuff The Unbearable Lightness of Being featured several members including Severn Darden Jack Burns and Del Close as well as teacher Viola Spolin A modern day interpretation of the story of Elijah 31 it won the Prix de la Nouvelle Critique at the Cannes Film Festival and Jean Renoir called it the best American film he had seen in twenty years 32 The Monitors 1969 A satirical alien invasion film in which earth s invaders run the planet as though they were 1950s hallway monitors featuring members Avery Schreiber Alan Arkin Fred Kaz and Peter Boyle Second to None 2001 A documentary by Matt Hoffman and Scott Silberstein about the process of writing Paradigm Lost following the cast and director Napier from the initial rehearsal through opening night Originally narrated by alum Jim Belushi the film was reworked with rehearsal footage added ten years after its initial release 33 The Second City First Family of Comedy 2006 A documentary by Sharon Bartlett and alum Dave Thomas in three parts focusing on the origins of The Second City in Chicago the life of SCTV and the success of notable alumni including Tina Fey Mike Myers Ryan Stiles Patrick McKenna and Martin Short I Want Someone to Eat Cheese With 2006 An independent film starring written directed and produced by Jeff Garlin himself a former Second City actor features scenes shot within The Second City s Chicago theater and features several of its alumni including Mina Kolb David Pasquesi Amy Sedaris Richard Kind Dan Castellaneta Tim Kazurinsky and Bonnie Hunt Don t Think Twice 2016 A film written and directed by Mike Birbiglia centered around an improv troupe dealing with the effects of one member s success It stars Second City alumni Tami Sagher Steve Waltien and Keegan Michael Key The film features archival footage and photographs of Second City ensembles in the course of establishing the roots of improv comedy in Chicago For Madmen Only The Stories of Del Close 2020 A documentary on the life and career of Second City director Del Close who mentored and trained up and coming comedians including John Belushi Bill Murray Tina Fey Harold Ramis Dave Thomas George Wendt and countless others Touring Company EditCreated in 1967 as a way to increase the talent pool the initial Touring Company featuring Ramis Doyle Murray and Flaherty was tested on the road for two years before taking the stage as The Next Generation after the mainstage ensemble was sent to perform in New York The Touring Company continued to perform greatest hit shows on the road and in 1982 with the assistance of producer Joyce Sloane and without Sahlins s knowledge they staged an original revue in what would become the theater s second stage the Second City e t c 34 Fiftieth anniversary EditIn December 2009 the theater celebrated its fiftieth anniversary with a weekend of panels and performance which featured many prominent alumni including an SCTV reunion show starring Joe Flaherty Eugene Levy Andrea Martin Catherine O Hara Harold Ramis Martin Short and Dave Thomas 35 Other notable alumni returning to participate included Steve Carell Stephen Colbert Jeff Garlin Jack McBrayer James Belushi Dan Castellaneta Amy Sedaris Ian Gomez Richard Kind Robert Klein Fred Willard David Rasche Betty Thomas and George Wendt 36 as well as original cast member Mina Kolb Compass Player Shelley Berman and co founder Bernard Sahlins along with Playwrights Theater Club co founder Sheldon Patinkin 37 he later served as assistant director to Paul Sills then succeeded him as artistic director spending over five decades as an artistic mentor of the troupe while chairman of the theater department at Columbia College Chicago for three decades 38 Alumni EditMain article List of alumni of the Second CityTraining Center and Harold Ramis Film School EditMain article The Second City Training Center The Second City Training Center was founded in the mid 1980s to facilitate the growing demand for workshops and instruction from the world famous Second City theatre Training Centers are located in Chicago Toronto and Los Angeles The Training Centers have grown substantially since the Second City Conservatory was established in the mid 1980s under the tutelage of longtime Chicago improv instructors and mentors Martin de Maat and Sheldon Patinkin The Chicago Training Center has over 5 000 