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Hey, this an an archived bit of WIT's website that
you have found - just being kept around while some of
the old information is transferred across. Please,
go to WIT's main site,
to find out what
shows are on now, to contact us,
or find out how to experience some of the playful joy
that is improv for
your very self.
Some Sample WIT People
WIT welcomes people from all walks of life and
improvisers at all levels of experience and skill. Made
up of itinerant theatre professionals, bored public
servants, confused stand-up comedians, desperate
homemakers, cut-throat corporate sociopaths, nervous
public speakers and relapsed improvoholics, we are
altogether unique in New Zealand.
Guided by Creative Directors Ali Little and Lyndoon
Hood and the WIT Committee, WIT is a cooperative and
inclusive family. WIT is the only improv troupe in
the country that is accessible to members of the
community and founded on the principle of community
participation. We aim to provide pathways for all
players.
WIT maintains an active membership of about
thirty adults with an even number of men and women. We
pioneered the first all-female act (Improv Divas) and
professional youth act (Joe Improv) in New Zealand.
Check out some of the people who make WIT happen
below.
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Adam Williamson is a geek. He spends his days
playing computer games and reading fantasy
novels. Using his primary character trait
(intelligence) he graduated from university with
a degree majoring in Mathematics. Failing,
however, to educate people on the importance of there
being precisely six convex regular polytopes
in four-dimensional space, Adam fell back on his
secondary character traits of humour
and charisma. After equipping his Ring of
Sarcasm (+5 to Snappy Comebacks) and paying 30GP
to join the Guild of WIT, Adam was given a rare
T-Shirt of Improv (+10 to All Comedic Skills)
and now participates in frequent 8-12 player
high-level Venue Raids.
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Anton van
Helden /‘Un’ton van Helden’/ n. 1. A
marine mammal scientist by day. 2. A magician,
singer, clarinet and mandolin player, cartoonist and
improviser by night. An unforgettable,
highly-realistic performance of an improvised song
entitled "Sweaty Man" landed him the first of his
many improv trophies in 2001, with other contestants
literally throwing in their towels. From such humble
beginnings, Anton has starred in WIT's recent
soaps, and the "Sunday Improv Jam" in Fringe 2009,
he has also been heavily involved over the years
teaching as part of the Improv courses taught at the
Wellington Community Education Centre. Trying to
emulate the musical stylings of a humpback whale,
this big man loves to sing - he put the blues in
Blue Whale. |
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Barry Miskimmin
is the oldest living member of WIT. Twice awarded
the WIT annual prize for gravitas, Barry brings a
serious flair for improvisation to the stage. Proud
of his Celtic roots, Barry often gets Irish and
Scottish accents confused. Barry trained in the WIT
Keith Johnstone masterclass and is one of WIT's
senior trainers and MCs. He is also perhaps the most
stable improviser in the group, performing in all of
WIT’s improv formats and starring in Micetro (Best
Comedy Award, New Zealand International Fringe
Festival 2003). Barry is so dry that he is a fire
hazard. Weekdays, Barry is a sales sales weasel for
a large corporation. |
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Chelsea Hughes graduated cumma cumma
cumma cumma cumma chameleon laude from the
University of Foreign before invading New Zealand
just a few years ago. Since then she has Stood
Up at the Fringe Bar and been Stood Outside for
inappropriate use of the Dewy Decimal system.
Chelsea also appeared in WellingSIN City, a
noir-themed improv show, as part of the 2009 New
Zealand International Comedy Festival, and is one
third of the comedy triumvirate that is Little
Moustache.
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Christine Brooks
joined WIT in 2005. Christine has been
improvising since she was old enough to know better.
After many years performing in the obscurity and
smog of Christchurch, she was spotted by a WIT
talent scout concerned for her health. When she is
not improvising, Christine likes to wander the
beaches of Eastbourne. Christine was a public
servant, but now she is not.
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Clare Kerrison
has been part of WIT since its very beginning in
2003. She trained at the NASDA in Christchurch, in
the WIT Keith Johnstone masterclass, and at the
Loose Moose International Improvisation School,
Calgary. Subsequently Clare spent years
as a mild mannered Business Manager for BATS Theatre
by day, and as senior improv
player and trainer by night, even
putting in time on the WIT Committee as a
Co-Creative Director and Coordinator. More
recently she has gone off to the UK, and we miss
her.
