Finland International Improv Festival 2012
The third weekend of May 2012 was the weekend for the first-ever Finland International Improv Festival. I, alongside of Improgrupp Jaa!, had the luck of participating. The following is my (personal) summary of the weekend which is also highly subjective.
Friday, 18th May
Woke up bloody early, packed and met the others in the harbor. Rahel had brought with her a big box of #FIIF T-shirts. Participant shirts read “Go ahead and laugh. I’m a COMEDIAN” and staff told the story of “I’m not funny, I’m just STAFF”. The latter, by the way, proved to be false, because the staff disproved the claim during the next days.
Boarded the big cruise ship (10 decks, seriously?) and walked to Helsinki train station some hours later. Was quite impressed by VR: quality trains, decent service. Martin tested their patience by playing the harmonica in the big, echo-ish station hall and wasn’t arrested. The train ride was smooth, almost vibration-less and the locomotive itself hurtled forwards with top speed of 160km/h. Tampere welcomed us with a downpour and we arrived to the hostel to spill water everywhere.
Accommodations were set up in DreamHostel, a clean, comfortable and affordable hostel in Tampere. A quick lunch and off we were to Ylioppilasteatteri to watch the first performances. The stage was decent, there were stands to hide behind and of course, a door. The acoustics were good enough so the performers didn’t have to shout.
Show #1: Perun Perunat (FIN) & Snatch Comedy (IRE)
The first to perform were Perun Perunat, who presented a two-person longform. I was quite impressed by character work – playing a preteen is not easy, the same goes for grandfathers. One of the best moments for me was an improvised song where a woman was on a rooftop, pondering suicide. I can’t remember the lyrics further than “Now (this?) is the time…”, but the melody and the general sad atmosphere still haunts me. The duo had a nice chemistry and handled playing various roles/characters really well. The story was a bit suicidal though (was it planned?), with the teen shooting her grandfather and bodies jumping off roofs (at one point, a short intermission was called to count the characters that were still alive). I once saw a play with only two actors in various roles. Perun Perunat did the same, but on the spot. Well done!
Snatch Comedy was something completely unexpected. All (mostly) the other teams presented some version of a long-form, but Snatch decided to do traditional short-form games. It. Was. Hilarious. The expertise of the actors was just beyond my level of comprehension. Whenever I see an improv show I look with the eyes of an improviser and what I saw blew me away. The show was fast-paced, the crowd roaring in fits of laughter and the short scenes made me wonder what would happen if they turned into a long-form. In short, the Irish troupe nailed the essence of short-form improv games.
Show #2: LamaAlpaka (ISR) & JadaJada Improv (FIN)
LamaAlpaka consisted of three exotic-looking (in a good way) men from Israel and their long-form grew into a story of a corrupt man who kind of owned the town. It was an unique experience to see the humor and thinking of a less American-influenced group.
There is not much to say about JadaJada that I haven’t already said, the same praise still applies. The story was of Mike & Mike, a gay couple who adopted a boy, John. The tale had integrity and emotion and it drew me in to the point that I missed a queue to dim the lights (I was on the light board during their show). There was a song of course and I have to say, I’m addicted to improv songs, such a joy to see a singing scene.
Show #3: Short Form Tournament
The evening ended with all the groups competing against one another in the Short Form Tournament. Initial pairings were drawn, with the winner of each round moving on the the next one. There was a list of games to be played (drawn from a cup), many of which were new to some of the teams. Perun Perunat actually cut their scene because the rules were a bit different from the traditional ones and there was some confusion. It was all done with a high spirit of course, because a mistake is a gift.
The teams competed with various games, the audience chose winners and in the end, only JadaJada and Snatch Comedy remained. The title of the audience favorite was awarded to Snatch Comedy for their laughter-inducing performances.
The day ended with everyone finding their way back to the hostel to get some sleep in preparation to the improv-madness of the next day.
Saturday, 19th May
Alarm & shower all to early, but no complaints this time. I later heard that some of the teammates were woken with baby noises close to their ears by an unnamed, but benevolent lady… so I’m glad I woke on my own terms. A 20-minute hike through Tampere and the morning kicked off with the first workshop. It’s a pity many of the workshops were on the same time. I’d chosen to go learn more about character building and statuses because I felt them to be one of my weakest areas.