students in several disciplines including improvisation and comedy writing Former Training Center students include Steve Carell Tina Fey Amy Poehler Mike Myers Chris Farley Tim Meadows Bonnie Hunt Stephen Colbert Halle Berry Sean Hayes Amy Sedaris Jon Favreau Hinton Battle Jack McBrayer Dave Foley and Kevin McDonald Classes are taught by working professionals many of whom are existing or former Second City performers In 2007 the Comedy Studies program was created as a collaboration with Chicago s Columbia College which provides students with an immersion in all aspects of the study of comedy and improvisation 39 In 2016 the Training Center expanded to include the Harold Ramis Film School dedicated to comedy in filmmaking 40 The Second City Training Centers operate under the leadership of Kerry Sheehan President The Second City Training Centers and Education Programs The Second City Detroit EditThe Second City Detroit was a comedy theatre and training center located in the Detroit suburb Novi Michigan It was the Second City s third mainstage theatre in North America following the Second City Chicago and Toronto 41 Originally established in September 1993 in downtown Detroit Michigan 41 the theatre relocated to a strip mall in Novi in 2005 where it remained until it was disbanded in 2009 The original downtown Detroit theater within the Hockeytown Cafe complex was renamed the City Theater Detroit and the Novi location became the Andiamo Novi Theatre The Parents School EditIn the early years of the Second City and Game Theater several parents and Lincoln Park community members including Carol and Paul Sills and Mona and Dennis Cunningham started a progressive school for their children based on Viola Spolin s Theater Games techniques and philosophy with her son Paul Sills refinements Early on it was called Playroom School after Spolin s Educational Playroom a progressive school project during the 1930 s on Sheridan Road which Paul Sills had attended 42 Theater Games were gaining recognition and are now incorporated in drama therapy play therapy and are used as an educational tool Early Second City and Game Theater members as well as some Old Town and Lincoln Park community members were closely involved including the Sillses and Cunninghams Viola Spolin Joyce and Byrne Piven John Schultz Mel Spiegel and Beverly Gold The highly progressive curriculum included daily theater games and some students went on to careers in entertainment Briefly at the Game Theater site at 1935 N Sedgwick the school moved to several locations in Lincoln Park before it closed in the mid 1970s 43 Audio recordings EditComedy from The Second City Mercury 1961 From The Second City Mercury 1962 The Sound of My Own Voice and Other Noises Severn Darden at The Second City Mercury 1961 The Second City Writhes Again Mercury 1969 The Cosa Nostra Story Mercury Smash The Second City Survival Kit Spirit 1982 Archival audio was released as part of Sheldon Patinkin s book The Second City Backstage at the World s Greatest Comedy Theater 2000 Other influences EditIn 1971 The Players Workshop was Chicago s only official school of Improvisation for over a decade Although it was never officially a part of The Second City cabaret theater The Players Workshop was often referred to as Players Workshop Of The Second City due to the school s close affiliation with the famous sketch comedy stage See also EditAnnoyance Theater iO Theater Under the Gun Theater Theatre in Chicago Upright Citizens Brigade The Groundlings List of museums and cultural institutions in ChicagoReferences Edit a b c d Christiansen Richard 2004 Second City Theatre In Grossman James R Keating Ann Durkin Reiff Janice L eds The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago Chicago Historical Society p 744 ISBN 0 226 31015 9 Retrieved March 7 2008 a b Chris Jones February 18 2021 Column On Second City private equity and the sad lack of a Chicago comedy savior Chicago Tribune Retrieved February 21 2021 Leadership The Second City Liebling A J 1952 Chicago The Second City First ed New York Alfred A Knopf Retrieved May 22 2022 a b History The Second City secondcity com Retrieved February 2 2019 Robertson Campbell June 4 2008 Paul Sills a Guru of Improv Theater Dies at 80 The New York Times Retrieved September 3 2010 From the Second City Broadway