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Corey
Matthew’s ability to
vacillate with astonishing virtuosity between
swaggering Lothario and little boy lost mean
that he is widely recognised as bringing a
certain . . . something to everything he does. |
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Danni has astonished
everyone with her amazing special powers. These first
manifested themselves on stage in 2008, and
continue to draw gasps of astonished
astonishment from audiences and WIT players
alike. She is a
furtive standup comedian and
is
one
third
of
the
triumvirate
that
is Little
Moustache.
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Derek Flores is a Canadian improv
import with 20+ years of comedy experience,
beginning way back in 1988 when he joined the Loose
Moose Theatre Company in Alberta. Since then he's
done time on the mean streets and in the hard bars,
as well as performing in many festivals, including
Adelaide, Christchurch, Nashville, Edmonton, and
Edinburgh and Melbourne to name a few. His
Wellington career has included Fringe Fest fav The
Chit Chat Lounge, the 2009 Improv Festival fav "Mr.
Fish and His Spooky Library of Improv Macabre", and
three seasons in improv soapy The Young and the
Witless. Derek describes his time as a senior
trainer for WIT and as a past creative co-director
as "well spent". He continues to maintain a number
of secret identities "just in case".
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Geoff Simmons
has been visibly involved in improv since 1997 when
he joined Auckland group Improv Bandits.
Escaping to Wellington, he was a founder member of
the group which subsequently became WIT. Then
he went away, but eventually came back, only to
become a Co-Creative Director and a regular fine
trainer.
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Janet Humphris
joined WIT in 2003 and is one of WIT’s growing
number of public servants. Disappointed initially by
the lack of a strategic policy framework, Janet
quickly adjusted to the world of improvisation and
started performing in Battle of WITs. She won the
inaugural WIT Award for Most Improved Player 2003,
and is known for her winning way with words. Janet
enjoys long meetings, cups of tea, Powerpoint
presentations and the feeling that nothing she
contributes as an individual matters. She applies
her "Yes, (Let's!) Minister" attitude to work and
WIT. Most recently it was discovered that Janet is
in fact on the cutting edge of 'uncool'. |
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Jen Mason, an
openly reformed Hutt girl, has performed in improv
since she was 12 and has not yet gotten sick of it.
Jen is studying at the moment - but when she is not
involved in Kiwi
Professional Wrestling she keeps the WIT
committee able to use their emails. |
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Josh Samuels
considers himself to be a Writer/Cricketer/Performer
(in that order). He’s been improvising for about 3
years, after first studying improv under Julie Welch
of The Groundlings when he attended the University
of Southern California in Los Angeles. Since then,
he’s also performed in Brisbane and his new home of
Wellington. |
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Kate Zabranski-Todd
is a 'nice girl' although she may have spent too
long in the bush with her cats and has a more than
reasonable aversion to men with no teeth. She is
currently trying to avoid dressing in hessian and
becoming the weird woman of the 'hood". Improv
provides her with an outlet for the 'weird that
lives within'. She has been improvising for about 3
years and loves the challenges that it brings, plus
it gets her out of the house. |
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Kirstin Price
is the longest-running female improviser in
Wellington, and a founding member of WIT and of New
Zealand’s first all-female improvisation act, the
Improv Divas. Kirstin has been involved in
improvised comedy since forgetting her lines and
cutting out her twin brother's big scene in a school
play some years ago. She trained in the Victoria
University Theatresports troupe and performed in
seedy bars when WIT was a just a twinkle in Keith
Johnstone ’s eye. She compensates for her short
stature by being quicker and smarter than other
improvisers. |
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Keith Johnstone
joined WIT as an honorary member in 2004, directed
the WIT masterclass and his first and only show in
New Zealand (“The Secret Origin of Improv”). Keith is
the world’s leading authority on improv, great
chunks of which he invented (including
Theatresports, Micetro, The Life Game). He currently
tours the world teaching it. On discovering that WIT
was largely unresponsive to outside help and unable
to follow a trail to the end of a story, he
concluded that WIT reminded him of ‘clinic clowns’,
the gentle people who are entrusted to entertain
very sick children - a badge we wear with pride. WIT
continues to miss Keith and we hope to train with
him again. |
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Lorraine Ward
is quiet and unassuming in public. Speculation
exists as to her private life. |
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Lyndon Hood
likes to dress in green leathers and is a descendant
of Robin. He has been improvising since late last
century, stealing lines from the rich to give to the
poor. Lyndon left Dunedin in 2004, when it became
apparent that all the good improvisers had
left. Lyndon brings intellectual rigour and a
love for technological gadgetry to the stage in
Battle of WITs and the Improv Factor. Generally
creative, he is currently daylighting as the office
lackey and in-house satirist for an independent
internet news agency. He can be found sitting in
cyber oak trees, thinking. |
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Mark (last name
withheld) is regarded in some circles as
the best person in the world. Mark is an amateur
astronomer. Except not so much amateur - as
professional, and astronomer - as drunk. From his
mind numbingly boring public service job he dreams
of a better life for Brad and Angelina. Other than
that he is content. Can drive a tractor. Most
recently seen as that guy who robbed II Bordello's.