8 Ways To Character (Jani Turku, FIN)
The workshop focused on techniques to get inspiration for character-building as well as some related subjects such as status and memorization. Here be a suggestion to all the unpopular kids in high-schools all over the world: go take up improv and learn about character and status. You’d be amazed on how your life improves. We talked and practiced character building, interaction, memorization, of making life-like characters… and animals. Non-human roles have fascinated me ever since I saw the actors of Helsingin Kellariteatteri do swans at Viljandi. Animals are a good source of inspiration, but they are also a difficult subject. All in all, I think the workshop paid up in full and I do plan to consciously use and develop the stuff I learned there in upcoming practices.
Status Games Workshop (Simo Routarinne, FIN)
Status Games continued where character work left off, namely the statuses of characters and the constant flux of it. We learned some basics of body language for high/low status and mingled with same/opposite status characters to put it into practice. Then came the difficult part: scenic statuses. A Status Card Deck was introduced with different statuses (scale 2…13) and emotions (hate, fear, love, joy) as suits. We’d draw a card, take the specified status and emotion (an inner drive for the character, not necessarily visible) and try to portray it. To final challenge was a two person scene where one person would have to treat the other like so that Other would be able to guess his/her own status/emotion. Statuses are not easy even though some would naively argue that the difference between a high and low status is discrete enough.
The workshops taught a lot and I even got to use some of what I learned in a couple of hours when the turn for Improgrupp Jaa! to perform came.
Iloinen Mursu (FIN) & Improgrupp Jaa! (EST)
Iloinen Mursu presented something special, a show format where the actors were challenged to do scenes with specific elements in it. The challenges ranged from quite easy to the improbable, but were handled expertly to the joy of the audience. One of the challenges involved a rap song titled “Drive-by Cockroach Attack” that was undoubtedly the best improvised rap I’ve ever heard. We’d just spoken about doing something really scary (which, for me is rapping) on stage in a workshop and the tip was to do it with unwavering confidence. Really cool.
I’m not going to give feedback to our own show because I’m too overcritical about myself. It’s sufficient to say that we went on stage and came back alive-ish.
frei.wild (GER) & Arrogantjes & Friends (NED)
frei.wild did a series of audience-suggested scenes and used their own musician expertly. As I said, I’m a sucker for scenes that include an improvised song and frei.wild did not disappoint. Singer/songwriter playing an invisible guitar and singing about the horse she found to be her strictly friend was beautiful. Such moments should be taped, why were there no recorders? The ending was a bit disappointing in that it didn’t end happily. A woman was dying from chickenpox and the the virus decided to block the antidote and kill the woman. Then again, had the story ended with the woman’s survival it wouldn’t have been so memorable.
Arrogantjes closed the individual team performances with a bang. The show was (a bit?) sexual, namely, they’d asked the audience to share their sexual fantasies anonymously and then continued to use those suggestions to create short sketches. Estonians don’t touch a lot, at least it’s not as common… so I was really positively surprised by the Netherlands troupe courage to do contact improv, and yes, contact improv in a sexual context. The characters were relatable and life-like, the stories believable. They’d suited up.
All Star Show & The Lottery Show x2
The All Star show meant that all the workshop instructors - professional improvisers with great skills – had their turn to perform a long form. Watching that performance made me realize how young I still am – I’ve been doing improv for just a year while the performers had decades of experience. The story flowed flawlessly, the characters were diverse and believable. There was singing. And a big boxing match in slow motion… And a all-knowing zen-master. A display of improv skills by experienced teachers/actors.
We ended the night doing a show with all the teachers. It was myself, Jeannie, Yani, Trent, Anya, Rod and Senja. We had a very, very fun show. It was such a treat to perform with Trent, Rod and the rest of the teaching staff. The show was so fun. (From the blog of Jeff Griggs)
International festival means cooperation, right? Names were drawn from a bag and named actors jumped to stage to perform a international long form. Amazing how simple it is for improvisers to work together. I’m no expert, but it seems to me that traditional theater requires a familiar setting and consistent troupe while the rules of improv – making your partner feel good – make it much easier to work even with strangers since your goals overlap. There were a few singing scenes and the audience actually sang along the chorus… at least I heard Senja do it from nearby.
The night ended with a big round of applause for the comedians, instructors and staff and the more energized ones started the early morning of a new day in a sauna.
Sunday, 20th May
The departure was uneventful and sad for me. A quiet breakfast and a ride to Helsinki, then with a boat back to Tallinn. The improvisers and the city of Tampere got really familiar, really fast. It actually felt a bit weird walking around, not speaking English, not hearing Finnish babble around me. The weather changed too, from windy and a bit cold to a hot summers day.
Afterthoughts
The festival gave me some perspective, both in terms of improvisation in foreign countries and a foreign country itself (this was my first abroad trip). I’m an improviser still in his early shoes and have a lot to learn. It will be interesting to see if I can deal with what I’ve seen and learned or try to be too ‘good’ too early.