Musical Original IBDB Rocket Darcel November 6 2020 How Second City s diversity promises are being executed Chicago Tribune Robrt L Pela May 13 2010 The Second City Does Arizona Or Close But No Saguaro Proves There s Plenty of AZ to Poke Fun at Outside of SB 1070 Phoenix New Times Anderman Joan April 19 2010 From Chicago joke s on Hub The Boston Globe Smith Tim January 6 2011 Charm City gets Second City treatment Baltimore Sun The Second City Does Dallas outsiders making astute observations Star Telegram September 14 2012 Keane Erin January 2 2011 Second City seeks coup with Ville The Courier Journal Second City comedy theater for sale 2nd time in 60 years ABC News October 6 2020 a b Blair Elizabeth January 15 2021 SNL And Second City Announce Scholarships For Diverse Emerging Comic Talent NPR Riess Steven A Sports in America from Colonial Times to the Twenty First Century An Encyclopedia Routledge USA 2015 page 675 Retrieved October 10 2018 Lampard Dr J Robert Dr Charles Alexander Allard Profiles and Perspectives from Alberta s Medical History Alberta Medical Foundation Edmonton Alberta Canada 2008 Retrieved May 12 2018 Second City CEO Andrew Alexander remembers co owner Len Stuart Chicago Reader February 29 2016 Retrieved March 18 2020 Second City s Andrew Alexander Honored by Phi Kappa Betta Broadway World Retrieved March 18 2020 ON THE LAUGH TRACK Chicago Tribune December 12 1999 Best John June 7 2020 SCTV Founder Andrew Alexander To Exit Second City After Accusations Of Institutionalized Racism The Bay Observer Jones Chris June 5 2020 Second City owner Andrew Alexander to exit after accusations of institutionalized racism leveled at theater Chicago Tribune A Letter from Andrew Alexander The Second City June 5 2020 Retrieved September 11 2021 Lara Smith leaving role at head of Dad s Garage Theatre by Bo Emerson The Atlanta Journal Constitution March 10 2021 Retrieved March 15 2021 Jon Carr leaves Second City after 14 Months as Executive Producer by Darel Jevens Chicago Sun Times February 23 2022 Retrieved September 8 2022 Jeff Awards List of Nominees and Recipients Second City takes home Jeff Awards and announces complete 50th anniversary lineup Time Out Chicago 2009 Archived from the original on March 16 2010 Retrieved September 3 2010 Chinglish Chicago Shakes Candide Porgy and Bess Mike Nussbaum Among Jeff Award Winners Playbill com 2011 Archived from the original on November 10 2011 Retrieved November 8 2011 Iceman Cometh Follies big Jeff Award winners Chicago Tribune 2012 Lyric Opera of Chicago amp The Second City Take Home Two Jeff Awards for THE SECOND CITY GUIDE TO THE OPERA Broadway World 2013 Doll Susan Turner Class Movies Film Article Goldstein TCM com Murray Noel January 25 2006 Goldstein DVD A V Club Inside the Improv Process at Second City The Chicago Sun Times Thomas Mike 2009 The Second City Unscripted Villard Books pp 34 41 146 150 ISBN 978 0 345 51422 6 Second City 50th Anniversary SCTV Reunion Live review Time Out NY Archived from the original on August 25 2010 Retrieved September 3 2010 What s in a Ticket Broadway World Retrieved September 3 2010 Long Form Improvisation and American Comedy The Harold by Matt Fotis Palgrave MacMillan 2014 page 33 Retrieved September 11 2021 Sheldon Patinkin The Second City Retrieved September 11 2021 Winchell Stephen Inside the Second City s Comedy Studies Program Splitsider Jones Chris February 9 2016 Second City to open Harold Ramis Film School a first for comedy moviemaking Chicago Tribune a b Comedy Shows in Chicago Toronto amp Hollywood The Second City Sills Aretha Sills Carol Viola Spolin Biography Viola Spolin Official Website The Viola Spolin Estate Retrieved May 31 2023 Planet Improv Index Archived from the original on April 19 2014 Retrieved April 18 2014 External links EditOfficial website The Second City Toronto Audio interview with Anne Libera author of The Second City Almanac of Improvisation on The Sound of Young America StensonsNewDigs blog review of the Benefit of Laughter show and SCTV reunion and after party Pye in the Face blog review of the Benefit of Laughter show and SCTV reunion and after party Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Second City amp oldid 1162203829, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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