Allegedly. |
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Matt has
been described as relentlessly cheerful. He is
inevitably kind to brave little lost kittens. On
stage, Matt is widely admired for his ability to
turn on a low denomination foreign coin from tiger
of fierce ferocity into a fluffy bunny. With
accents. And gymnastics. Widely admired. |
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Merrilee McCoy
is a seasoned improviser who has performed in myriad
shows since her improv début (in home town,
Brisbane) back last century (‘98). She has spent
time working with many different ensembles, learning
both short and long-form improv, as well as singing,
physical theatre, and writing sketch comedy.
She has a Bachelor of Creative Industries
(Drama). Busy as she is, Merrilee
also finds time to produce and direct. Oh, and she
also has a day job in the public sector! |
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Paul Sullivan
is coming along nicely. He was handpicked by the
Improv Divas to star in lovepossibly on account of
his sweet nature, youthful good looks and prehensile
tail. A graduate of the National Academy of Singing
and Dramatic Art, Paul is a professional actor and
drama teacher, but fortunately was liberated from
scripted acting in 2004 by WIT. Paul practices yoga
meditation and is so enlightened he glows on stage.
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Peter Dorn wanted
to
be an exotic dancer in a night club when he grew up,
but neither has happened. For years, nothing had
happened for Peter. Then one night, in the audience
of a WIT show, sudden waves of sensual excitement
rippled through his body during an epic poem. Soon
after, he changed his daily routine and started to
care more about stage appearances. By 2004, he was
sneaking out at night to attend the WIT Community Education
Centre beginners course . When Peter is not
improvising, he produces volumes of paper and WIT's
business cards. He joined WIT in 2005. He is
attentive and responds well. |
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Robbie
Ellis
was born on Auckland's
sunny North Shore. After showing some musical
ability as a child, his Mum & Dad pointed at
any musician they saw and said to him "You can do
that!" at every opportunity. In the case of
pointing at improv theatre musos, his parents'
suggestion actually came true.
After providing seven years' worth of
improv music for ConArtists in Auckland through
high school and uni, Robbie swapped volcanoes for
earthquakes and made the move south. Thanks to
WIT, he got gigs before he got a flat.
Wellington's a good town like that. Occasionally,
WIT gets him out from behind the keyboard to say
stuff on stage. Like, words. With his mouth. At
every opportunity. |
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Simon
Smith wants people to take him seriously,
but instead went off and had a cute baby. Simon is
a professional improviser - he has trained at the
Loose Moose International Improvisation School in
Calgary, Canada, the Wellington School of Performing
Arts, New Zealand, and Blockbuster Video, Kent
Terrace. Notwithstanding his habit of dropping his
trousers on stage, Simon is adored by the Wellington
audience, as well as his fellow players. He is one
of WIT’s senior trainers, MCs and producers,
spearheading the internationally renowned show,
Gorilla Theatre, and performing in all of WITs
formats, blah, blah, blah. He plays himself, thus
specialising in very wide range of unusual
personalities. He's been in
movies too. There's even a Facebook
fan page dedicated to him. |
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Steven Youngblood
has been improvising for years (some might say his
whole life). He was discovered by WIT living in the
backstreets of the 1980s, performing with Palmerston
North's FABULOUS local improv boy band, ‘Scared
Scriptless’. In 2005, we successfully negotiated his
release back into the mainstream improv community
but still allow him to wear colourful knee-warmers
and a towelling head-band at training. Steven’s
hobbies include long walks on the beach and
candlelit dinners. Steven has military connections -
but this information is rated: Top Secret.
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Wiremu (Woody)
Tuhiwai was born and raised in the golden
fields of Hawkes Bay (only golden in summer and
actually near the hills not in them). He first
graced the stage with Theatre Hawkes Bay and was
introduced to the world of Improv through Hawkes Bay
Youth Theatre (HaBYT), joining the improv happenings
of ‘Strange Habyts.’ A move to Wellington and Vic
University in early 2007 led Wiremu to stumble
across WIT. A generous player both on stage and off,
Wiremu has been embraced with welcoming arms to the
WIT family. |
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