The teams were given ten minutes of free stage time after their respective shows. That was cool, just going at it with people you barely know and finding it works out well.
The organization was good, really good. Thank, you, funny STAFF! As for the red shirts and passes… they said COMEDIAN. It’s official, I’ve earned my comedian stripes through a year-long challenge.
I think I’d like to spend a summer in Tampere / Helsinki, although the latter scares me a bit. It’d certainly be good for my pronunciation which still needs a lot of work.
The festival was everything I expected and more. The people were diverse, skilled and amazing. I do hope we/I get to do that again, next year.
References & Links
- Finland Improv Festival
- Article & video interview on Ilta Sanomat
- Jeff Griggs blog – Sauna Party
- Jeff Griggs blog – Finland International Improv Festival
Two Magical Nights
Trent, the awesome Chicago / Finland improviser, contacted Improgrupp Jaa! a month or two back and made a suggestion that made me giddy: namely, another workshop (read about the previous one here) for our actors and his teams – JadaJada – first international improv show.
Trent Pancy is an American Actor and Improviser living in Tampere, Finland. Trent teaches and performs Improv in Professional and Recreational settings throughout Northern Europe and the US.
- http://www.trentasaurus.com/
We are JadaJada! We are a collection of international improvisers who live in Tampere, Finland. We perform comedy shows based on suggestions from the audience!
Friday, 6th of April
Woke up at eleven – after being without sleep for over 30 hours the day before – and couldn’t make it to welcome the boat from Finland that arrived to the port at the same time and had JadaJada as its cargo. Instead, I made it to the venue (Toomklubi) and messed around on the piano with the guys before Rahel arrived with Trent at two-ish to conduct the three hour workshop for Improgrupp Jaa!.
There were around twelve of us present – including the guys from the army and Tartu -, no one wanted to miss this opportunity. The atmosphere was high-energy, professional and benevolent, a somewhat different experience for me since all of us had had at least some contact with improv and knew what they were doing. In fact, Trent couldn’t even finish the introduction of the first warm-up game, we had already mastered it and just went with it.
Öös on IT-d
Ülevaade
30.-31. märts 2012 toimub üle Eestiline IT ÖÖ, kus noored kogunevad noortekeskustesse ja mõtlevad seal välja suuri, uusi ja lahedaid ideid – KUIDAS IT KAUDU ELU KOOLIS PÕNEVAMAKS MUUTA.
IT öö on noortele mõeldud suursündmus, mis toimub korraga ja ühtemoodi üle Eesti noorte kodukohas. Tegemist on meeskonnatöö üritusega, kus ühtsed noortegrupid mõtlevad ideed välja 0 kuni teostuseni. Lõpptulemusena valmivad noorte ideedest multimeedialise lahendusega presentatsioonid, mis pannakse üles StartIT Facebook’i ja noortekeskuste Facebook’idele. – http://eank.eu
- Kaheksateist noortekeskust üle Eesti
- Igas noortekeskuses noorsootöötajad, IT-tudengid mentoritena ning palju, palju noori
- Kõik keskused saadavad otsepilti eank.eu serverile
- Keskustes meeskonnad, kes mõtlevad välja IT lahenduse kooliga seotud probleemile
Garage48 2012 Tallinn – impressions
Garage48 Tallinn Music 2012 – my third participation in the foundation’s startup weekends. This post was written on three subsequent nights at around 1am and expresses my personal opinion of the events of the weekend.
What is Garage48 Tallinn Music 2012?
Garage48 is a weekend hackathon, where people pitch ideas, form teams and build prototypes or sometimes full service over the weekend. This time we partnered with Tallinn Music Week, so we have a bigger focus on Music related ideas and our mentors are mostly from Music industry. But you can pitch all kinds of ideas, also outside of music industry.
- http://garage48.org/tallinn/faq
Friday, 23. March (23:50)
Arrived at the venue (Tehnopolis Ülemiste, also the host of Garage48 Tallinn 2011 – read my post about THAT weekend) right after work. Deadlines with school and work are both tight at the moment and I decided to cram in a weekend of sleeplessness. Oh, well…
The venue looked emptier than a year ago, with some vacant seats – I guess many of the previous startups really did start up and the authors are now busy conquering the world. Traditional intro, traditional, brutal pitching rounds with 90 seconds to convince the audience of the success of the idea.
The usual story – some pitchers did it well, some not so much.
Pro trip: don’t write your pitch as a note on your phone to read from: you WILL delete it during the presentation.
#garage48 - https://twitter.com/#!/AndoRoots/status/183237716547354625
Maybe I’m being dull or maybe it’s my (lack of) taste, but I found a lot less ideas appealing (as in Yes!, I’ll join the cause!) than previous times. Maybe the Music theme held some ideas back? That was, in fact, the reason I didn’t submit some of my own ideas to the discussion.
Microsoft TechDay 2011 Estonia
This post contains notes from the first half of Microsoft TechDay 2011 Estonia.
Developer’s Keynote: Next Generation Apps! Developing for Services and Devices
Cloud is the way to go. We started with the mainframes and have reached an era where the trend is the cloud and virtualization. Software- and Planform As A Service is the new vision.
We can bill you elastically. SLA-driven architecture and extreme standardization.
10-15% of failed HDD-s on a stack of server machines is an acceptable loss; we only interfere when we reach a critical level. We try to keep the human factor in a data center as low as possible with one person maybe managing 10 000 servers.
The cloud is a big oppurtunity. We need the cloud to connect different devices from watches to PC-s. We’re providing software for both the public and the private cloud. Put stuff that needs bursts of performance in the public cloud. We give you a secure and standard-compliant platform to run your application.
We don’t believe everything will be moved to the cloud, the future will be a kind of a hybrid. We’d like to open up the [Azure] platform because there are other technologies besides Microsoft’s out there who could benefit from it.
Azure security:
- Confidential and isolated data
- Data integrity – we duplicate and geo-replicate your data
- SLA availability
- Accountability: logs
When you become the next Facebook overnight…you need the cloud to scale your app on-demand.
Kinect demos
- Hardware: RGB and Depth camera
- Can “see” human figures and tell apart different, overlapping persons.
- Can also do tricks with voice recognition!
Demo: moving skeleton with joints recognized. Error: SkeletonDemo has stopped working. [System malfunction for ~8 minutes]
Windows phone philosophy: People vs. Icons. We put people first.
Windows Phone 7 features demo
Porting apps to Phone 7 with .NET and Visual Studio is easy! We have a full infrastructure for PUSH notifications. We need to build social apps.
[Demo for simple PUSH system. Doesn't work, reason unknown.]
There is a lot of cool stuff you can do with HTML5. Microsoft has invested heavily in the tools to help you build HTML5 and having them will be critical to your success.
Question from the audience. Answer: Estonia support for the Phone 7 will come, but unfortunaly I can not tell you exactly when.
[Remarque from a live demo]: Whoever reads the EULA? Let’s make the lawyers happy.
FabriCamp demo – scalable Azure infrastructure deployment. [The demo doesn't succeed, several error messages].
Developer Session #1: HTML5 – Myth and Reality. How industry is changing and why?
A brief history of HTML from 1997. Static pages, Netscape browser design. Because of plugins like flash and Silverlight we, the browser vendors, decided to sit down and work on a new version of HTML. We want to use the GPU for graphics acceleration. Javascript performance has increased dramatically since the beginning [of the Internet].
The web and expectations have changed, but HTML hadn’t. That’s the reason for HTML5.
Some features:
- new doctype
- binary attributes
- structured tags are not required
- quotes on attributes are now optional
- obsolete elements (applet, center, font, marquee). They work…but please – please don’t use them in new sites! Use the HTML5 logo if you support it, not because it’s fun!
- New life to old elements (i, ol, em, small…)
- New semantic elements (canvas, audio, video, footer, header…)
- Native support for audio, video and more
Open technologies – open standards, not owned by any company
Myth #2 : HTML5 is a product by Apple/Google…. – Nop!
We all love HTML5 – Opera, Safari, IE, Mozilla, Chrome & more
Microsoft is commited to supporting HTML5 in all of their products.
Favourite browser for everyday usage in order from most to least(raise hands): Chrome (half the hall), Firefox, IE, Opera
Demo of particle rendering on canvas (paintball on ietestdrive.com): IE 9 really fast, Chrome about 10fps? Using canvas is very simple, you can draw anything!
Myth #3: ACID3/html5test/… – quality of standard measurement – Nop, they measure how a feature is implemented in a browser. MS claim: ACID3 is not a real test, we don’t like it. Two weeks ago IE9 got 100/100 after the test was changed, Chrome (version 14) got 99/100. Still we tell you it’s not a real measurement of HTML5 implementation.
Myth #4 – HTML5 is ready – Every W3C standard must complete 6 steps. We’re almost done, but it’s not yet a real standard. We are very careful about draft status specifications in Microsoft so we won’t implement them. Chrome.angrybirds.com isn’t REALLY done in HTML? Disable flash plugin and you’ll see… The whole game is much faster in IE than in Chrome, by the way…
Myth #5 – HTML5 is not ready – Well, true, but you CAN use it already! Example: doodlegod.com, all done in HTML5! Yup, even sound!
“Developers can use HTML5 now and we encourage them to do so” – Ian Jacobs, W3C
Myth #6 HTML5 = CSS3, SVG… – They are actually separate specifications
CSS 3 features:
- custom font import
- media queries
- background manipulation
- new selectors
- HSLA colors
- transparent elements
- …and more!
Myth #7: HTML5 is only for desktops - Not no! Mobile devices, user interfaces etc
Myth #8: HTML5 is only for browsers - See above
Myth #9: All codecs are equally great - Legal issues? Implementation status?
Let’s kill IE6 together! Please kill it! 9% still use it. http://ie6countdown.com
http://buildmypinnedsite.com/ - give websites Windows 7 taskbar integration (pinning).
HTML is the future of the Web.
Vaata Maailma: Uus Algus
Eestlaste tava – kui midagi vajab tegemist, tuleb korraldada talgud. Osalesin Vaata Maailma SA poolt korraldatud arvutite korrastamise talgupäevadel.
Heategevusliku Uue Alguse projekti käigus kogume ettevõtetelt kasutatud arvuteid, teeme need vabatahtlike abil korda, installeerime Eesti Infotehnoloogia Kolledži abil ning Microsofti toel tarkvara. Arvutid jagame erinevate organisatsioonide kaudu abivajajatele.
- vaatamaailma.ee
Päev algas tasuta hommikusöögiga, kuhu kogunes umbes 20 talgulist. Annetatud riistvara (massiivses koguses arvuteid ja lisavarustust) asus DSV laohoone teisel korrusel. Organiseeriti kolm tiimi: puhastus-, server- ja paigaldustiim. Allpool käis arvutite tolmust puhastamine, ülakorrusel seadsid IT Kolledži tudengid Margus Ernitsa juhendamisel üles vajaliku keskkonna tarkvara paigaldamiseks. Operatsioonisüsteemiks sai MS Windows XP, peale läksid ka Office ning mõned vajalikud programmid.
Seadsime üles infrastruktuuri: kaks switch’i, serverit, toide, 8x4x2 patch kaablit võrgu jagamiseks. Annetatud arvutite hulgas oli 5-6 erinevat masinaklassi, nendest said nn. emamasinad: paigaldati Windows, kõik uuendused ja vajaminev lisatarkvara; saadud tulem klooniti teistele arvutitele. Kõik masinad said korraliku puhastuse ja mälutesti.
Minu ülesandeks oligi emamasinate paigaldus. Töövoog nägi välja nõnda:
- Ühendada arvuti vajaliku riistvaraga (kuvar, hiir…)
- Mälutest
- Windows XP paigaldus
- Windows XP uuenduste paigaldus
- Draiverite otsimine võrgu- ja graafikakaardile
- Lisatarkvara paigaldus
- Seadistamine
Windows XP-d paigaldades tekkis ka nostalgiahetk. Sain oma esimese arvutikogemuse Vaata Maailma avatud internetipunktis diskettide ja WIndows Me-ga jännates. Sinist progressiriba jälgides ja internetist draivereid otsides sai “vanu häid aegu” meenutatud. Minul kui vaba tarkvara pooldajal tekkis kohe küsimus: miks 256/512 MB mäluga arvutile Win XP ja paljunõudev Office (ja IE), kui Linux, Chrome ja LibreOffice oleks lõppkasutajale palju parem (kiirem) valik?
Kogemusest endast: väga mõnus oli kamba IT-inimestega nõnda arvutitega mässata. Vahva väljakutse, mida meeskonnaga rünnata. Sain teada, et on olemas selline elukas nagu CloneZilla, hindasin ümber oma administraatori oskuste taseme ning olin rahul, et ühiskonnale midagi tagasi sai anda.
Lisalugemist
Reporter: Korrastatud arvutid annetatakse abivajajatele (video)
Teemakohane uudis Vaata Maailma kodulehel
Pildid – Reede (Kristel Aija)
Nädalavahetusel toimus 200 arvuti korrastamistalgud (EIK)
Pildid – Laupäev (Kristel Aija)




Ando “David” Roots is a college student and a software developer from Kunda, Estonia. Living, working and studying in Tallinn, he hopes to get his bachelor degree from the Estonian Information Technology College on IT Systems Development. 